Building Community With Music
November 2, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
I have heard rumor that drum circles could kill the revolution. Wow! We are so powerful! As a drummer who drums in a circle with other drummers, I almost resent that. But I understand. I studied very specific, very traditional drum rhythms from West Africa. It is very precise and beautiful, if you know what you’re doing. Drum circles are often a large group of people, sitting side by side, playing alone. It has groove, but no structure. I like the structure of music. I live like jazz is a verb. How do these two sides get along?
For the Occupy Boise Bazaar, we did a facilitated circle with these guidelines:
1. Everyone is welcome. This is 100% inclusive! It is not about your drumming skills, it’s about your unity skills.
2. You Got The Beat – you were born with it. Begin with a pulse. Join in. The song is the most cherished presence in the room. This is about building a strong, cohesive beat. Make it sound like one drum.
3a. Speak UP! Without the constriction of you head, play your drum. Speak with your hands what’s filling you up. Be honest. Terribly honest. Don’t put words on it in your head, just play it like you mean it. Say what you have to say and be done. We will know you are done when you re-join the pulse.
3b. LISTEN. We honor each other by listening to what they have to say. Your responsibility here is to maintain a solid beat. if you cannot hear the lead drummer, you are playing too loud.
4. Drumming is a Metaphor
The group built a solid vibrating foundation, and everyone took a turn playing louder than everyone else. After the last person played, it sort of burst into a really great song. It was joyful and musical. We built a circle of trust where no one was greater or less than any other. We started out on common ground; that being the ultimate foundation. After we were unified, each person was given the opportunity to speak and be heard, with the entire body supporting them in saying it.
The jam that followed was as spontaneous as a drum circle, but with intention, direction and trust. We were all in it together. If we listen to each other, we can build a song. If we listen, we can build a community, and if we can build a community, we can build a nation.
So we build a song….
Filed under Playing Together, Uncategorized · Tagged with Alternatives to Violence, Building Community through Music, playing in public!, Rhythmic Music making
HealthRhythms….
June 1, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
Published Research Summary
Numerous research studies have been published in peer reviewed journals which demonstrate the health & wellness benefits of our research-based HealthRHYTHMS Recreational Music-Making (RMM) protocol. HealthRHYTHMS Group Empowerment Drumming is Remo’s internationally acclaimed research-based RMM program and is the basis for this research.
IMPACT ON IMMUNE SYSTEM – Strengthens the Immune System (2001)
A healthy immune system is the key component to preventing infectious diseases. We are all exposed to millions of germs every day, so our reliance on our own immune system to fight off most potential infections is indisputable.
What do we mean it can strengthen the immune system? The study of 111 HealthRHYTHMS Group Empowerment Drumming participants showed a statistically significant increase in natural killer cell activity after a one-hour group session. Natural Killer cells (NK) are the white blood cells that seek out and destroy cancer and virally infected cells. Additionally, the protocol appears to reverse specific neuroendocrine and neuroimmune patterns of change associated with the classic stress response. Read the Abstract ~ Read Remo Belli’s Interview with Researcher, Barry Bittman, MD
EMPLOYEE BURNOUT & TURNOVER REDUCTION – Improves Mood States and Reduces Burnout (2003)
Working in the long-term care environment can be very stressful. Lower employee stress and turnover rates translate into better care for residents and cost savings for employers. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) estimates there is an annual turnover rate of between 70 to 100 percent in nursing homes (Wilner 1999).
In this 6-session (HealthRHYTHMS) study of 112 long-term care workers 46% demonstrated significant mood improvement. When follow-up testing was done 6 weeks after the end of the study, the improvement in mood had continued to grow increasing to 62%. Based upon what is already known from previous studies of factors that influence an employee’s decision to quit, an independent team of economic-impact analysts projected these improvements would result in an 18.3% reduction in turnover. When follow-up was done with this facility the annual turnover experienced was actually reduced even more than these projections. Read the Abstract
REDUCING STUDENT DROP-OUT RATE – Retains Students: Mood Improvement & Burnout Reduction (2004)
In July 2007, a report released by the PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Health Research Institute found that though the average nurse turnover rate in hospitals was 8.4%, the average voluntary turnover for first-year nurses was 27.1%. (GIH, 2008) Drop-out rates for nursing schools are rising further compounding this problem.
