The Mozart Effect: Music For Children, Vols. 1-3 [Box set]
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Two hundred years after Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's death, French physician Dr. Tomatis discovered a relationship between listening and learning. Remarkably, he found that children develop their listening ability in the womb. According to medical studies, we now know that the music of Mozart in particular has a profound effect on the human mind, body, and spirit. Working in accordance with this philosophy, internationally known teacher and musician Don Campbell wrote The Mozart Effect, a seminal book correlating music with health, well-being, and increased intelligence. Campbell's musical collection of the same name presents compositions carefully chosen for the benefit of children. Volume 1, "Tune Up Your Mind," is formulated to gently stimulate young minds. Volume 2, "Relax, Daydream, and Draw," includes excerpts from Symphony Nos. 6 and 18, and volume 3, "Mozart in Motion," a delightfully playful disc, includes an excerpt from The Magic Flute. --Paige La Grone
The Mozart Effect: Music For Children, Vols. 1-3, Music, Various Artists, Amadeus Wind Ensemble, Cambridge Buskers, Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, Capella Istroplitana, Capella Istropolitana, Northern Chamber Orchestra, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Salzburger Kammerorchester, Vienna Mozart Academy, Jeno Jando, Ambient, Basssoon Concerto, Box Sets (Audio Only), Chamber, Children's Collections, Childrens, Classical, Classical Period Serenade/Cassation/Divertimento, Classical Period Symphony, Classical Period Variations for Keyboard, Classical Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard, Concerto, Dance/Single-Movement/Miscellaneous Work for Orchestra, German/Austrian Classical Period Opera, Keyboard, March for Orchestra, Miscellaneous, Opera, Orchestral, Sinfonia Concertante, Symphonic, Unknown Genre/Unspecified Instrumentation, Violin Concerto
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The Mozart Effect: Music For Children, Vols. 1-3
Manufacturer: Children's Group ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002134 Release Date: 1997-09-30 |
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Product Description
Studies prove that the music of Mozart has a powerful effect on the intellectual and creative development of children. Don Campbell, musician, teacher and author of the new book The Mozart Effect for Children and The Mozart Effect, has selected some of the best of Mozart's music to stimulate and inspire young minds. Based on up-to-date medical and psychological research in creativity and intelligence, the pieces on each recording have been carefully chosen by the author so that tempos, key signatures and textures of the music change with each selection in order to provide a rich listening and learning experience for children of all ages.Amazon.com
Two hundred years after Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's death, French physician Dr. Tomatis discovered a relationship between listening and learning. Remarkably, he found that children develop their listening ability in the womb. According to medical studies, we now know that the music of Mozart in particular has a profound effect on the human mind, body, and spirit. Working in accordance with this philosophy, internationally known teacher and musician Don Campbell wrote The Mozart Effect, a seminal book correlating music with health, well-being, and increased intelligence. Campbell's musical collection of the same name presents compositions carefully chosen for the benefit of children. Volume 1, "Tune Up Your Mind," is formulated to gently stimulate young minds. Volume 2, "Relax, Daydream, and Draw," includes excerpts from Symphony Nos. 6 and 18, and volume 3, "Mozart in Motion," a delightfully playful disc, includes an excerpt from The Magic Flute. --Paige La GroneCustomer Reviews:
Great CD's for children........2007-05-23
Eh..........2007-01-10
We Love These!!!.......2006-02-11
Bringforth the artist within by listening to Mozart.......2005-10-07
Absolute nonsense.......2005-03-06
"The Mozart Effect is an example of how science and the media mix in our world. A suggestion in a few paragraphs in a scientific journal becomes a universal truth in a matter of months, eventually believed even by the scientists who initially recognized how their work had been distorted and exaggerated by the media. Others, smelling the money, jump on the bandwagon and play to the crowd, adding their own myths, questionable claims, and distortions to the mix."
"The idea for the Mozart Effect originated in 1993 at the University of California, Irvine, with physicist Gordon Shaw and Frances Rauscher, a former concert cellist and an expert on cognitive development. They studied the effects on a few dozen college students of listening to the first 10 minutes of the Mozart Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major (K.448). They found a temporary enhancement of spatial-temporal reasoning, as measured by the Stanford-Binet IQ test. No one else has been able to duplicate their results. One researcher commented that the "very best thing that could be said of their [Shaw's and Rauscher's] experiment-were it completely uncontested-would be that listening to bad Mozart enhances short-term IQ" (Linton). Rauscher has moved on to study the effects of Mozart on rats. Both Shaw and Rauscher have speculated that exposure to Mozart enhances spatial-reasoning and memory in humans. "
Note that the only scientific tests were performed on college students.
If you want to listen to Mozart, great. Just buy a CD that does not insult your intelligence by making ridiculous claims.
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