For sure. I like both listening to music with no other input, as well as listening to the world in silence, and realizing there is never complete silence and that ambient background noise creates its own music. Or my head does. I generally prefer listening to actual music because then there are physical vibrations that add to the experience but I get down in my head pretty hard sometimes.
Also the experience of hearing the minute background sounds of the machinery of existence become music is a uniquely wonderful experience. Very inspiring sometimes.
Related to this but different, my friend and I occasionally do "tryptamine jams". We're both musicians, and we'll take high doses of tryptamines along with, often, just a hint of dissociative (3-MeO or MXE - we'll dose like 5mg of 3-MeO or 15mg of MXE and around 40mg of a 4-sub-tryptamine) and play music together starting on the come-up and proceeding through the end of the trip. All kinds of great states and music happen, very intense immersion and usually getting to the point where we feel guided in this organism that we've created, each next note being self-evident, sometimes unlocking new muscle movements. But anyway, this one time I remember we were doing that, and it was during the peak and I had to pee. So we stopped for a minute, and while I was in the bathroom, all of the little sounds - the water in the pipes, the creaking of the house settling, the movements of my friend, the faint sound of a neighbor's TV - organized into this OUTRAGEOUSLY beautiful and intense melodic/rhythmic flow, I came running out of the bathroom like a wild man with my eyes bugged out and tried to get on it on piano but my friend hadn't heard the same so we veered into something else.
I remember as a kid I would always listen to the sounds of nature and hear a symphony. I remember as a teenager, when I'd mow the lawn, the drone of the lawnmower engine would invariably produce clearly audible and amazing church organ-style music, oh my god it was so great. Made me love mowing the lawn.
That was before drugs too.