Live Music Makes Life Feel More Meaningful
The live music industry is booming. Even as ticket prices have climbed sharply and consumers face real cost of living pressures, attendance at concerts, music festivals, and live events continues to grow with roughly seven in ten eventgoers saying they prioritize experiences over material goods. As I have written about in previous newsletters, people across generations, and especially teens and young adults, are increasingly hungry for real-world experiences that connect them to others and to the physical world around them. Live music is one of the most powerful expressions of that impulse, and new research helps explain why.
Live music does something to us that recorded music, for all its accessibility and convenience, simply cannot replicate. It is not just about the music. It is about what happens when human beings gather together to share a musical experience. A recent paper published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin by Nicole Koefler and colleagues helps explain what that something is and why it matters for our psychological health.
Specifically, the researchers focused on a concept called collective effervescence, a term sociologist Emile Durkheim used to describe the psychological experience of group religious rituals. Collective effervescence refers to the simultaneous experience of feeling deeply connected to the people around you and sensing that something special, even sacred, is occurring.
In an initial study, participants were given a brief description of collective effervescence and asked to recall a group event where they experienced it, alongside a separate event where they felt nothing particularly special or sacred. The researchers asked participants to rate the degree to which music was present and central to each event. They found that music featured far more prominently in the collective effervescence events than in those where people felt nothing special or sacred.
In subsequent studies, the researchers recruited people who had recently attended live music events and assessed how their experiences related to their wellbeing. The pattern was consistent. Greater collective effervescence during the event was associated with a stronger sense of meaning in life in the moment and greater happiness a week after the show ended. It was also the strongest predictor of these outcomes, outperforming other intense concert experiences like awe. And when the researchers looked at what drove collective effervescence in the first place, feeling a bond with the artist, immersing yourself in the lyrics, and attending with friends all played a role.
As you might expect from an existential psychologist, I think it is crucial to emphasize the importance of the finding on meaning in life. Meaning is a fundamental psychological need, and people who have a strong sense of meaning in life report better mental and physical health, greater resilience, and higher life satisfaction. They are also more motivated to pursue their goals. Thus, attending a live music event where you feel that sense of shared connection with those around you can support your psychological wellbeing in ways that go far beyond a fun night out.
The real-world renaissance I mentioned at the outset is not just a random consumer trend. It is people seeking more authentic, tangible, in-person experiences to counterbalance the digital saturation of modern life. Live music is one powerful expression of that shift, alongside the growth of independent bookstores, boutique fitness studios, board game cafes, and crafting communities. To be clear, people are not abandoning digital technology. They are recognizing that technology alone cannot meet all of their psychological and social needs.
I think these findings also have important implications for mental health. Rather than turning inward and dwelling on our struggles, which our current culture too often encourages, we tend to do better psychologically when we direct our energy outward, into activities that connect us with others and with something larger than ourselves. This is what I call the outward action approach to mental health. Live music is a great example of outward action. It gets you out of your own head. It puts you in a physical space with other people who share your passion. It reminds you that you are part of something bigger.
This also matters at the societal level. One of the things I find most encouraging about the live music trend is that it creates spaces where people from different backgrounds, neighborhoods, and political persuasions can share something meaningful together. In a cultural moment defined by political polarization, digital fragmentation, and cultural pessimism, that kind of in-person shared experience is a vital resource. For example, research suggests that collective effervescence can help us build social cohesion and remind us of our common humanity.
We are fortunate to live in an era when so much music is available to us at the touch of a button. But no matter how technologically sophisticated our lives become, we remain physical, social, and spiritual creatures who need to gather together in person and share experiences that connect us to one another and to something that transcends the ordinary. So the next time your favorite artist comes to town, or a local band is playing at a nearby venue, go. Bring a friend. Lose yourself in the music. The science says it will do you good, and it just might do the world a little good too.
Have a great weekend!
Clay