In this study the mood states of 75 first year associate degree nursing students were evaluated including: tension/anxiety, depression/dejection, anger/hostility, vigor/activity, fatigue/inertia and confusion/bewilderment. In spite of the fact that being required to participate in the study added additional time requirements to their schedule a 28.1% improvement in total mood disturbance was reported. Analysts project that these reductions in burnout and improvements in mood would likely reduce drop-out rates. This has the potential to positively impact the number of nurses completing nursing school and entering the nursing profession. Read the Abstract
GENOMIC IMPACT – Reverses Stress on the Genomic Level (2005)
“Stress is really a component of every disease,” says James Rosenbaum, MD.
This groundbreaking study published in the February 2005 issue of the international research journal Medical Science Monitor shows for the first time that playing a musical instrument can reverse multiple components of the human stress response on the genomic level. We know from previous studies that HealthRHYTHMS Group Empowerment Drumming Protocol (RMM) reduces stress, burnout, improves mood states and boosts the immune system. This study looked at the effects of Recreational Music Making (RMM) at the genomic level and demonstrated not simply a reduction in stress but a reversal in 19 genetic switches that turn on the stress response believed responsible in the development of common diseases. This study also “extends our understanding of individualized human biological stress responses on an unprecedented level”.(Bittman, B., 2005) Read the Abstract
CORPORATE EMPLOYEE WELLNESS BENEFITS – Strengthens the Immune System of Corporate Employees (2007)
Growing evidence linking job stress to illness emphasizes the importance of finding an effective means of stress management. This study of Corporate Employees in Japan was conducted to assess whether or not this wellness strategy demonstrated a positive effect on stress biology in the corporate environment.
HealthRHYTHMS has significant potential for utilization in the corporate wellness environment. (Masatada, W., Koyama, M., Utsuyama, M., Bittman, B., Kitagawa, M., Hirokawa, K., 2007) Read the Abstract
CREATIVITY & BONDING IN SENIORS – Recreational Music-Making Inspires Creativity & Bonding in Long-Term Care Residents
Bittman, B., Bruhn, K., Lim, P., Neve, A., Stevens,C. Knudsen, C. , 2003
This study demonstrates the efficacy of recreational music-making as a means of inspiring creativity and helping long term care residents bond. Residents reported that RMM activities produced far more favorable effects, when compared with antidepressants or mood-stabilizing drugs.
To test this hypothesis, two real-world laboratories were established at Wesbury United Methodist Retirement Community, Meadville, Pa., a facility with independent living, skilled nursing, assisted living, and memory support (skilled and assisted); and Fredericka Manor, Chula Vista, CA., a retirement campus with independent living, assisted living, and skilled nursing, including 60 beds for persons with dementia.
While ongoing RMM programs are currently offered at both facilities, the data collection period extended from 2002 through 2003. A total of 550 seniors participated in the study. All subjects (or family members when appropriate) signed informed consents, and the protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board for Human Studies of Meadville Medical Center. The program was conducted by an interdisciplinary facilitation team that included a physician, two music therapists, a music teacher, musicians, and members of the facilities’ activities staffs. The program included a Yamaha Clavinova Keyboard assisted drum circle which followed the HealthRHYTHMS Protocol.
