(Not original and found)
Plants can indeed be infected by music, provided that the music matches their taste. The music of Bach or Bedouin can make a withered rose or a shriveled radish look fresh and strong again, but crazy rock music will kill them. Experiments in the United Kingdom and the United States have proven that if shoots often grow with music, the root system and chlorophyll will increase. Discovered by American botanist George Smith. Corn and soybeans germinate particularly well after "listening" to Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue". Pumpkins prefer Haydn and Brahms, while melons prefer Schubert. His roses were obsessed with the 61st movement of Beethoven's Violin Concerto in D major, while the cacti considered Stravinsky their superstar. Experiments with petunia flowers showed that they loved the works of Bach, "Duke" Ellington, and Louis Armstrong. Heavy metal rock music cannot win the hearts of potted flowers. Instill this rhythm of pounding into the petunia, and its leaves will soon droop and die in four weeks at the latest. British scientist John Longstaff fed opera, concertos and other classical music to vegetables in his garden in London. He said: "They do grow faster than the vegetables in the neighbor's garden, and they taste better." His popular list is: carrots, kale and potatoes like to "listen" to the music of Verdi and Wagner, while cabbage, peas And lettuce grows best when "appreciating" the works of Mozart and Rossini. Only red beet is indifferent to everything. They seem to have no sense of music.