Overt the last 20 or so years here on RD, I’ve mentioned the theory of Peak Musical Awareness (PMA), which gained traction when I was programming music radio in the 70s. Basically, it said that for most people (your mileage may vary), the ages of 16-22 where when the greatest awareness of pop music took place.
Now, there’s some scientific research. The dates have shifted slightly, but the concept is the same.
Essential pull-quote:
Now, there’s some scientific research. The dates have shifted slightly, but the concept is the same.
Essential pull-quote:
“Research suggests that after about twenty-five, the window narrows. Not because the brain stops learning, but because the type of learning changes. The brain shifts from building foundational identity structures to refining and maintaining them. New music can still be pleasurable. It can still be meaningful. But it arrives at a house that’s already been framed, wired, and roofed. The music of adolescence arrived while the foundation was being poured.”
Psychologists explain why the songs you loved between thirteen and eighteen feel more emotionally powerful at sixty than anything you've heard since — it's not nostalgia, it's how memory and identity were being built simultaneously - The Expert Edito
The songs that shaped you at fifteen didn't just soundtrack your youth — they became permanent architecture in the brain you were building at the time, and no song heard after twenty-five can replicate that construction.
experteditor.com.au