The Amazing Health Benefits of Singing (And They’re Backed by Science)

Woman singing

Image source, Getty Images

    • author, David Cox
    • Author title, BBC Future

It’s that time of year when the air begins to vibrate with angelic sounds, or resonate with the occasional powerful carol, as Christmas carols convey their indomitable festive joy.

But whether they realize it or not, these singers filling malls, train stations, nursing homes, and your street with upbeat songs, are also working to improve their health.

Singing has been discovered to offer a wide range of benefits – ranging from the brain to the heart – to those who practice it, especially if they do it in a group. It can bring people together, prepare our bodies to fight disease, and even suppress pain. Is it worth raising your voice to celebrate?

“Singing is a cognitive, physical, emotional and social act,” says Alex Street, a researcher at the Music Therapy Research Institute in Cambridge, who studies how music can help children and adults recover from brain injuries.

Psychologists have long marveled at how people who sing together can develop such a strong sense of social cohesion that even the most reserved singers unite in singing. Research has shown that complete strangers can form unusually close bonds after singing together for an hour.