December 30, 2004
Nigel Helyer in Australia is making music out of DNA sequences, through a project "designed to establish a functional relationship between conventional Western musical scales and DNA sequences and produce a system for mixing and mutating musical form within a biological context." It's the method that is unique: "Rather than taking given DNA structures and rendering them as musical code, GeneMusik takes fragments of conventional Western melody and sequences them as DNA that is subsequently ‘bred’ and ‘mixed’ within bacterial cultures."
October 25, 2004
Natural Sound
Probably the best article about musicians' use of beta blockers to prepare for performance. Not particularly in-depth about the ethical issues, but perhaps that is because this phenomenon remains untouched in the bioethics literature.
Labels: anxiety, beta-blockers, music, off-label use, performance anxiety
October 17, 2004
Better Performances Through Chemistry
The New York Times reports in its Sunday "Arts and Leisure" Section about classical musicians using drugs to calm fears before performances. It has been an open secret for some time that doctors prescribe beta-blockers, as well as other drugs, to quell performance anxiety. This article reports that, in the classical music world at least, its use is ubiquitous. Some doctors have prescribed one-time use for nervous grooms or people scared to fly; but should they be routinely used by performers who find their calming effect improves their performance?
Labels: anxiety, beta-blockers, music, New York Times, off-label use, performance anxiety
