4.0 Article

Does music help regulate depressive symptoms for fans of violently themed music?

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY OF MUSIC
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 1296-1311

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/03057356211044200

Keywords

depression; emotion; mood regulation; music; violence

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP160101470]

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Fans of violently themed music are more likely to report negative emotional responses to their preferred music, with depressive symptoms predicting these responses and the use of the discharge mood regulation strategy. Negative emotional responses were not reduced by the discharge strategy, but may still have other benefits for fans.
Fans of extreme metal and rap music with violent themes, hereafter termed violently themed music, predominantly experience positive emotional and psychosocial outcomes in response to this music. However, negative emotional responses to preferred music are reported to a greater extent by such fans than by fans of non-violently themed music. We investigated negative emotional responses to violently themed music among fans by assessing their experience of depressive symptoms, and whether violently themed music functions to regulate negative moods through two common mood regulation strategies: discharge and diversion. Fans of violent rap (n = 49), violent extreme metal (n = 46), and non-violent classical music (n = 50) reported depressive symptoms and use of music to regulate moods. Participants listened to four one-minute excerpts of music in their preferred genres and rated negative emotional responses to each excerpt (sadness, tension, anger, fear). There were no significant differences between ratings of depression between groups, but depressive symptoms predicted negative emotional responses to music across all groups. Furthermore, depression ratings predicted the use of the mood regulation strategy of discharge in all groups. The discharge strategy did not reduce (or exacerbate) fans' negative emotional responses, but may nevertheless confer other benefits. We discuss implications for the psychosocial well-being of fans of violently themed music.

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