“Making Neuroscience Into Music”: Sarah Hennies on Science Friday
Sarah Hennies. Photo by David Andrews, courtesy of the Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at the University of Maryland
Why does your brain look different on Bach than it does on Beethoven? It’s a question that’s stuck with Sarah Hennies, visiting assistant professor of music, since she watched the PBS documentary Musical Minds with Oliver Sacks, where an MRI showed his beloved Bach engaged more portions of his brain than Beethoven. “One of my questions always has been like, well, what is that?” Hennies said on Science Friday. “Why would his brain respond so much to one piece of music and then not at all to some really similar thing? And so that’s part of what inspired this piece.” Hennies discusses Rodolfo Llinás’s “motor tapes” neurological theory, which “theorizes that the brain is a giant mass of constantly-running tape loop,” and how it connects to her compositional practice. Hennies’s new work, “Motor Tapes,” takes its inspiration—and name—from the repetitive rhythmic theory.
Post Date: 10-04-2023
Post Date: 10-04-2023