I have conducted a controlled trial to determine whether music affects pump intensity. Before anyone asks: yes, it is controlled. I had a control group. The control group was Subject B pumping in silence. That is what control means.
METHODOLOGY
Subjects:
- Subject A (myself): 4 years training experience, pumps 5x/week, highly pump-sensitive
- Subject B (my roommate Derek): 1 year training experience, pumps "when he feels like it," agreed to participate in exchange for me doing the dishes for a month
- Subject C (Derek's friend Tyler): 3 years training experience, agreed to participate because Derek asked, does not fully understand what a pump is
Protocol: Each subject performed 3 sets of 12 reps on bicep curls using the same weight (25 lb dumbbells), on two separate days. Day 1: with music (my playlist, 140–160 BPM). Day 2: in silence. PPI was self-reported after each set on a 1–10 scale.
Blinding: The trial was not blinded because the subjects could hear whether music was playing. I acknowledge this limitation.
Results:
| Subject | Music PPI (avg) | Silence PPI (avg) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| A (me) | 8.7 | 6.2 | +2.5 |
| B (Derek) | 5.0 | 5.0 | 0.0 |
| C (Tyler) | 7.3 | 4.8 | +2.5 |
Analysis: Music increased PPI in 2 of 3 subjects (66.7%). Subject B (Derek) showed no difference, which I attribute to the fact that Derek does not care about pumping, does not care about this study, and was visibly on his phone during the silence condition. Tyler showed strong results, possibly because he was listening to music he liked (my playlist). I did not ask Tyler if he liked my playlist. In retrospect, this is a confound.
Conclusion: Music probably helps the pump. n=3 is small but it is three times larger than n=1, which is the standard in this forum. I welcome peer review.