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How to Work Better and Faster — Listen to the Same Song on Repeat All Day Long

About 10 years ago, I started listening to songs on repeat while doing creative work. I’ll listen to the same song for days at a time and often for the entire length of a project (weeks). Or sometimes I’ll listen to a slower song in the morning and maybe a faster song later in the day. I’ve discovered that this approach makes a significant impact on the quality and the volume of work I produce. This practice will work for designers, writers, programmers, or anyone who’s involved in intensely focused work.

Why is song repetition such a powerful tool?

Studies suggest that when you listen to music you like, the brain releases the chemical dopamine that can have positive effects on your mood. Fast music can actually increase your heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure, while slower music tends to have the opposite effect.¹

By listening to the same song on repeat, you are altering your physiology. Over time the song starts to fade into the background. That’s when you begin to transcend from actually listening to just feeling the music.

I’m using music to literally put myself into a trance-like state.

And that place is where I’m able to do my best work. Anything that helps me focus is…

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Written by Jeffrey Bates

Highly experienced creative director writing on design thinking, sports, and life. Design: jeffrebrands.com | For fun: createanddestroy.com

Responses (25)

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I totally do this:)
Saves time picking a new song or skipping the one I don’t like that YouTube picked for me :)

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I’m not auditory by nature. I work best in silence. Rarely, if ever, do I turn on the radio, or music from any source. That’s at home or in the car.
I do use up-beat songs if I’m sliding into depression. And then I have a few favourites I sing along…

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Perhaps not all but some instrumental tracks from guys at “Two Steps from Hell” are phenomenal. Always pump you up. I can listen to them on loop several times if not infinite.
This is even better when the project is two steps (usability testing and stakeholder review) from the ultimate release on Friday.

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