Resident Observations: After completion of the program, many residents noted the immediate benefits of creating connections with staff and other residents. Participation in just one RMM session often promoted identifiable and meaningful connections. The predominant conclusion was that there are no “strangers” at the end of an RMM session. Several residents remarked that their ability to more effectively deal with the loss of a loved one or friend was enhanced through RMM sessions. The acknowledgement of a person who had recently passed on served as an effective means for honoring an important relationship through empathetic group
support. A number of participants commented that RMM positively influenced their overall perspectives and expectations for living in a long term care environment. In addition, residents reported that RMM activities produced far more favorable effects, when compared with antidepressants or mood-stabilizing drugs. Read the Abstract
QUALITY OF LIFE IMPROVEMENTS IN AT-RISK ADOLESCENTS – HealthRHYTHMS Adolescent Protocol is a catalyst for quality of life improvement
Despite the devotion of significant resources to rehabilitate juvenile delinquents (youth who have committed offenses that would be considered criminal in adults)a limited number of effective, replicable, evidence-based treatment strategies exist, which are supported by peer-reviewed research. This new research published in Advances Journal demonstrates significant improvements in these youths through the use of the HealthRHYTHMS adolescent protocol. In fact this is the first strategy we are aware of which may actually hold hope for reducing what some refer to as “the columbine effect” which has driven so many adolescents to commit horrible violent acts. (Instrumental Anger)
“This is an accessible, affordable and sustainable strategy that can positively impact juvenile rehabilitation.” Barry Bittman, MD
GUEST POST: it’s not about drumming
May 18, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
…it’s about connecting.
seems like most folks understand how primal a drum is. it is so much so, that most i’ve met – and i mean most - have some sense of their own rhythm and can naturally express something in rhythm with others, even if it is something as simple as the pulse.
that is where i started. the pulse. that was my level of understanding when i went to my first big drum gathering. it was an open circle where apparently everyone interested was welcome. i was at first amazed at what i witnessed. i guess there were 100 people or more, many with drums, some with sticks and bells, some clapping or vocalizing and some dancing. i found myself looking for a leader, something to explain how all these people sounded so good together. i walked the entire perimeter, listening while the rhythm seemed to morph as new drums came into my hearing range and other left it. i thought, “wow! this is really something i’ve never seen before, like some kinda democracy better than any we could contrive.” these folks all sounded great together and everyone was speaking at the same time. so, i kneeled down over the small drum i had borrowed and started pulsing. it was literally what i knew, but as i did that i could feel the connection. as i listened i could hear how my pulse fit within the context of the larger sound. i was participating at my level with something much larger than me – and it was good! i felt connected in a way that i had never before felt. as i sunk into that feeling of connectedness, i realized all these people must be experiencing something very similar; that they too must feel connected in a special way. everyone appeared happy, joyful and open. wow.
throughout that weekend, i experienced lots more drumming and decided that this was something i wanted more in my life. i came home and came up with a drum and started inviting friends to play. one thing led to another and soon enough the full moon drum circle at farmer brown’s was born. in the early days of those gatherings i think most everyone coming understood about connecting. see, in the early days there was the full moon, there was food; vegetarian was encouraged, as many of the folks open to such connecting also enjoyed the idea of sharing healthy food – and there was rhythm. i don’t think most of us knew much about rhythm (except that natural part we all share), we all had to listen and keep trying until we came together, but we always seemed to come together. to connect. drumming together connects us in a deeper way.
then i met a teacher who knew amazing things about a drum and i learned one or two. i found it fun to actually understand more than just pulse and improvise. to be able to fill in between the spaces and know where i was related to that pulse increased my confidence. i found it easier when i went to a gathering to play more expressively, to join in with more of my voice. well, that turned out to be the beginning of a process of learning many more things, one small step at a time gaining a rhythmic vocabulary. during that same period of time, hundreds of people around boise were having their first experience at the full moon gatherings. the drum swept in like a wave and seemed to have a life all its own. it was right about then i first noticed a small rip in the fabric, because it was right about then that others like me, who had been learning things started to clash a little with those who were new to this drumming thing.
see, when you learn a thing a natural progression is that you want to show others you have learned a thing. in hindsight, this is where it got real tricky. showing and sharing works really well in the right situations, as it can inspire and encourage others to learn more. but, i soon learned that showing the things you know in the wrong situations can cause others to respond in a negative fashion. knowing things changes things. i think it affects most the way you listen. knowing things and being with group of others who know the same kind of things shows you how to better listen for ‘depth’… to increase your skills, your precision, your performance. knowing things and being with group of others who don’t know the same things requires listening for ‘breadth’. i believe for most of us who think we know things, learning to listen this way is at first difficult, as our focus is most often on depth. conversely, it is easy to listen for breadth as a beginner. if you want to join in it may all you have to work with! as a beginner you are still relatively unaware of the depth…. and someone who knows a thing can appear showy, selfish and uncooperative to a group of people who just want to play together. it is communicated, often times at subtle levels that few notice, but it is communicated. when you know a thing and don’t understand this or, worse yet don’t care to refine your listening skills to include breadth, you are just asking for a negative response to your showing of that thing. in those cases one would do better becoming a teacher or performer, where the situation is more clearly defined – and where depth is more the focus and intention.
after (quite some time now of) seeing that drum wave recede in the same mysterious manner that it grew i understand better what happened and why. i see that as much as i grew rhythmically and musically and as much as i really appreciate depth in a thing… i also desire breadth in things. i want to further refine my listening skills and find ways to include, not exclude. the drum has universal primality. it has the ability to connect like nothing i’ve ever experienced. it can also divide. the difference is in the listening.
see, for me it’s about connecting, not about drumming.
[this is an article written by Rick Thom son]
Filed under General, Playing Together · Tagged with Building Community through Music, New Drummers, Playing!!, Reflections from Others
Every Ability. Everyone.
April 24, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
It is awkward for me to say that “I teach drumming.” I really don’t teach that. I share what I know from my experience, how to make music with people with instruments that have only two notes: on and off. I share techniques, patterns, ways to build a rhythm song, adding their instrument’s voice in the time and space framework the group has established… I remind people to listen to the beat and hopefully, help them find the confidence to express themselves on a rhythm instrument with other people. [As playing alone is called 'practice'].
I share “rhythmic-music-making” with children – babies and their parents, grade-school aged kids, adults and the “people who come as they are.” Euphemistically and practically described as “special needs.” [I squirm those terms, too. Who doesn't have special needs? Doesn't every child deserve a special education? Another term - "disabled" cracks my classes of special needs kids up. Nary a one of them has ever told me they have no rhythm, or tell me they can't play because they don't know how. Even before they have tried. I tell them about those responses from adults I invite to play and they say, "Ha! and they call US disabled!"]
In my adapted classes, I don’t try to get folks to play one of the West African rhythms I share in other classes. I don’t really try to get them to do anything. We just play together in a musical environment. It’s loud and noisy and messy and joyful and engaging and spontaneous and everyone is absolutely successful.
One of the fine and humbling artifacts I realized is that, if the way other people do things does not work for me, I need not have a great amount of strife trying to figure out what is wrong with me that I cannot get it. I simply find a way that does. Simple. I mean, if the shoes don’t fit, there is no need to blame my feet….
The S.T.E.P. classes – along with my other adapted classes – are the best of what I can be a part of. These are young people who “come as they are”. They come with Autism and Asperger’s and Down’s and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, and CP and names and jobs and intentions and relationship issues and life desires…..
As far as I can tell, we all come as we are. I am grateful they take me as I am.
We played Friday, taking turns being the dunun lead. The dununs – the big bass drums that are the foundation to the West African rhythms I learned – are a powerful ground the hand drums can dance to and all around. I guided only by asking them to start with a steady pulse. After that, go nuts! But try to keep the pulse strong. Sometimes it goes that way, sometimes it is pretty random and jammy. Someone in the group holds a pulse; either me or an aide. It is home. It gives us a touchstone… I had set up a little kit that could be played with sticks [unlike the hands-only drums], with a few cowskin drums, a tambourine, the krin and a bell I think. Each kid took a turn. The last person in the circle was their teacher. She was – like many ‘typical’ adults – reluctant. The kids were incessant; drumming and chanting her name. Finally, she got to the sticks and completely gave herself to all of us and the music.
These kids have so much to share with others about fearlessness. What can you do that is wrong when we are all here together to play?
I have no reason to call myself the teacher…..
Filed under "Special Populations", Music with Kids, Playing Together · Tagged with Building Community through Music, Class Notes, Drumming with kids, Playing!!, students
Playing forward….
March 11, 2011 by · Leave a Comment
I am grateful… making music with others – especially showing other people that they are music makers – is truly a reward in itself. I spend most of my time and resources doing just that. It is worth every breath, every moment, every muscle. This morning I had one of my adapted classes at the Fort Boise Community Center. A young woman asked, “What are you going to teach us?” ”Nothing.” I said. “You already know how to play music. I am just going to remind you.”
