I absolutely love solo classical piano performances on psyhedelics, nothing gets the mind going and sounds a beautiful, especially depending on what piece it is. I also like so many other kinds of music on psychedelics, but at the moment I'd have to go with classical piano by a really top-quality performer. I would say overall that psychedelics have greatly expanded my musical appreciation and pushed me past my preconceptions about, for example, country music... I grew thinking fuck country, that shit's for rednecks and southern people, all they do is talk about beer and trucks and shit. But then I opened my mind, my friend put on some country that's kind of on the edge of country, it's not too pop but it's really popular, I think it was Sturgill Simpson, and I thought it was beautiful. I think don't care for the pop country shit, or really the pop music of any genre, except sometimes there is someone who is actually amazing and just doing pop. I guess my point is, all genres of music (yes even trap... and I particuarly tend to despise average trap music) have examples of artists who are passionate and doing something unique and heartfelt and that stuff is good music and I can appreciate it. Before psychedelics, I was quite unwilling to look past "genre". Now I think "genre" music is the least interestinbg. A whole shit ton of bands who I've seen who are not more than regionally known, you know, working hard, incredibly talented, have fans, but they still have full-time jobs and are struggling to make ends meet. But a lot of those acts are bending and combining genres, or creating new ones, in amazing ways. In my music community, no one is saying "yeah we're country music" or "we're post punk" or whatever. People are instead describing their different genre influences they touch on, and not pigeonholing themselves. And they're creating some of the most innovative, fantastic music that anyone is playing today.