It’s Never Over: New Year, New Music, Volume 2
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Is “older listening age” really a sign of nostalgia—or cognitive growth?
In this episode of The Forensic Lens Podcast, I revisit the idea of musical novelty in the streaming era. When younger listeners discover Fleetwood Mac, Jeff Buckley, or Radiohead for the first time, are they looking backward—or forming entirely new emotional timelines? Drawing from neuroscience research on music, memory, and dopamine-driven pattern recognition, I explore how the brain responds not to release dates, but to experience.
Music activates networks linking identity, emotion, and autobiographical memory. It can retrieve forgotten selves in dementia patients—and it can anchor new memories in those still becoming who they are. In a world where entire musical histories coexist on the same platforms, discovery no longer follows generational lines. The real distinction is not between old and new music, but between familiar and unfamiliar sound.
A song is never finished when it is released. It begins again with every first listen.
📖 Read the full article on Agham Road.
🌐 Learn more about my work here.
#TheForensicLens #MusicAndTheBrain #MusicAndMemory #BioculturalAnthropology #Neuroscience