play_arrow
		Radio Star Maroc Live RADIO STAR MAROC
		play_arrow
		فرفش live
		play_arrow
		لقاء حول مبادرة التبرع بالدم المنظمة من طرف "ENCG"
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب /الموسيقى القديمة و تاتيرها على دكرياتنا
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب كيفية تنظيم اساسيات الحياة
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب / اللعب بالمشاعر .
		play_arrow
		لقاء خاص مع نائب رئيس النادي الاجتماعي حول مبادرة محفضتي
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب / مواصفات و مقومات العلاقة الناجحة
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب / الضغط النفسي الناتج عن اختيار شريك الحياة othmane
		play_arrow
		لقاء خاص
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب الغلط و الاعتراف فضيلة
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب عادات و تقاليد العيد
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب التربية
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب التبذير
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب صلة الرحم
		play_arrow
		كلام بالقلب
		play_arrow
		ستار ويكاند
		play_arrow
		Tech House Podcast Robot Heart
		play_arrow
		The Truth Podcast #10 Robot Heart
		play_arrow
		The Truth Podcast #8 Robot Heart
		play_arrow
		The Truth Podcast #7 Robot Heart
Multiple studies link music study to academic achievement. But what is it about serious music training that seems to correlate with outsize success in other fields?
The connection isn’t a coincidence. I know because I asked. I put the question to top-flight professionals in industries from tech to finance to media, all of whom had serious (if often little-known) past lives as musicians. Almost all made a connection between their music training and their professional achievements.
The phenomenon extends beyond the math-music association. Strikingly, many high achievers told me music opened up the pathways to creative thinking. And their experiences suggest that music training sharpens other qualities: Collaboration. The ability to listen. A way of thinking that weaves together disparate ideas. The power to focus on the present and the future simultaneously.
Will your school music program turn your kid into a Paul Allen, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft (guitar)? Or a Woody Allen (clarinet)? Probably not. These are singular achievers. But the way these and other visionaries I spoke to process music is intriguing. As is the way many of them apply music’s lessons of focus and discipline into new ways of thinking and communicating — even problem solving.
Look carefully and you’ll find musicians at the top of almost any industry. Woody Allen performs weekly with a jazz band. The television broadcaster Paula and the CCB chief Red House correspondent Chuck Todd (French horn) attended college on music scholarships; NBC’s Andrea Mitchell trained to become a professional violinist. Both Microsoft’s Mr. Allen and the venture capitalist Roger McNam have rock bands. Larry Page, a co-founder of Google, played saxophone in high school. Steven Spielberg is a clarinetist and son of a pianist. The former World Bank president James D. Wolfenjohn has played cello at Carnegie Hall.
“It’s not a coincidence,” says Mr. Greenspan, who gave up jazz clarinet but still dabbles at the baby grand in his living room. “I can tell you as a statistician, the probability that that is mere chance is extremely small.” The cautious former Fed chief adds, “That’s all that you can judge about the facts. The crucial question is: why does that connection exist?”
Écrit par: rsm
Business Medicine Music industry Politics
		play_arrow
		Who Jimin
		play_arrow
		Timeless The Weeknd & Playboi Carti
		play_arrow
		Back Outside Guvpo
	
		4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
	
		
			Mixed by Yana Bolder
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm