Psychoanalytic perspectives on music: an intersection on the oral and aural road

Psychoanal Q. 2008 Apr;77(2):507-30. doi: 10.1002/j.2167-4086.2008.tb00349.x.

Abstract

This paper is organized around two ideas. The first invites the reader to consider the importance of music in emotional life, suggesting that for some people, music can have profound, deep, and transformative effects, both in loosening defenses and in deepening the psychoanalytic experience. The second idea is that analysis of the formal properties of music have both specific and overdetermined meanings that share elements with psychoanalytic principles. I suggest that, if the verbal analysis of dreams paves a royal road to the unconscious, the formal properties of music provide an aural road to the same destination. Two clinical vignettes and scenes from Verdi's opera Otello are used to illustrate these interrelated ideas.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Auditory Perception*
  • Emotions
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Mental Disorders* / diagnosis
  • Mental Disorders* / therapy
  • Music / psychology*
  • Psychoanalytic Interpretation*
  • Psychoanalytic Therapy / methods
  • Unconscious, Psychology
  • Verbal Behavior*