They remembered! One young man took a giant beautiful dununba, and without suggestion, began to play a steady deep pulse. Whoa, baby! That’s all I need! I matched his beat with bass notes on my djembe and the room immediately settled in time for the song to begin.
I want to let you know that this is a room filled with around 20 young adults [19 -25] with “disabilities” – Down’s, Autism… conditions, symptoms, complications, behaviors that distinguish them from “Typical”. Everyone in the room was playing to this pulse. [I did have to encourage the aides who believed they were there to observe. It is never a baby, a child or a person who 'comes-as-they-are' that tells me they cannot play a drum.]
We built the rest of the hour from there. Always the same. Always different. Start with a pulse, add your voice, your joy, your frustration, your day. Make the song we’re playing our own. A couple girls got up to dance. The kid on the tambourine rocked! The young man whose expression does not change, smiled. They laughed and drummed and hooted and cheered. It is worth everything to play this way.
I have been devoted to this sharing caring play time music fest for years. A few days ago, I received a financial gift. In my world, it was a really BIG gift. I am not a non-profit, so the donation of money and instruments really is a stringless Gift. The giver doesn’t get a tax break for it. It is encouragement to continue on and the means to do so. What my friends ‘paid for’ was my ability to donate several hours to a couple of classes of 5th graders, and still be able to pay some bills. They enabled me to purchase some lummi sticks so everyone can participate when we invite others to play. They have validated this priceless work…
The world is changing and asking us all to show up with our deepest love and greatest contribution. That is our own self. I just play drums. But it is my voice, and shared with the voices of each person willing to speak up and share their deepest love and greatest self, we really can have harmony in this world.
http://failladrums.com/doing-the-best-for-the-most/
Filed under General, Music with Kids, Playing Together, Uncategorized · Tagged with At Risk Kids, Building Community through Music, Drumming with kids, Money, students, The Importance of Play
Now a word from me….
October 16, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
I am sorry I have been out of touch, friends. It has been joyfully busy! I think this drum thing is catching on [after thousands of years!]
We’ve been busy with kids programs and adult classes; drum sessions for adults with traumatic brain injuries, kids & adults who come as they are. a great session going on at the boise Language Academy with the Refugee kids, great performances with The Fleet Street Klezmer Band, and for as long as we can, drumming on the sidewalk Saturdays at 10am on 6th & Main.
In a little bit, I will be back to the regular updates, class notes and pictures galore! Thanks for checking in. Let me know you’re still there and what I can offer you in your sacred, community, healthy, playful, exploratory journey into rhythm.
~failla-marie
Filed under General, Playing Together · Tagged with Building Community through Music, Drumming with kids, New Drummers, REMO Healthrhythms, Rhythm Jazz, students, The Importance of Play
Hyde Park Street Fair 2010
September 19, 2010 by · 1 Comment
Oh I have so many things to say… here’s the picture story first.
Filed under Music with Kids, Playing Together · Tagged with Building Community through Music, drum & didge, Drumming with kids, Hyde Park Street Fair, playing in public!, Playing!!
In appreciation of volunteers
September 16, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
I am half outta my mind trying to sort out what I need to bring, who I need to invite, how I need to set up; and as a bike rider, how I’m gonna schlepp so many instruments – and that huge Grandmother Drum – across town. After work. When will I have time to set the booth up, visit the new studio, print flyers for classes…. and who is going to organize this? There are probably 100 people I know who are spinning this stuff around their heads.
I think everyone I know in Boise is somehow involved in creating, building, protecting, performing, healing, sharing, showing, dancing or promoting Hyde Park Street Fair. And we are doing all that with all our hearts – as well as working our day jobs and tending our families. Holy hell! How do we do it?
Together….
I hold, in the highest regard and deepest respect, everyone who helps. There is no separating the dancers from the dance!
There will be all sorts of playing times at the Hyde Park Street Fair this weekend.
