this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2024
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Engaging in music throughout your life is associated with better brain health in older age, according to a new study published by experts at the University of Exeter.

Scientists working on PROTECT, an online study open to people aged 40 and over, reviewed data from more than a thousand adults over the age of 40 to see the effect of playing a musical instrument—or singing in a choir—on brain health. Over 25,000 people have signed up for the PROTECT study, which has been running for 10 years.

The team reviewed participants' musical experience and lifetime exposure to music, alongside results of cognitive testing, to determine whether musicality helps to keep the brain sharp in later life.

The paper, "The relationship between playing musical instruments and cognitive trajectories: Analysis from a UK aging cohort," is published in International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

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[–] Yokozuna 8 points 9 months ago

Yea, most musicians are generally not that well off and have as much free time as you think. Most still work some sort of regular job to offset the cost of living and equipment because they won't make the money they need to survive solely off of the money from gigs. They do it because they love it and not because they're making tons of money and have ample free time. Their hobby is music, so whatever downtime they have from regular life, they fill it with playing and writing music. If you're fortunate enough to be signed to a label, you're on the road for months out of the year gigging and constantly immersed in your music, and that definitely isn't a health benefit either. There is a thing down here called the Musicians Clinic - musicians don't have a typical job and therefore don't have access to medical insurance like they would if they worked a 9-5 with benefits, so it supplements that to keep them healthy.

Source: from New orleans, have family that plays music for a living, play live music myself, and know tons of gigging musicians.