Do you get chills or 'frisson' from music?
Do you get chills or 'frisson' from music?
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Speed Badger

Original Poster:

3,376 posts

137 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
I've heard about this before, but was reminded of this again recently in an article - https://www.thewellnesscorner.com/blog/do-you-get-...

I just assumed everyone got these spine-tingling shivers during music, particularly crescendos or if a line or lyric gives you a particularly strong emotional reaction. But I was really surprised to learn than not everyone feels this or has moments like these. So I suppose my question is - do you?

pidsy

8,530 posts

177 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
Yes.

Maxwell singing This Woman’s Work live. Originally a song by Kate Bush. A song about a difficult birth from the perspective of a helpless man.

I don’t have kids, never wanted them but this song gives me chills and makes me well up every time I hear it.

https://youtu.be/1YDSXuVIU78?si=VTik1PrgmQYcVwoE

PeterGadsby

1,397 posts

183 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
pidsy said:
Yes.

Maxwell singing This Woman s Work live. Originally a song by Kate Bush. A song about a difficult birth from the perspective of a helpless man.

I don t have kids, never wanted them but this song gives me chills and makes me well up every time I hear it.

https://youtu.be/1YDSXuVIU78?si=VTik1PrgmQYcVwoE
WOW that is an amazing song and singer - Thanks for posting, chills for me too

- Pete

DickyC

55,812 posts

218 months

Tuesday 4th November
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Jefferson Airplane - White Rabbit

The whole track is one long build.

Rampant Golf

2,793 posts

230 months

Tuesday 4th November
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I do yes. My wife and kids do not.

Mr Creosote

68 posts

5 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
Yes, I get it a lot. Here are a few:

Watcher of the Skies by Genesis. The end of the intro, just as the crescendo finishes before the vocal comes in.

Shine on Your Crazy Diamond by Pink Floyd. The whole thing, but especially when then vocal comes in.

Won’t Get Fooled Again by The Who. The organ break and then the final ‘Yeeeeeeaahhhhh!’.

John Lennon’s voice on basically anything.

Saint-Saen’s Symphony No. 3 in C Major. 4th movement.

Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9. 4th movement. This for me is up there for me as one of humanity’s finest achievements - musical or otherwise. If aliens came to earth and wanted to hear music, I’d play them this.

I could go on!

king arthur

7,514 posts

281 months

Tuesday 4th November
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Roxy Music's version of Jealous Guy always does it.

Still Mulling

15,268 posts

197 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
Yes, and teariness, particularly if I’ve been in a private moment of belting out the song in unison.

PeterGadsby

1,397 posts

183 months

Tuesday 4th November
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TameRacingDriver

19,713 posts

292 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
If the track, mood and situation is right then yes, can be quite a weird but powerful sensation.

Still Mulling said:
Yes, and teariness, particularly if I ve been in a private moment of belting out the song in unison.
Also this, very rarely. Certain songs from my past were the backdrop to traumatic events, so sometimes when I hear them again can trigger emotion.

abzmike

10,925 posts

126 months

Tuesday 4th November
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Yes to several tunes.
This years John Lewis Xmas tv ad is basically built round it.

Wacky Racer

40,294 posts

267 months

Tuesday 4th November
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"Since I've been loving you" by Led Zeppelin, especially with headphones on

Macneil

1,042 posts

100 months

Tuesday 4th November
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Mainly classical,
Verdi Requiem, end of Tosca, Swan lake,

Panamax

7,544 posts

54 months

Tuesday 4th November
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MitchT

17,033 posts

229 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
First time I had this was as a kid, listening to Equinoxe Part 7 by Jean-Michel Jarre, when the "chorus" part of the track, which is in the major key, kicks in after the "verse" part, which is in the minor key. Happens three times during the piece. I'm getting shivvers just thinking about it! Lots of JMJ's stuff has that effect on me.

thetapeworm

13,090 posts

259 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
MitchT said:
First time I had this was as a kid, listening to Equinoxe Part 7 by Jean-Michel Jarre, when the "chorus" part of the track, which is in the major key, kicks in after the "verse" part, which is in the minor key. Happens three times during the piece. I'm getting shivvers just thinking about it! Lots of JMJ's stuff has that effect on me.
Ethnicolor has a similar effect for me but there's a few examples from his catalogue as well as quite a few other songs that give me goosebumps every listen.

Some at certain moments, others right from the first note... but then its just increases as the song moves on, quite addictive.



Whereas others that experience this won't feel.a thing with the same tracks.



Edited by thetapeworm on Tuesday 4th November 20:44

MitchT

17,033 posts

229 months

Tuesday 4th November
quotequote all
thetapeworm said:
Ethnicolor has a similar effect for me...
Same here! Also, the middle 8th during Zoolook when everything drops out and it goes all atmospheric for a moment... the bit during Oxygene Part 1 when the big synth lead comes in... I'd better stop here!


Glassman

24,157 posts

235 months

Tuesday 4th November
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Yes, a lot. I didn't know musical frisson was thing until I looked into it.

Skyedriver

21,721 posts

302 months

Wednesday 5th November
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DickyC said:
Jefferson Airplane - White Rabbit

The whole track is one long build.
Oh indeed, yes, I'm 72, this song, production.
There's been many since but Grace Slick nailed it back then. Still have the 45.

Skyedriver

21,721 posts

302 months

Wednesday 5th November
quotequote all
Can I add Swan Hunter and a couple of other Big Big Train tracks where the brass comes in. I burst inro tears.