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Three studies on the effects of music on athletic ability, which have been accepted for publication in journals next year, show that James Brown, Steppenwolf or even Vivaldi can make you quicker, stronger and more focused during sport.
Research by Costas Karageorghis, a sports psychologist at Brunel University, suggests that the right music can lift a person’s athletic performance by as much as 20 per cent.
Dr Karageorghis found that athletes who ran while listening to “synchronous” music — when the beats fitted with the rhythm of body movement — could endure a fifth more exertion than those without.
Tunes heard “asynchronously” (as background music) also acted to arouse a person or calm nerves to enhance sporting performance by as much as 10 per cent. “Pre-task” music — heard before an event — was also highly effective at creating internal focus or raising an athlete to an optimum level of arousal.
Many sports stars have taken to listening to music, including the long-distance runner Haile Gebreselassie, the Olympic marksman Richard Faulds and the heavyweight boxer Audley Harrison. Gebreselassie, who has set 18 world records during his career, asked for Scatman, a techno track, to be played at a race in Birmingham where he set the world indoor record for 2,000 metres.
James Cracknell, the Olympic oarsman, found a different form of stimulation through music, famously sitting through a blast of Blood Sugar Sex Magik, an album by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, before helping Britain to win Gold at the Athens Olympics. Harrison, in contrast, has used Japanese classical music to help him to relax, focus and cast aside his big fight nerves.
According to Dr Karageorghis, the right tune can help anyone exercising at a gym to run faster on a treadmill or lift heavier weights.
His research, to be published in the Journal of Sports Sciences and the Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, “ shows that music is a powerful but often untapped resource for both sports’ competitors and exercise participants.”
The psychologist suggests four basic ways in which music can aid athletic performance. In repetitive exercise, such as running, it can narrow a performer’s attention and as a consequence divert attention away from sensations of fatigue. Music also alters arousal levels and can therefore be used as a form of stimulant prior to competition or as a sedative to calm over-anxious athletes.
A third benefit is found in synchronising rhythm and human movement to increase endurance, and it can also be used to enhance the learning of effective movement skills.
Dr Karageorghis said that gyms should consider playing different types of music to their members depending on the equipment they were using and their level of intensity. Individuals should also create their own playlist.
IN THE GROOVE
Haile Gebreselassie
Long-distance runner Listened to Scatman, fast techno track by Scatman John, while competing in 2,000 metres, with the beats of the music fitting to his world record pace
Audley Harrison
Olympic gold boxer. Listened to Japanese classical music to help to calm nerves
Andrew Murray
Tennis player Listened to Let’s Get It Started by Black Eyed Peas at Wimbledon
Iwan Thomas
400m British record holder Listened to Firestarter by The Prodigy before running to gain optimum intensity
Richard Faulds
Olympic gold marksman Listened to One Moment in Time by Whitney Houston for inspirational lyrics
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