Saturday September 18th
10:00 AM to 11:00 AM – Building a Community Song – In community, every voice needs to be heard, every person plays an important role. In building a song, it is the same. We will provide drums, rattles, shakers, bells and who knows what else, to give your hands and heart a voice.
Noon – World Stage. Community performance.
2:30 PM to 3:30 PM – Rhythm Kids – This is a time for musical exploration and play time for people who are officially kids, but parents are most welcome. Your children will do as you DO. Come let them encourage you to play! Let the wild rumpus begin!
Sunday September 19th
11:30 AM to 12:30 PM – Drumming for Kids ages 8 and up! Come make a splendid noise in our drum dome! Drums and noise makers provided.
The Hyde Park Street Fair is an annual fundraising/ informational effort ini in a festival format. It is is one of the largest neighborhood events of its kind anywhere. It attracts local artisans and vendors as well as a few from out of town. Attendance tops 30,000 people over the weekend! Billed as a “neighborhood picnic”, with something for the whole family to do.
A new feature on the NENA website is the “(Un)official Survival Guide” for the Hyde Park Street Fair written by Holli High Woodings (twitter: @hollihigh). It is a truthful and humerous guide to survival and how to really enjoy the Hyde Park Street Fair.
2010 Performance Schedule – go to www.northend.org
Filed under Music with Kids, Playing Together · Tagged with Building Community through Music, drum & didge, Drumming with kids, Hyde Park Street Fair, playing in public!
Room for Music Making
August 25, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Schlepping enough drums, shakers, bells, sticks, chairs and verve is not as easy as it looks. Especially on a bike! I am so grateful for the people who offer hands and arms and cars and trucks… We get everything we need in place, and the place fills with every expression from anticipated elation to tentative doubt. Then the magic happens. So far in this life of mine, I have found nothing more rewarding.
I have shared stories of people who believe they have no rhythm playing SOLO’s during our Saturday Sidewalk jams; non-verbal kids in my adapted classes slinging on the hip scarf and leading their peers in an orchestration of rhythm, Idaho City kids creating a masterpiece of unity, and adults finding a welcoming avenue for letting go of the day. Getting back into our groove. Finding a sweet spot in the rhythm of life…..
On August 31st, we’ll be celebrating the End of the Month and the Start of our new Tuesday gathering in my friend Shannon’s studio on Warm Springs Blvd. What a beautiful place! Not only is the location awesome, Shannon and her fellows fill the place with healing. Councilors, psychologists, healers, wellness practitioners all of them! I am so grateful to be invited to be a part of that… I hear everyday from people who just need something that soothes the day. Drumming – rhythmic music making – has brought humans together and soothed our wild souls since the beginning of ourselves as us.
“Recreational Music Making encompasses enjoyable, accessible and fulfilling group music-based activities that unite people of all ages regardless of their challenges, backgrounds, ethnicity, ability or prior experience. RMM ultimately affords unparalleled creative expression that unites our bodies, minds and spirits. ” Karl Bruhn, Father of the Music Making and Wellness movement.”
Drumming in support of wellness has found a place….
The next mission is to locate an affordable studio in which to hold classes for school-aged kids and teen-agers. Let me know if we can come play. I can schlepp this stuff almost anywhere!
Filed under Music with Kids, Playing Together · Tagged with At Risk Kids, Building Community through Music, Drumming with kids, New Drummers, Playing!!, REMO Healthrhythms, School programs, students, Teens, The Importance of Play
Is joining a drum ensemble a viable alternative to joining a gang?
August 20, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Being a teen-ager is dangerous. I think it has the potential to be the worst thing that can happen in your life. “Adolescents are often on an emotional roller coaster. Their bodies are being flooded with hormones, and they get angry and upset easily. They are trying to separate from their parents and become more autonomous, but they still desperately need their parents.” They are still kids, but are now experiencing more adult responsibilities without being granted corresponding adult authority. Their place is in between. They risk displacement and are often simply overlooked by adults. They are invisible. There are nefarious forces that are paying attention, though.
Gang-banger or drum-banger? Can joining a drum ensemble provide what kids are needing at this time in their lives? Can we at least offer an alternative?
