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| Joseph LeDoux |
As well as providing interesting background info on the Amygdaloids (they're currently working on a EP called In Our Minds), LeDoux reflects on why so many scientists are drawn to music, and he talks about the benefits that performing music has brought to his own life and work. "Playing music makes me a healthier, happier person," he says. "It not only connects me with others in a unique way, it also makes connections in my own mind, drawing up emotions and thoughts I didn’t know I had."
LeDoux also gives plenty of examples of other scientists who rock:
"Dan Levitin, author of bestselling books, This Is Your Brain On Music and The World in Six Songs, is part of the Diminished Faculties at McGill University. Harvard molecular biologist, Pardis Sabetti, heads Thousand Days. Francis Collins, Director of NIH, has played at benefits with Joe Perry of Arrowsmith. Richard Brown, a philosopher at CUNY, is in the house band of a monthly jam session he organizes (The Amygdaloids played at their Qualia Freak Fest last year). Dave Sulzer, a neuroscientist at Columbia, has an alter ego as David Soldier, the leader of an avant garde music group. A biology-based bluegrass band in New York is called the Southern Blots. There’s a band of shrinks called The Psy- choanalytics. A New Jersey punk band is named the Lonely Ions. The Periodic Table hails from Long Island. Ryan Johnson of Michigan State is in Kinase Moves. The Science Fair is a jazz group from Norway that sings about science.
Andy Revkin, a biologist and New York Times environmental writer is part of the roots group Uncle Wade. Freaks of Nature are a science band from Philadelphia. The Cell Mates are from Yale. Darwin’s Finches are an a capella group from Rockefeller University. MacArthur awardee David Montgomery, a geomorphologist at the University of Washington, plays guitar for Seattle band Big Dirt. Mike Shadlen, also at the University of Washington, fronts the Turing Machines. Chris Code, a psychologist from Exeter in the UK, is in Broken Road. The Society for Neuroscience has a music social every year at its annual meeting, where brain geeks strap on guitars and other instruments. And we shouldn’t overlook that there are some really well known rockers with connections to science. Brian May of Queen has a PhD in astronomy and spends part of his time these days teaching at Imperial College London. Greg Gaffin of Bad Religion has a PhD from Cornell and teaches life science at UCLA. They Might Be Giants does some science-themed songs. We Are Scientists, on the other hand, seem to only be connected to science in name."To his list I can add at least four psychologists who rock: Catherine Loveday, a neuropsychologist at the University of Westminster plays keyboard and sings backing vocals in a band; Ellen Poliakoff, a psychologist at the University of Manchester is in a band called Stray Light; Rob Hughes, a psychologist at Cardiff was in a band called Alien Matter; and psychologist Stephen Kosslyn was in a band when he lived in Cambridge Massachusetts. Do you know of any other psychologists who rock?
Update. More psychologists/neuroscientists who rock (grabbed from comments or Twitter): Stats whiz Andy Field drums with Fracture Pattern; Charles Fernyhough plays guitar with the Aimless Mules; Tim Byron plays keyboard with Lazy Susan; Roy Baumeister apparently plays guitar; Matt Wall is a UCL neuroscientist who plays guitar in a pub-rock covers band; and post-doctoral psychology researcher Dan Carney plays guitar and sings in the folk/indie/electronic band Dark Captain Light Captain (they've had Single of The Week on iTunes US, toured the UK, Germany, Austria and the Czech Republic, and been played on Radio 1/Radio 2/XFm etc... They've also soundtracked a Royal Bank of Scotland advert and had their music used on numerous TV programmes both here and abroad!).
-Read The Flip Side: Scientists Who Rock (pdf) by Joseph LeDoux.
(Thanks to Tadhg MacIntyre for the tip-off about this article, and about Kosslyn).

In psychology, Roy Baumeister plays guitar.
ReplyDeleteIn philosophy,
Steven Laws plays drums in a jazz-funk band.
Tom Chatfield plays jazz piano.
Tom Hodgkinson of the Idler plays Ukelele.
Will try to think of some others.
I'm a UCL neuroscientist who also plays guitar in a pub-rock covers band. After a bad day in the lab there's nothing better than blasting out some AC/DC or Wolfmother with the rest of the band!
ReplyDeleteMatt.
Twitter: @m_wall
Band facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/8roundsrapid/236214513059471
Oh yes - and "Joe Perry of Arrowsmith"
ReplyDelete*shakes head*
Cardiff University have another group- Miller 56. Featuring Petroc Sumner, Bill Macken, Mike Le Pelley... and a few others. they are pretty good !
ReplyDeleteTHE CODES are an all neurointensivst hard rock garage band. We hail from NYC Albany Cleveland & Pittsburgh and will be playing in saratoga NY July 21 We rock with extreme prejudice and are thankful for the healthy effects of the noise ands emotion on our neurotransmitter systems. www.codesrockers.net
ReplyDeleteYou definitely missed a big one - Julian Thayer.
ReplyDeleteDon't forget Cutie Pie and Baby, the Korean-Texan neuroscientist giant pumpkin filled with gold! https://cutiepieandbaby.com
ReplyDeletePsychology - University of Manchester - Luke Jones (me!) http://www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/staff/LukeJones, plays bass for Soma Dark (http://www.somadark.com)
ReplyDelete