Benefits of playing guitar for the brain

dstroud

dstroud

Well-known member
Been researching the effects of using AI and the brain which lead me to start thinking about the brain and how to keep my brain healthy. This made me wonder if practicing guitar (which I love to do) helps my brain. So I asked AI and got this answer. Looks legit to me - I feel I have experienced some of this. So just some more good reasons to practice :)

Yes, practicing technical proficiency on the guitar absolutely helps your brain in numerous ways. It's not just about building muscle memory in your fingers; it's a full-brain workout that has a wide range of cognitive and neurological benefits.






Here’s a breakdown of how practicing technical proficiency on the guitar affects your brain:



1.​



  • Rewiring the Brain: When you learn and practice a new skill like guitar, your brain physically changes. This ability is called neuroplasticity. You are forming and strengthening new neural pathways, which makes communication between different parts of the brain more efficient.





  • Enhanced Inter-Hemispheric Communication: Playing guitar requires both your logical, left-brain (for reading music, structure, and rhythm) and your creative, right-brain (for improvisation and emotional expression). The constant, coordinated effort between your hands and your brain strengthens the corpus callosum, the bundle of nerves that connects the two hemispheres.




2. Cognitive Skill Enhancement​



  • Improved Memory: Learning technical exercises, scales, and songs engages both short-term and long-term memory. You're constantly encoding, storing, and retrieving information. This practice has been shown to improve verbal and working memory in musicians compared to non-musicians.



  • Enhanced Attention and Focus: The act of practicing demands sustained attention to details like timing, pitch, and rhythm. This helps you to block out distractions and can improve your ability to concentrate on other tasks.




  • Better Problem-Solving: When you encounter a difficult passage or a technical challenge, you have to break it down and find a solution. This process of experimentation and adaptation strengthens neural pathways associated with creative and divergent thinking.





3. Motor Skills and Coordination​



  • Fine Motor Development: The precise finger movements required for fretting notes, picking strings, and executing complex passages are excellent for developing fine motor skills and dexterity. This can be particularly beneficial for children and can help delay age-related motor decline in adults.




  • Bilateral Integration: The coordination between your left and right hands (one fretting notes, the other picking or strumming) is a unique and powerful form of bilateral motor integration that few other hobbies achieve at such a high level.




4. Psychological and Emotional Benefits​





  • Stress Reduction: The focused nature of practice can serve as a form of mindfulness, helping to reduce stress and anxiety by occupying your mind and preventing it from wandering to negative or intrusive thoughts.



  • Dopamine Release: As you make progress and master a new technique or song, your brain releases dopamine, a "feel-good" neurotransmitter. This sense of accomplishment fuels motivation and contributes to a positive feedback loop.
  • Therapeutic Outlet: Music, and the physical act of playing an instrument, can be a powerful way to express emotions and process experiences, which is why it is often used in therapeutic settings.


In short, the discipline and concentration required for technical proficiency on the guitar go far beyond just improving your playing. They create a symphony of neural activity that strengthens and enriches your brain's structure and function, with benefits that can extend to many other areas of your life.
 
Playing guitar is such a release and I can't imagine if I didn’t play. It relaxes me and is good for focus.
 
I'd imagine anything that forces you to constantly learn new information, requires physical movement, that also encourages you to develop new ideas of your own, and that is such a dopamine hit every time you do with with basically no long term downsides (except maybe back problems if you play 13 lb. LP Customs standing up every day, or hearing loss if you're irresponsible like me) pretty much has to be great for your mind.
 
Been researching the effects of using AI and the brain which lead me to start thinking about the brain and how to keep my brain healthy. This made me wonder if practicing guitar (which I love to do) helps my brain. So I asked AI and got this answer. Looks legit to me - I feel I have experienced some of this. So just some more good reasons to practice :)

Yes, practicing technical proficiency on the guitar absolutely helps your brain in numerous ways. It's not just about building muscle memory in your fingers; it's a full-brain workout that has a wide range of cognitive and neurological benefits.






Here’s a breakdown of how practicing technical proficiency on the guitar affects your brain:



1.​



  • Rewiring the Brain: When you learn and practice a new skill like guitar, your brain physically changes. This ability is called neuroplasticity. You are forming and strengthening new neural pathways, which makes communication between different parts of the brain more efficient.





