The reason the music you grew up with is "better" than new music
Updated | By Jacaranda FM
Your brain is actually hardwired to love the music you grew up with.
We have all experienced that feeling you get when you hear a song from your teenage years, especially if you have not heard it in a while.
It turns out there is a scientific reason why the songs you listened to while growing up still evoke deep emotions and nostalgia.
Psychologists have identified a phenomenon called the “reminiscence bump”.
This is a specific window where our experiences and the music we listen to become permanently linked to our identity.
The Reminiscence Bump
According to Melissa Davids from the South African College of Applied Psychology, that feeling we call nostalgia is actually a complex neurological process.
Davids explains: "Songs from our teenage years are encoded during a peak period of identity formation and emotional intensity, when the brain is especially sensitive to reward and memory consolidation. Through processes like autobiographical memory and the reminiscence bump, these songs become deeply tied to personal meaning, relationships, and formative experiences. As a result, hearing them later in life can reactivate not just the memory but the emotional state attached to that time in a more vivid way than music encountered in adulthood."
Why the music from your teenage years is “better”
While we often think our favourite songs from our youth were just "better", the reality is about timing.
Between the ages of 15 and 25, we experience a lot of "firsts".
During this stage, our brains are more sensitive, more adaptable, and produce a higher dopamine response to new things.
"Music enters the teenage brain like water into wet cement; it does not sit on the surface, it shapes the structure."
Why new music is not as good
By the time we reach adulthood, our identities are more settled and our emotional lives are more stable.
While we still enjoy new hits, they do not often attach themselves to the core of who we are in the same way.
As adults, we simply listen to music; as teenagers, we almost absorb it.
Mental health benefits of your older music
Experts have revealed that old playlists are actually good for you.
Research shows that revisiting music from your youth can:
- Lift your mood and lower anxiety
- Spark positive personal memories
- Help with memory recall as we get older
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