The feeling of being an outsider, dismissed and looked down on, is what gang members say drew them to their crews.
“You got to be part of a crew that has respect. That’s like family, boy.”
“Gangs give these kids status, a self-identity, and they call that their family,” kids replicate a sense of belonging through gangs and, just as important, get a feeling of protection.
“Yeah, they see those colors, they know it’s you and your boys,” says a 16-year-old Crip from the Groometown Road area. “It ain’t you alone. You ain’t never alone. That’s the truth.”
With broken families common, Jackson-Stroud says, young kids look for mentors and role models — and too often find them in gangs.
MS13 also appeals to young men proud of their culture but without an outlet for that pride in a city dominated by black and white. “So you got your set. You got your signs. You got your colors,” one member says. “You belong. That’s like saying, ‘This is where I belong.’
“There is a serious issue of racial discrimination when it comes to Latino kids,” he says. Although many MS13 members come from Latin and Central American countries, the gang was founded in America by immigrants who faced racism and violence. One MS13 member says being Latino means you don’t belong anywhere.
by Karl T. Bruhn
Humans have the need to belong, to be part of a group of individuals who share interests, and who come together for a common purpose. Such needs are as important to children and teens as they are to people in mid-life and to senior adults. In fact, it is increasingly being understood that this need for connection with others may be the most important component contributing to quality of life.
• Response to rhythm is basic to human functioning making percussion activities and techniques highly motivating to people of all ages and backgrounds.
• Pure percussion activities are interesting and enjoyable to all people regardless of ethnic and cultural background, musical preferences, or age range making these activities useful in creating groups that are fun and positive for a wide variety of people.
• Participation in active group percussion experiences has physical benefits including sustained physical activity, relaxation, and use of fine motor skills.
• A strong sense of group identity and a feeling of belonging is created because participants are actively making music together and because the sustained repetition of the steady beat acts to bring people together physically, emotionally, and mentally (rhythmic entrainment).
• Percussion activities can be done with little or no previous musical background or training making these experiences accessible to virtually all people.
In addition to providing a creativity outlet for students and entertainment for the community, research suggests that students involved in arts programming do better in school and are less likely to engage in risky behaviors. According to the Department of Education, “cultural projects which involve young people in an exploration of their neighborhood and its history allow them to gain a better understanding of their family, ancestors and community. They develop bonds to their community and a sense of civic pride. Through performing, exhibiting and teaching others their newfound skills, youth come to see themselves as having valuable contributions to make to their communities. A study of several prevention programs found that young people were attracted to programs that emphasized cultural heritage, sports or the arts – programs that embedded prevention messages in the context of other activities rather than addressing it directly. Other research has shown that minority youth with a strong sense of cultural identity, especially those who function competently in two cultures, are less likely than other minority youth to use alcohol and other drugs. In addition, young people who participate in theater groups, choirs, bands and other arts and humanities programs are more likely to stay in school and to avoid harmful behaviors.”
Music Therapy as a Treatment for Substance Abuse with At-Risk Children and Adolescents:
by Deborah Bradway, MT-BC
Music is not only a universal language, it is the result of a natural bodily response for humans to adjust within an environment. Since the birth of man, music has been used for many things, but primarily to purge.
Why do the countries with extreme poverty and suppression produce music that the rest of the world adopts as the leading forms of healing music? Those who created these forms did so for survival and cultural preservation, to rise above and heal from devastation. “Happy” music can lift depression or promote health, such as in the beautiful chants from Salvador Bahia or the dancing rhythms from Africa. “Mourning” music can move depression through the body, providing a physical exit through tears, such as the Blues music from Mississippi or Hasidic songs from Europe during Hitler’s reign.
As Jerrold Levinson stated in Music, Art, and Metaphysics (Cornell University Press, 1990), “The grief-response to music is that it allows one to bleed off in a controlled manner a certain amount of harmful emotion with which one is afflicted.”
Music provides us with a safe container within which one can slowly and safely come to terms with built up emotion that natural body defenses have hidden in the unconscious mind for the preservation of the organism.