  • Enhanced Inter-Hemispheric Communication: Playing guitar requires both your logical, left-brain (for reading music, structure, and rhythm) and your creative, right-brain (for improvisation and emotional expression). The constant, coordinated effort between your hands and your brain strengthens the corpus callosum, the bundle of nerves that connects the two hemispheres.



2. Cognitive Skill Enhancement​



  • Improved Memory: Learning technical exercises, scales, and songs engages both short-term and long-term memory. You're constantly encoding, storing, and retrieving information. This practice has been shown to improve verbal and working memory in musicians compared to non-musicians.



  • Enhanced Attention and Focus: The act of practicing demands sustained attention to details like timing, pitch, and rhythm. This helps you to block out distractions and can improve your ability to concentrate on other tasks.




  • Better Problem-Solving: When you encounter a difficult passage or a technical challenge, you have to break it down and find a solution. This process of experimentation and adaptation strengthens neural pathways associated with creative and divergent thinking.




3. Motor Skills and Coordination​



  • Fine Motor Development: The precise finger movements required for fretting notes, picking strings, and executing complex passages are excellent for developing fine motor skills and dexterity. This can be particularly beneficial for children and can help delay age-related motor decline in adults.




  • Bilateral Integration: The coordination between your left and right hands (one fretting notes, the other picking or strumming) is a unique and powerful form of bilateral motor integration that few other hobbies achieve at such a high level.



4. Psychological and Emotional Benefits​





  • Stress Reduction: The focused nature of practice can serve as a form of mindfulness, helping to reduce stress and anxiety by occupying your mind and preventing it from wandering to negative or intrusive thoughts.



  • Dopamine Release: As you make progress and master a new technique or song, your brain releases dopamine, a "feel-good" neurotransmitter. This sense of accomplishment fuels motivation and contributes to a positive feedback loop.
  • Therapeutic Outlet: Music, and the physical act of playing an instrument, can be a powerful way to express emotions and process experiences, which is why it is often used in therapeutic settings.

In short, the discipline and concentration required for technical proficiency on the guitar go far beyond just improving your playing. They create a symphony of neural activity that strengthens and enriches your brain's structure and function, with benefits that can extend to many other areas of your life.
I just came in for the lesson on the Freudian Pentatonic Scale ..........:confused:
 
You literally can meditate and have OBE if you become so lost in you’re player . I’ve felt like I’m watching me play and not doing it at all . Almost observing myself . Deep practice can be amazing .
You refer to the "Flow State", where you turn your brain off and reach a zen-like trance while doing something. It is incredibly productive.

I recently found it on my mountain bike through some single track. I just turn my brain off and ride the trail. Don't think, just ride. It makes the trail more vivid and time slows down. That's why I ride.

I miss getting like that at rehearsals. It's like I would wake up and forget where I am in the song I was playing, even though I was playing it without missing any changes. You get things so deeply ingrained in your head that you play it without thinking. That way, when you play live, you can be yourself on stage and act stupid without fucking up your music.
 
You refer to the "Flow State", where you turn your brain off and reach a zen-like trance while doing something. It is incredibly productive.

I recently found it on my mountain bike through some single track. I just turn my brain off and ride the trail. Don't think, just ride. It makes the trail more vivid and time slows down. That's why I ride.

I miss getting like that at rehearsals. It's like I would wake up and forget where I am in the song I was playing, even though I was playing it without missing any changes. You get things so deeply ingrained in your head that you play it without thinking. That way, when you play live, you can be yourself on stage and act stupid without fucking up your music.
Everytime I jam with a drummer I can get there .
 
You refer to the "Flow State", where you turn your brain off and reach a zen-like trance while doing something. It is incredibly productive.

I recently found it on my mountain bike through some single track. I just turn my brain off and ride the trail. Don't think, just ride. It makes the trail more vivid and time slows down. That's why I ride.

I miss getting like that at rehearsals. It's like I would wake up and forget where I am in the song I was playing, even though I was playing it without missing any changes. You get things so deeply ingrained in your head that you play it without thinking. That way, when you play live, you can be yourself on stage and act stupid without fucking up your music.
maybe you're not going to the right dispensary ?
 
just wait until you play keyboards. :D

Here's my modern old school "Wakeman" keyboard rig:

IMG_0651.JPG


...and I have more.
 
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