The Genesis of a Tune in the Mind: An Interview Study About Novel Involuntary Musical Imagery Repetition

Author:

Floridou Georgia A.1ORCID,Mencke Iris2,Caprini Francesco3,Müllensiefen Daniel1

Affiliation:

1. Psychology Department, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK

2. Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics, Germany

3. Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, Department of Psychological Science, Birkbeck, University of London, UK

Abstract

Musical creativity, as a cognitive process, is inherently associated with musical imagery. Several composers have claimed to have composed music based on creative ideas that emerged involuntarily in their minds in the form of musical imagery. Research on musical imagery has been growing steadily, yet studies exploring its link to creativity have been scarce. Furthermore, although reports in the musical imagery literature reveal the existence of novel involuntary musical imagery repetition (IMIR, i.e., music that comes to the mind spontaneously and repeatedly), research to date has focused on familiar IMIR. In a semistructured interview with six composers, we investigated the internal and external experience of the novel IMIR. Based on grounded theory analysis, two descriptive models emerged: the first model indicated that the intramusical features of novel IMIR were described in terms of musical, technical, and linguistic dimensions. The repetition within novel IMIR was related to functional outcomes associated with experience, and there was a sense of familiarity when experiencing novel IMIR. The occurrence of novel IMIR was more likely when individuals reported being in specific mental and physical states. Finally, the emotional valence associated with the novel IMIR was classified as mainly positive. The second model indicated a variety of methods to aid the translation of internal novel IMIR into external musical composition and a range of factors that influence the success of that translation. The findings are discussed in the context of existing literature on creativity, musical imagery, and spontaneous cognition.

Funder

Greek State Scholarships Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Psychology (miscellaneous),Music

Reference83 articles.

1. The auditory imagery of great composers.

2. Music training and mental imagery ability

3. Bailes F. (2002). Musical imagery: hearing and imagining music [PhD thesis]. University of Sheffield.

4. The prevalence and nature of imagined music in the everyday lives of music students

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