Conditioning by Music
Part 2
Monday, July 27, 2009
By Dennis L. Cuddy, Ph.D.
NewsWithViews.com
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These types of popular songs help destroy the moral values of our nation. And once our moral values are destroyed, we will then descend into chaos and ruin just like all past civilizations that lost their moral bearings.
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With
the undermining of Biblical values through music, it was therefore not
surprising that the year after “Age of Aquarius” was released
as a single in 1969, Perry Como in 1970 recorded “It’s Impossible”
which became very popular despite its lyrics, “I would sell my
very soul and not regret it.” Similarly, in 1977 Debbie Boone
recorded the popular “You Light Up My Life,” with the lyrics,
“It can’t be wrong when it feels so right,” intimating
that how one feels about a female-male relationship is more important
than whether it might otherwise (e.g., morally) be wrong.
In
the late 1960s and through the 1970s, rock music was followed by “hard
rock.” Writing about this in Crisis in Christian Music
(2000), Dr. Jack Wheaton explained that “the repetitive, constant
loud backbeat” of the drummer, “the pulsating (at an ear-splitting
level), low-frequency vibrations, and the soaring, wailing, crying sounds
of the amplified guitar trigger major subconscious emotional responses
in the body, primarily stimulating aggressiveness, as well as providing
increasing, but difficult to control, energy.” He further related
that when this music triggers the listener’s fight-or-flight syndrome,
“the body is actually getting ‘high’ on its own internally-produced
drug (adrenaline), resulting in… an increased tendency to aggressive
and anti-social behavior.”
According
to Dr. David Noebel, this type of music has harmonic dissonance and
melodic discord, which violate man’s natural body rhythms. And
Dr. John Diamond, a New York City psychiatrist, some years ago studied
beats of over 20,000 recordings and concluded “that a specific
beat (‘stopped anapestic rhythm,’ which is contrary to our
natural body beats and rhythms) found in over half of the top hits of
any given week can actually weaken you…. It interferes with brain
wave patterns causing mental stress.”
With
the introduction of “hard rock” in the late 1960s, there
was a change in American values. Popular songs like the Rolling Stones’
“Under My Thumb” and their later album cover for “Black
and Blue” demeaned women. There was a corresponding dramatic rise
in homicides and suicides from the late 1960s and through the 1970s
in the U.S. In 1970, the popular movie “M.A.S.H” was released
with the even more popular TV series beginning in 1972. The theme song
for the movie and series is actually “Suicide Is Painless,”
and elementary school children in the U.S. were taught both the music
and lyrics, which inform students that “cheating is the only way
to win, the game of life is lost anyway, and suicide is painless.”
Musical
promotion of violence continued into the 1980s with groups like Guns
N’ Roses formed in 1985. Its 1988 album “GN’R Lies”
includes the lyrics “I used to love her but I had to kill her.”
GN’R (known for its cursing) also has an album with a rape scene
on it! The year after “GN’R Lies” was released, the
Journal of the American Medical Association (September 22,
1989) contained a report titled “Adolescents and their Music”
warning that teenagers’ fascination with heavy metal music may
be associated with premarital sex, drug use and Satanic activities.
Given
all of the above, it was not surprising that Tipper Gore in the January
8, 1990 Washington Post wrote: “A majority of children
surveyed by a Rhode Island Rape Crisis Center thought rape was acceptable.
In New York City, rape arrests of 13-year-old boys have increased 200%
in the past two years.” A few months later in mid-July 1990, a
landmark trial began in Reno, Nevada regarding the British heavy metal
rock group Judas Priest (formed in 1969) allegedly having a subliminal
message, “do it, do it,” on their album “Stained Glass,”
which supposedly led to the suicides of two teens who chanted “do
it, do it, do it,” before they shot themselves after hearing the
album. One of the teens survived long enough to say it was as though
the music controlled his actions, leaving him without a free will. He
also remarked, “It was like a self-destruct that went off. We
had been programmed.” Wilson Key, a Reno experimental psychologist
and author of four volumes on subliminal messages, testified that the
misspelled word “sucide” is hidden on the cover of the Judas
Priest album. The ability to control someone’s “will”
sounds like science fiction, but Dr. Robert Assagioli (who was a disciple
of Luciferian occultist Alice Bailey), the founder of Pyschosynthesis,
believed it is actually possible to train the “will.”
Through
the 1990s as heavy metal rock music was affecting our youth, evidence
mounted regarding its deleterious effects. Earlier research at Temple
Bell College in Denver had already indicated rock music could even kill
plants within a month. Then, in the August 10, 1997 Washington Times
article “Heavy Metal Makes Killer Mice,” one reads about
research by David Merrel. According to the article, Merrel reported
that “it was like the music dulled their senses. It shows point
blank that hard rock music has a negative effect all around. I had to
cut my project short because the hard-rock mice killed each other. None
of the classical mice did that at all!”
Through
the 1990s and into the 21st century, violence in music continued. The
headline in the May 18, 2009 Detroit News read: “Eminem
is the hottest ticket in town.” This is even though the rap artist
Eminem has sung about violence (e.g., murder, rape, etc.) against women.
Kimberly
Smith in Music and Morals (2005) has explained that what is
going on in music today is about “control.” Traditional
music, including traditional Christian music, is characterized by self-control,
but rock music, including “Christian rock,” causes a loss
of self-control.
Music
has been used to destroy our traditional Biblical values, conditioning
us to abandon self-control over our emotional impulses. And often the
conditioning mechanism isn’t obvious. Click on the highlighted
phrase “hidden, sometimes illicit message” in the ABC News
report, “Lewd Lyrics Hidden in Hit Songs” (March 24, 2009),
and it leads you to “Drug Drenched Lyrics No Music to Parents’
Ears” by Carla Williams (ABC News Medical Unit). The news report
quotes “Coke and rum; got weed on the ton,” and says “So
chime the lyrics of one of rapper 50 cents top singles in 2005. And
such provocative messages, including those about alcohol and drugs,
may well constitute a dominant theme in popular music.” The report
then indicated that Brian Primach at the University of Pittsburgh School
of Medicine and Prof. Lisa Merlo in the Division of Addiction Medicine
at the University of Florida “agreed that these messages have
potential to sway behaviors in younger listeners.” The report
revealed that 77% of rap music songs mentioned the use of illicit substances
and 37% of country music songs studied made such references.
These
types of popular songs help destroy the moral values of our nation.
And once our moral values are destroyed, we will then descend into chaos
and ruin just like all past civilizations that lost their moral bearings.
Click
here for part -----> 1
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