Music taste 'linked to drug use'

trainwreckmolly

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Music taste 'linked to drug use'
BBC News
9-14-2009
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/5343598.stm

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More than a quarter of classical music fans have tried cannabis, says a study from the University of Leicester.

Researchers were trying to find out what people's taste in music revealed about their lifestyles.

They discovered that fans of every style of music had taken drugs, with those who preferred DJ-based club music topping the list.

The study also revealed that blues buffs are the most likely to have received a driving penalty.

Mild-mannered fans

More than 2,500 people were interviewed for the study, which is published in the scientific journal Psychology of Music.

They answered questions on their living arrangements, political beliefs, education, work and pastimes.

Fans of musicals come out as the most mild-mannered group, with the lowest level of drug-taking and criminal acts.

They also drink less regularly than other music fans, and are among the most likely to do charity work.

But followers of hip hop and dance music are more likely to have had multiple sex partners over the last five years and were among the biggest drug-takers surveyed.

"It comes out in the study that, in these types of music, fans score worse in various behaviours, such as criminality, sexual promiscuity and drug use," said Dr Adrian North, who led the research.

"It was shown that this had nothing to do with their ethnic backgrounds," he added. "The behaviour was linked purely to musical taste in its own right."

The study did reveal links between education and musical preferences.

People with a PhD or Masters degree are more likely to enjoy opera, jazz, blues or classical music.

Hip-hop fans were the most likely to have attended a fee-paying school.

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Musical taste also proved indicative of financial status, with fans of adult pop and classical music the most well-off.

They are even more likely to pay off their credit card bills each month than the less solvent fans of hip-hop, rap, dance and club music.

The report's authors acknowledge that some of these findings are related to age and social class.

To paint a more accurate picture of how musical tastes correlate with people's lifestyles, they are now seeking to expand their survey on a global scale.

They hope to recruit 10,000 interviewees on their website for further research, which is being funded by the British Academy.

"We want to paint the first worldwide picture of who likes what," said Dr North.

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Club music fans are more likely to take drugs, the study says
 
"Club music fans are more likely to take drugs, the study says "

I wonder if those fans like EDM because of the heavily related drug culture or just liked EDM...
 
LOL maybe its cause people who listen to dance tunes go out every weekend spending all there money on drugs and extreme high price tickets.. then ignore there credit card bills xP
 
I could believe this, even myself I am aware that I will sometimes listen to music associated with a certain drug culture. It's like a relationship between you, the music, and the drug.
 
I think it might be possible to scientifically test the hypothesis that using a mind-altering drug expands or shifts your definition of what constitutes enjoyable music.
 
I think it might be possible to scientifically test the hypothesis that using a mind-altering drug expands or shifts your definition of what constitutes enjoyable music.

I'd say that is true, not just possible. I know so many people who didn't like electronic / house (anything in the techno genre) until they tried MDMA. It might not be their favorite new genre but they developed more respect for it and listen it now when they didn't before.
 
Music and drugs are closely linked, probably because of the way it gives pleasure to the listener and the feeling of bass running through your body is similar in ways to body highs (I find so anyway).
But this is an interesting study :) I hope to take part in the website-based study.
 
Drugs enhance music of all kinds. If you're a person of any kind of reasonable intelligence, you're going to be interested in enhancing experiences that are already enjoyable to you. Its no surprise to me that classical music fans are toking up, or EDM fans are eating rolls and acid. It feels fucking GOOD to take drugs and listen to music, thats why people have been doing so for thousands of years. :)
 
Its sad that they did a study to see if drugs made music better for a certain percentage of the pop. Seems like common sense to me, but then again, all i do is music and drugs, so....
 
"It was shown that this had nothing to do with their ethnic backgrounds," he added. "The behaviour was linked purely to musical taste in its own right."

-> Obligatory ass covering for rap related remarks =p



And I liked electronic music years before I actually took MDMA........................it was all the cough syurp I think =D
 
I think it might be possible to scientifically test the hypothesis that using a mind-altering drug expands or shifts your definition of what constitutes enjoyable music.

It would definitely be possible to design such a study (I've been involved in several labs researching drugs and psychology and could probably "cook up" some methods for that). Unfortunately, getting funding would be more difficult. NIH and NIDA fund most behavioral pharm research, and even though they got a good bit of stimulus money, they're pretty adamant about drug research being clinically-driven. Which makes sense I think (at least for now).
 
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