Music and Mystery… Psychology and the Unexplained
How does music affect the mind? Writer Amanda Dalton looks at fascinating musical mysteries, like Hildegard of Bingen’s visionary compositions.
Writer and music lover Amanda Dalton’s childhood was dominated by her love of playing the piano and loathing of the intensive psychoanalytical psychotherapy she underwent for five years. Coupled with her long personal interest in how the brain and the body work together, this series takes an unusual look at music.
The essays focus on human stories exploring interactions between music and a troubled mind, discussing some of the key historical and current thinking regarding the relationships between creative individuals with mental health challenges or damaged minds - and music. Some of these will be well known, some less so – all afford rich material to explore the themes. Always returning to the human and personal story, the series references the research and insights of neuroscientists and psychologists, such as Daniel Levitin, Oliver Sacks and Anthony Storr. As arguably the birthplace of psycho analysis and home to a multitude of iconic classical musicians – the starting point is Vienna.
Essay 4: Music and Mystery… Psychology and the Unexplained.
This essay explores human stories in which the relationships between music and the mind are a source of debate and mystery. Woven through with a personal story involving Faure’s Requiem, Amanda Dalton considers the case of Rosemary Brown – Spirit Medium, who created a media storm during the 1970s with claims that dead composers were dictating her compositions to her. She and her work were studied by numerous psychologists, with controversial results. She also goes back in time to take a glimpse at notions of the divine through the work of Hildegard of Bingen, before recounting a modern day true story of the mysterious and debilitating pain that radically altered the career path of one of the world’s leading violinists.
Amanda Dalton is a playwright, poet and essayist. She has three poetry collections with Bloodaxe Books, most recently Fantastic Voyage (2024). Smith|Doorstop published a pamphlet of two long poems, Notes on Water, a version of which she re-created for two voices and soundscape for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3’s Between the Ears.
Amanda writes extensively for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3 and 4 including original drama, poetry-dramas, re-imaginings of silent movies and classic film, lyric essays and adaptations of fiction. Her theatre writing also includes text for outdoor and site-specific performance, and work for young people with commissions from Manchester’s Royal Exchange, Sheffield Theatres and Keswick’s Theatre By The Lake.
Until 2019 she was a senior leader at the Royal Exchange Theatre where she also worked as an Associate Artist, theatre maker and project director, in partnership with communities across the North West and beyond.
Alongside her work as a writer, Amanda designs and delivers a wide range of writing workshops, mentors a number of poets and playwrights, and regularly curates and co-delivers collaborative cross-artform projects, most recently with Wainsgate Dances, Manchester Camerata and Quarantine.
Her website is https://www.amandadalton.co.uk
Writer and reader: Amanda Dalton
Producer: Polly Thomas
Sound: Alisdair McGregor
Exec Producer: Chantal Herbert
A Thomas Carter Project production for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3.
On radio
Broadcast
- Thu 6 Feb 2025 21:45´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3
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