The Psychology of At-Risk Children, Substance Use & Medical Effects of Music:
Youth who are at-risk have spent much of their time surviving, not living. They rarely have experiences that enable them to feel, let alone feel alive. Vulnerable young children who pack weapons and use drugs on a regular basis encounter the “fight or flight” adrenalin response frequently. The body of a child such as this develops thick defenses against the outside world, which includes the neighborhood they come home to each day.
Many experts talk about how anger is used to reach these often hostile young people. If we are to back up a step in psychology, we find in actuality, that anger comes from fear. It is fear that they are responding to in the initial stages of substance use. Having to carry a knife to walk the ‘terf’ of a neighborhood and fulfill the expectations of gang members as a sibling is a terrifying experience for a child who is forced to participate as soon as he/she becomes conversational with those in the community. A young person with virtually no support system, uses substances as a defense mechanism to shut down the pain that seems unbearable. The amygdala, and area of the brain recognized as a major emotional command center that allows us to experience pleasure, can be accessed through cigarettes and other substances.
There are both social and physiological reasons why music therapy successfully addresses a young person’s desire for cigarettes and other harmful, but pleasure inducing substances. To understand this, it is helpful to look at the positive opportunities that music therapy can provide in relation to the needs of children who continue to live in poverty, experience neglect, and often endure psychological and/or physical abuse. It is not a mystery that children of this population need to develop self-esteem. However, a music therapy group not only allows for the development of self-esteem through successful educational and social interactions, it also enables the child to use the group as a support system, a replacement for what has lacked in family structure and rituals. Music is structure within itself, and has been used to mark rituals throughout time for as long as man has known music. Also, it is important to remember that toning (the release of tension and anxiety through the voice), is the body’s natural regulation mechanism for healing, both emotionally and physically.
Many pilot projects studying neurological development have recently released word of increased educational abilities in children who participate in music. Reputable and high visibility music and education organizations such as the National Association for Music Education, National School Boards Association, National Association of Music Merchants, American Music Therapy Association, National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences Foundation, State Commissions of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, and many universities with world renown neurologists have shown on a consistent basis how music increases brain function.
The cultures commonly assisted in this at-risk population are Hispanic, Asain/Pacific Islander, and African-American. All of these cultures, which represent a large portion of our population in the United States, revere music as a highly respected part of the culture. As a matter of fact, it is such a central focus in some, that musicians are regarded as heroic in their society. Some cultures are identified primarily by their music. Most adolescents consider musical taste as an important element in socializing with each other. As we can see, there is a strong connection between identity and music.
When one engages in music, the inner life world of the individual and their social ability to interact comes “out on the table” in the musical group interaction.
As researchers know, statistics show smokers quitting, alcoholics becoming dry, and crack users becoming clean is a hard battle to fight. Instead of a band-aid approach, with relapses that occur in using, let’s take this one step deeper. Address the fear that transformed the lives of children by providing an alternative that they can relate to and feel heard. In addition, give them a replacement that is also perceived by the body as pleasure.
If we can teach alternatives at a young age, for those who have not yet started to use substances or are in experimental stages (including adolescent females who are pregnant or who are at high risk for pregnancy), we have an opportunity to shape the future. It is imperative that in this attempt we provide pleasure for pleasure as an exchange. Aspiring to be ‘that artist up on the stage’ only works for those who possess the self-esteem to follow through on dreams. These youth will continue to seek pleasure to reduce pain. Let’s give them a support system, successful experiences, a sense of self-worth, a new place to call home.
Let’s give them the pleasure they were looking for in the first place.
http://www.drums.org/dng/community.htm
Categories
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Pages
Tags
Alternatives to Violence At Risk Kids Baba's Warm-Up Building Community through Music Class Notes Divas djembe break drum & didge Drum Class Drumming with kids Fanga Hand Charts Hyde Park Street Fair Left Handed drummers Money Moribayassa Music History Native American Music New Drummers Playing!! playing in public! Practice Reflections from Others REMO Healthrhythms Rhythmic Music making Rhythm Jazz Robbie Robertson School programs Senior Drumming Story telling and drumming students Students & Teachers Teens The Importance of Play URS Company Barbeque





















