Do you run
faster, or happier, when listening to music?
Two runners, journalist Matt Kurton and Sean Blair from Audiofuel, debate whether music offers valuable motivation or a dangerous distraction
Two runners, journalist Matt Kurton and Sean Blair from Audiofuel, debate whether music offers valuable motivation or a dangerous distraction
Matt Kurton: 'I take much more notice of what's going on
around me and of the way my body is working'
Several years ago, blogging here about training for the
London Marathon, I wrote a post comparing running without music to watching a
film with the sound turned off. At the time, music was a fundamental part of my
running routine: I was no more likely to head out of the door without my iPod
than I was to go running in a spacesuit.
But then, one day, without really knowing why, I went for a
run without music. The next day I did the same thing. A week later, I was
halfway around a 15k route before I realised that I hadn't even thought about
picking up my iPod – and a couple of years on, I couldn't even tell you where
it is.
From a performance point of view, I know I may not be doing
myself any favours. After all, plenty of studies have shown that music
increases concentration, lowers perception of effort, provides ongoing stimulus
and generally leaves you feeling more positive. Put on a pair of headphones,
the thinking goes, and running feels easier and more enjoyable, so you get
better at it. The only bad thing researchers seem to be able to say about
running with music is that you might damage your hearing if you turn it up too
loud, and the solution to that one seems fairly obvious.
But, like most non-elite athletes, performance gains are
only one small part of why I run. For me – much as I love to see my times drop
– it's more about the joy of running for its own sake than it is about constant
improvement. I'm sure those lab-based test results are true, but I'm not sure
they really matter to me.
So now I'm listening to birdsong and rainfall rather than
Bill Withers and Radiohead, I don't feel like I'm missing out. I'm still
focused and motivated, and I'm happy too, not least because I no longer spend
half of each run swearing at the headphones that have just fallen out of my
ears.In fact, the longer I have run without music, the more music has started
to seem like a barrier to running, rather than an enhancement. I take much more
notice of what's going on around me and of the way my body is working. I'd feel
cut off if I raced or trained with headphones on now, and I'd also be less likely
to notice if I was landing strangely, or if my breathing was tight.
Sports scientists differentiate between runners who are
"associators" – people who prefer to focus inwardly during a run –
and "dissociators" – people who spend their runs looking for ways to
forget what they're putting themselves through. But I think running without
music actually helps me flit between both states. It gives me space to explore
the world around me and to explore whatever is going on in my head.
So I've come to think that music acts fundamentally as a
distraction. And if I hated running, that might make sense – but I don't. I
love it. And whether I'm sliding through mud, or sweating as the sun rises, or
tearing down a rutted hill, or desperately trying to keep up with the guy at
the track who used to leave me for dead, I don't want anything to interfere
with that sense of pure pleasure.
Sure, my interval sessions might suffer because I'm not
listening to Rage Against the Machine while I do them, but I'll live with that.
Running for me means freedom. It means a clear head. And, over the past few
years, it's come to mean a rare and reliable chance for genuine peace and
quiet, too.
Sean Blair: 'Music helps a majority of runners enjoy their
exercise'
Running with music is an emotive subject. Some love it,
others hate it. But the facts are that running with music helps a majority of
runners enjoy their exercise. A Runner's World survey (of 3,523 runners)
revealed that 75% of respondents were "for running with music", while
other surveys show even higher results.
The science is more revealing. Professor Andy Lane, a sports
psychologist from the University of Wolverhampton (and a three-hour marathon
runner himself) undertook a project seeking to understand the effectiveness of
music to help (1,100) runners regulate their positive and negative emotions.
The findings showed motivating music helped improve performance.
In another research project at John Moores University, 12
people rode an indoor bike at a pace they could sustain for 30 minutes while
listening to a song of their own choice. In the second trial they rode again
with the tempo of the music variously increased or decreased by 10% without the
subjects knowledge.
The findings showed riders' heart rate and mileage decreased
when the tempo was slowed, while they rode a greater distance, increased their
heart rate and enjoyed the music more at the faster tempo. Though the
participants thought their workout was harder at the more upbeat tempo, the
researchers found that when they exercised to faster-paced music: "the
participants chose to accept, and even prefer, a greater degree of
effort".
Professor Costas Karageorghis from Brunel University, a
respected authority on the subject, says: "in some instances we have seen
performance benefits of up to 15%. As well as enhancing performance, music
lowers the perception of effort. It dulls or masks some of the pain associated
with training. We know from scanning the brain that when athletes are played
loud upbeat music there is an increase in activity in the ascending reticular
activating system."
But, of course, music is often used in a haphazard fashion –
leaving your iPod on shuffle could serve up a vast range of music that might
help or hinder a run. So how do you make sure your playlist will help your
performance? Lane suggests there are five conditions that runners might
consider: Tempo, genre or vibe, lyrics, the memory triggers the music can make
and finally the structure or compilation of the tracks.
Uptempo, upbeat tunes with motivating lyrics that trigger
positive emotions should, naturally, make you feel great. Classic running songs
such as Chariots of Fire or the Rocky theme tune may do the trick.
But there is another role MP3s can play in helping people
run better. By adding coaching to the music, we at Audiofuel have found runners
are willing to follow instructions that improve running form – vital for
staying injury free. They may speed up while interval training, or slow down –
taking walk breaks during long marathon training sessions when necessary.
Having a coach, or indeed a world champion, yell at you to hold your form for
just 60 seconds more can really make a big difference – and after all, holding
strong for the final 60 seconds of a three-minute hard interval could mean a
50% increase in performance.
Surveys, research and anecdotes all show that running and
music rock. Some still hate it for themselves and that's absolutely fine. But
for purists who look down on people running with headphones, consider this: we
know people don't exercise enough largely because they don't enjoy it. So if
music can help people to run, or run for longer, then music is contributing to
the health of the nation, and that is worth a more than a sneer. Perhaps
instead a smile and a cheer.
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