Current:Home > reviewsWhy beautiful sadness — in music, in art — evokes a special pleasure -Zenith Profit Hub
Why beautiful sadness — in music, in art — evokes a special pleasure
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:57:40
Composer Cliff Masterson knows how to make sorrow sublime.
Take his regal, mournful adagio Beautiful Sadness, for example:
"When I wrote it, the feeling of the music was sad, but yet there was this beautiful melody that sat on top," Masterson says.
Written for a string orchestra, the piece observes the conventions of musical melancholy. Phrases are long and slow. Chords stay in a narrow range.
"Obviously, it's in a minor key," Masterson says. "And it never strays far from that minor key home position."
The piece even features a violin solo, the preferred orchestral expression of human sorrow.
"It's one of the few instruments where I think you can get so much personality," Masterson says. "The intonation is entirely yours, the vibrato is entirely yours."
Yet for all of these conscious efforts to evoke sadness, the piece is also designed to entice listeners, Masterson says.
It's part of the album Hollywood Adagios, which was commissioned by Audio Network, a service that provides music to clients like Netflix and Pepsi.
"There's a lot of sad songs out there, very sad music," Masterson says. "And people enjoy listening to it. They get pleasure from it, I think."
Why our brains seek out sadness
Brain scientists agree. MRI studies have found that sad music activates brain areas involved in emotion, as well as areas involved in pleasure.
"Pleasurable sadness is what we call it," says Matt Sachs, an associate research scientist at Columbia University who has studied the phenomenon.
Ordinarily, people seek to avoid sadness, he says. "But in aesthetics and in art we actively seek it out."
Artists have exploited this seemingly paradoxical behavior for centuries.
In the 1800s, the poet John Keats wrote about "the tale of pleasing woe." In the 1990s, the singer and songwriter Tom Waits released a compilation aptly titled "Beautiful Maladies."
There are some likely reasons our species evolved a taste for pleasurable sadness, Sachs says.
"It allows us to experience the benefits that sadness brings, such as eliciting empathy, such as connecting with others, such as purging a negative emotion, without actually having to go through the loss that is typically associated with it," he says.
Even vicarious sadness can make a person more realistic, Sachs says. And sorrowful art can bring solace.
"When I'm sad and I listen to Elliott Smith, I feel less alone," Sachs says. "I feel like he understands what I'm going through."
'It makes me feel human'
Pleasurable sadness appears to be most pronounced in people with lots of empathy, especially a component of empathy known as fantasy. This refers to a person's ability to identify closely with fictional characters in a narrative.
"Even though music doesn't always have a strong narrative or a strong character," Sachs says, "this category of empathy tends to be very strongly correlated with the enjoying of sad music."
And in movies, music can actually propel a narrative and take on a persona, Masterson says.
"Composers, particularly in the last 30 to 40 years, have done a fantastic job being that unseen character in films," he says.
That's clearly the case in the movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, where director Steven Spielberg worked closely with composer John Williams.
"Even now, at the ripe old age I am, I cannot watch that film without crying," Masterson says. "And it's a lot to do with the music."
Pleasurable sadness is even present in comedies, like the animated series South Park.
For example, there's a scene in which the character Butters, a fourth grader, has just been dumped by his girlfriend. The goth kids try to console him by inviting him to "go to the graveyard and write poems about death and how pointless life is."
Butters says, "no thanks," and delivers a soliloquy on why he values the sorrow he's feeling.
"It makes me feel alive, you know. It makes me feel human," he says. "The only way I could feel this sad now is if I felt something really good before ... So I guess what I'm feeling is like a beautiful sadness."
Butters ends his speech by admitting: "I guess that sounds stupid." To an artist or brain scientist, though, it might seem profound.
veryGood! (2854)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- NASA spacecraft captures glowing green dot on Jupiter caused by a lightning bolt
- Mike Ivie, former MLB No. 1 overall draft pick, dies at 70
- How 90 Big Companies Helped Fuel Climate Change: Study Breaks It Down
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- As pandemic emergencies end, some patients with long COVID feel 'swept under the rug'
- Key takeaways from Hunter Biden's guilty plea deal on federal tax, gun charges
- Sun's out, ticks out. Lyme disease-carrying bloodsucker season is getting longer
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Florida's abortion laws protect a pregnant person's life, but not for mental health
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- How Massachusetts v. EPA Forced the U.S. Government to Take On Climate Change
- What’s an Electric Car Champion Doing in Romney’s Inner Circle?
- Kim Zolciak’s Daughters Send Her Birthday Love Amid Kroy Biermann Divorce
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- FAMU clears football activities to resume after unauthorized rap video in locker room
- Amazon has the Apple iPad for one of the lowest prices we've seen right now
- How a Contrarian Scientist Helped Trump’s EPA Defy Mainstream Science
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Best Memorial Day 2023 Home Deals: Furniture, Mattresses, Air Fryers, Vacuums, Televisions, and More
Why anti-abortion groups are citing the ideas of a 19th-century 'vice reformer'
U.S. charges El Chapo's sons and other Sinaloa cartel members in fentanyl trafficking
Travis Hunter, the 2
How 90 Big Companies Helped Fuel Climate Change: Study Breaks It Down
Fuzzy Math: How Do You Calculate Emissions From a Storage Tank When The Numbers Don’t Add Up?
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez Are Engaged