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I kind of thought the research project might have been to rate the relative intensity of the rush for a top ten spine tinglershttps://www.futilitycloset.com/2019/04/11/spine-tinglers/ In a 2009 study of responses to music, neuroscientist Valorie Salimpoor and her colleagues asked participants to bring in 3 to 5 pieces of “intensely pleasurable instrumental music to which they experience chills.” Then they measured their physiological response as they listened. They found that the “chills” effect is real — when the subjects reported that their pleasure at the music was highest, so was their sympathetic nervous system activity, a measure of emotional arousal.
One byproduct of the study is a list of more than 200 chills-inducing moments in music of various genres, with precise timestamps of the crucial points:
Composer/Artist Title Chills
BeethovenPiano Sonata No. 17 in D Minor (“The Tempest”) 5:33
Mahler Symphony No. 1 – Movement 4 5:42, 9:57, 15:15
Charles Mingus Fables of Faubus 0:20, 7:10
Stan GetzRound Midnight 1:26
Pink FloydShine on You Crazy Diamond 5:00
PhishYou Enjoy Myself 10:50
Cannonball AdderleyOne for Daddy-O 0:40
Los Angeles Guitar QuartetCongan 2:09
CrowfootLarks in May 0:10, 2:00
Howard ShoreThe Breaking of the Fellowship (film score) 0:10, 0:55
Dave Matthews Band#34 1:40
The DissociativesParis Circa 2007 Slash 08 1:30
Brad MehldauKnives Out 4:45, 7:25
Explosions in the SkyFirst Breath After Coma 2:25, 3:30, 8:10
The full list is here (Table_S1). (Note too that the timestamps relate to a particular recording, so consider them approximate in e.g. classical music.)
(Valorie N. Salimpoor, et al., “The Rewarding Aspects of Music Listening Are Related to Degree of Emotional Arousal,” PloS One 4:10 [2009], e7487.)
full list - https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/435833 you'll know a few