Human brains can sense rhythm and melody from birth, showing music may be part of biology rather than something learned.
When illness disrupts life’s rhythm, music, resilience, and executive function help us cope, choose wisely, and keep moving forward—one intentional step at a time.
In spite of my job testing home technology and appliances, I’m actually very old-school when it comes to how I run my home. I tell the time with a clock and jot down reminders on a pad of paper by the ...
Sudbury Performance Group presents Jagged Little Pill, the powerful Broadway musical inspired by the legendary music of Alanis Morissette. The show runs March 12-28 at the Ernie Checkeris Theatre and ...
From acupuncture to daily movement, magnesium, and essential oils, several natural approaches may support better sleep after Daylight Saving Time.
Future childcare providers who join the program will spend two months building their knowledge of business basics, early ...
The oldest known musical instruments— flutes carved from bones —are over 40,000 years old. And humans were likely making music before that, based on fossils showing our ancestors had the ability to ...
Memorial University professor and composer Andrew Staniland is making music out of brainwaves in St. John’s. CBC’s Madison Taylor had a listen to her thoughts.
Rhythmic tunes trigger synchronized eyeblinks and automatic bopping or swaying, new research suggests ...
Tommy DeCarlo, a singer who went from posting covers on MySpace to touring as Boston's lead vocalist for years, has died at 60.
A new study shows that 20 minutes of cardio can trigger memory-linked brain waves in the hippocampus, offering the first direct evidence of this effect in humans.
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