🎙️ Welcome to The Quiet Footnote — that shadowy nook where books don’t just sit on shelves, they hum, waiting for the curious ear to lean in close.Today’s selection? Musicophilia by Oliver Sacks — not your average exploration of music, but a deep, lyrical journey into the ways melody and rhythm tangle with the brain. This isn’t just about playlists and preferences — it’s about the wild, often inexplicable ways music can heal, haunt, and hijack the mind.👉 Pull up that rickety chair. Let’s wander through tales of sudden musical obsessions, phantom symphonies conjured by damaged neurons, and the way a simple song can stir forgotten corners of memory and self. Sacks reminds us that music isn’t just entertainment — it’s medicine, mystery, and sometimes, pure madness.Because in a world that often treats music like background noise, the real wonder? It’s in realizing that every note carries a map of the mind — and sometimes, if we listen closely, a glimpse of the soul.