A profound enhancement of one's enjoyment and emotional connection to music, making songs feel deeply meaningful and revealing hidden layers of complexity.
Description
Music appreciation enhancement can be described as a general sense of significantly increased enjoyment, emotional connection, and fascination with music. When music is listened to during this state, it does not merely sound subjectively better but can feel profoundly meaningful and emotionally resonant in ways that far exceed the listener's normal relationship with music. The experience often involves a sense of hyper-awareness of every sound, lyric, melody, and complex layer of instrumentation within a piece, combined with an enhanced ability to individually comprehend their significance and interplay.
The perceived emotional intent of the musician and the meaning behind the music may be felt with a level of clarity and intensity that is largely unattainable during everyday sober listening. Songs that one has heard hundreds of times can suddenly feel entirely new, revealing previously unnoticed nuances in rhythm, harmony, and production. Music that one would normally find unremarkable may become deeply moving, while already-beloved music can become an overwhelming emotional experience that brings the listener to tears of joy or profound contemplation.
This effect is commonly mistaken as a purely auditory phenomenon, but it is more accurately understood as the result of several coinciding cognitive and perceptual components working in concert. These include novelty enhancement, which makes familiar music feel fresh and new; emotion intensification, which amplifies the emotional impact of what is being heard; auditory acuity enhancement, which sharpens the perception of individual sounds; and personal meaning intensification, which imbues the music with a sense of deep personal significance.
Music appreciation enhancement is most commonly induced under the influence of moderate dosages of hallucinogenic compounds such as psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, mescaline), dissociatives (ketamine, DXM), and cannabinoids (cannabis). However, it can also occur to a lesser extent under the influence of entactogens like MDMA, stimulants, and even some GABAergic depressants. The effect is particularly pronounced with psychedelics, where it often forms a central and highly valued component of the experience.
Many users report that enhanced music appreciation is one of the most consistently enjoyable and sought-after effects of psychoactive substances. The experience can leave lasting impressions that alter one's relationship with particular pieces of music long after the substance has worn off. Some individuals report developing entirely new musical tastes or gaining a deeper appreciation for genres they previously dismissed as a result of these experiences.