English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I need to know a good artist that I can play for my unborn baby. They say classical music is good..any recommendations

2007-02-07 04:05:05 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pregnancy & Parenting Pregnancy

16 answers

I have heard that classical music is good, so I would turn on the classical radio station in the car while I drove to get a variety of artists. I also read that it's good to introduce your baby to music you like as well, so they will be use to it. I like a variety of music, so I listened to it all while pregnant. I mainly selected softer music, like jazz, soft rock and country, but there was the occasional dance or rock song when the mood struck me. My daughter is 19 months now and loves music. She mostly listens to nursery rhymes, songs on the Disney Channel and Baby Einstein, but she likes a lot of different music too. She even loves jingles on commercials.

2007-02-07 04:26:06 · answer #1 · answered by Melissa B 5 · 0 0

"Remember the Mozart effect? In 1993, two researchers at UC Irvine studied the effects of listening to 10 minutes of a Mozart sonata, a "relaxation tape" or silence upon 36 college students. They reported, in a letter published in the journal Nature, that the students who listened to Mozart displayed a brief improvement of spatial-temporal intelligence, as measured by the Stanford-Binet IQ test.

Soon, books and CDs promoted Mozart as a sort of mental vitamin, all suggesting that listening to the composer made people smarter, more creative. Government programs in Tennessee and Georgia supplied parents of newborns with Mozart samplers. Florida mandated that all child-care facilities receiving state aid play at least half an hour of classical music daily. Devices were marketed to broadcast Mozart in utero.

The problem was other researchers could not replicate the UC Irvine results. To the contrary, other scientists determined that the Mozart effect, if it existed, was temporary, lasting no more than 15 minutes. A 2000 Harvard study, analyzing 50 years of research into whether listening to music boosted brain power or creativity, went further: It concluded there was no scientific evidence at all."

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/science/20030514-9999_mz1c14mind.html

Listen to whatever you enjoy, but those in-utero Mozart things are just marketing gimmicks.

2007-02-07 04:59:02 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes it is true, but not necessarily classical music - just any that is really soothing, soft and melodious.

Talk to your baby often and sing songs and rhymes and tell good stories and play with ur baby. It is really good for both of u.. u will realise later how ur baby 'knows' certain things that you often do or talk.

And it is recommended that you are not subjected to any hard sound or music as ur baby can hear thru your ears too.

2007-02-07 04:10:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

definitely relies upon on the way you decide on your infant to strengthen up... in case you decide on him/her to alter into : a universe-ruling mastermind at six years previous = classical music a metalhead = Liquid tension test (or Metallica or alter Bridge or in spite of) slutty (for a woman)/ gay (for a boy) = Kesha mushy, candy yet naïve and consistently getting harm = Bjork or the Corrs a hyperactive loopy guy or woman who bites = Excrementory Grindfuckers a pimp = Pitbull an fool = Twilight soundtrack. ... bleh i only made that crap up only % your fave variety of music, i doubt it impacts developement interior the womb xD voices are significant nevertheless, consistent with probability quite of having the newborn to take heed to music, refer to it

2016-09-28 13:25:16 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

they have cds for the womb in music stores, however I played regular old classical music, beethoven, mozart, also soothing new age music.

2007-02-07 04:08:39 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i listen to mexican music and i feel the baby really moving to it also things with good beats i play it all the time and i like the feeling of him move. you just got to find the right songs to listen to i would say stick with the kind you listen to yourself

2007-02-07 04:49:05 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Play something that you enjoy listening to. Weather it be rock and roll, rap, or country. If you play only classicial, your baby probably won't hear it outside of you since you don't listen to it. I know someone who's child wouldn't sleep unless they were listening to Kiss. Haha.

2007-02-07 04:12:58 · answer #7 · answered by itskatyo 3 · 2 0

the famous ones like Bach Mozart and Beethoven

2007-02-07 04:11:00 · answer #8 · answered by Natasha C 3 · 2 0

Mozart or Beethoven

Mozart has proven in numerous studies to aide in the development of brain cells and synapses (the connection between cells)

2007-02-07 04:08:11 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Mozart or Bach would be good, anything soothing. They have "Baby Mozart" DVD's for after it is born too.

2007-02-07 04:08:30 · answer #10 · answered by Ladythang 3 · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers