by
Stanley Jordan
Note:
this article was put together rather quickly.
I plan to add on to it in the near future.
Thanks for checking it out! Stanley Jordan
1998/07/02
Introduction
WESTERN
CULTURE
is catching on to something many other
cultures have known for a long timethat
music can have healing powers. The 1940s or
'50s bore witness to the birth of a new Westernized
form of musical healing, one that utilizes
scientific research methods and trains its
practitioners to high clinical standards.
More and more, you can see music therapists
in important places, such as hospitals, hospice
centers, youth counseling centers, and correctional
facilities. The work they are doing is making
a big difference for their patients, and I'm
very excited to tell you about it.
Since
last year, I have been a member and spokesperson
for the American
Music Therapy Association. I would
like to see this field grow to its full potential.
This brief article provides a glimse of the
many areas that are touched by music therapy.
How
I Got Involved in Music Therapy
The
concept of entertainment falls
far short of the real potential of music.
Even the idea of music as art
has its limits. When I think back to some
of my most profound experiences, such as hearing
for the first time the music of Serge Prokofiev,
Jimi Hendrix or John McLaughlin, I know I
was changed irreversibly. Good music touches
us in depths we didn't even know we had. In
this way it is tied to our growth and evolution,
both emotionally and spiritually.
I've
always wanted to do more than just making
albums and playing gigs. I wanted a higher
calling, higher than commercial
or artistic success. What does
all that really mean, after all? But if you
can touch someone, really help their life,
now that would be something special.
Once
when I was a teenager, I had a date to jam
with a girl, Allison, who played piano. I
almost canceled, because I had come down with
the flu, but I decided to go anyway.
We
must have played at least 4 hours together,
and at the end of the session, I felt nearly
healed. It was very clear to me that the music
had made a difference, although I had not
yet heard of music therapy.
That
memory always stuck with me. Then one day
years later I met a music therapist named
Donna Poland, who told me about the field
and sent me some very impressive literature.
The following year Kenwood Dennard, who was
playing drums in my band, asked me if I knew
anything about the healing powers of music
and I shared the information I had gotten
from Ms. Poland. It seemed everything was
coming together.
In
the last two years or so, I've had the opportunity
to observe a number of music therapists during
my travels. I make stops during my concert
tours to contact local music therapists and
observe what they do. I talk with some of
their patients too. This has been very rewarding
to be able to see first hand how this work
is helping people.
A
Few Music Therapists I've Observed
Dr.
Johann Lowey Working with Children
in a Hospital
Dr.
Lowey specializes in treating children by
practicing music therapy in the pediatric
ward at Beth Israel Hospital in New York.
She points out that pediatric pain is often
under-treated. Possible explanations are:
- Children
are very sensitive to anesthetics, and doctors
want to avoid administering overdoses or
creating chemical addictions. So they are
often conservative in the amount of anesthetic
they give.
- Also,
children often experience a mixture of fear,
pain and other powerful emotions in a hospital
setting, so it is not always easy to tell
what the child is really feeling.
- A
child who seems merely afraid could actually
be in great physical pain as well. When
the child is treated with insufficient anesthetic,
the pain may become unbearable.
I
observed Dr. Lowey doing music therapy for
a boy who was getting a spinal tap. She played
her guitar, she sang to him, she improvised
lyrics that helped him to understand what
was going on and to realize that he was in
good hands and he would be okay. I think the
music reassured him in ways that merely speaking
might not have accomplished. An important
point: rather than use the music to distract
him, she used the music to ground him into
the moment, and to empower him to be a participant.
They
used no drugs in the procedure. The music
was the anesthetic. The boy was so comfortable,
that he fell asleep during the operation.
IMPORTANT
POINT:
Music therapy can also be good for the
doctors and other health care workers. It
helps them to manage their own stress, which
can help them do a better job.
Barbara
Dunn Helping People Cope with Difficult
Illnesses
In
Seattle I had a chance to visit Barbara Dunn
at the Bailey Bushay House, which is a skilled
nursing facility that specializes in treating
people with life-challenging illnesses such
as AIDS and cancer.
While
there I saw her do a number of positive things
with the patients, including helping them
manage their pain and helping them deal with
some of the issues their illnesses brought
out.
This
last point illustrates another aspect of music
therapy. While working with one patient, she
asked him what song he wanted to sing, and
he said The Greatest Love Of All.
There's something really powerful about that
songsinging it takes takes you to greater
and greater heights of inspiration and feelings
of self-worth. You feel you can do the impossible,
where you may have given up before. This is
another way that music can heal. The subject
matter of the lyrics can affect us emotionally
and realign our thinking with our deeper purpose.
Your
immune system is the part that decides what
is you and what is not you. When functioning
properly, it makes this distinction flawlessly,
attacking only foreign invaders. When the
process malfunctions, it may attack your own
good tissues, resulting in auto-immune disorders
such as leukemia, or it may fight substances
that really aren't bad for you (this is called
allergy), or it might not be fighting things
that it should be fighting, such as cancer
cells and HIV viruses. In deciding what is
and isn't you, your immune system acts as
the physiological expression of your self
concept, or sense of identity.
Medical
science is realizing more and more that the
mind and body are linked, and that our thoughts
can affect our bodies. It may be that strengthening
and clarifying one's sense of self could help
the immune system. No wonder the person with
AIDS wanted to sing The Greatest
Love of All. From what I've seen, it
appears that music can play a role in the
treatment. There have already been a number
of good studies showing positive immune responses
to music.
Jazz
might be a particularly good style to test
because it places such a high value on individualitybeing
yourself, no matter how that looks or how
others react, however...
IMPORTANT
POINT:
We must be careful to not make too many
assumptions about the effects of specific
musical styles, because so much depends on
people's tastes and background. For this reason,
music therapists have to be very flexible.
There seems to be no limit to the number of
songs and styles you can use as a music therapist.
Barbara
Crowe New Research Horizons
Barbara
Crowe is doing cutting-edge research at Arizona
State University. I found her presentation
one of the most fascinating at the 1998 AMTA
conference. She is looking at insights from
non-linear dynamics, chaos theory and subtle
energy research and applying these ideas to
music therapy. She views chaos as a natural
healthy state rather than a disease state.
For example, she points out that chaotic systems
are more resilientthey return more quickly
to equilibrium after being perturbed by an
external force.
Over
the years, medicine has evolved toward more
and more subtle forms of energy.
At
this moment in history, we are in the chemical
age of medicine. Drugs are the primary treatment
modality in the health-care industries.
More
subtle than chemical energy is magnetic energy,
and we are starting to see some work done
in that area. People are treating thyroid
imbalances and even healing damaged tissues
with the help of magnets.
Even
beyond that is subtle energy,
which has also been called chi,
or prana. It is very difficult
to detect using today's technology, yet its
power has been tapped by mystic healers and
sages for thousands of years.
Healing
touch practitioners generally say that what
heals is more than just the touch. The intention
of the healer is at least as important, and
the physical touch is merely the vehicle for
transmitting that intention.
Many
people are looking for ways to use sound vibrations
to heal physical parts such as internal organs.
Barbara Crow is suggesting to go even beyond
that and use the sound to, in effect, reprogram
the person's overall energy field so that
their healing can take place naturally and
at all levels. To me this is the highest dream
of holistic healing.
The
most important thing I got out of chaos theory
is the idea that the Universe is extremely
sensitive. It's theoretically possible for
the flap of a butterfly's wings to affect
the weather on the other side of the planet.
And we humans, being a refined expression
of nature's eternal principles, are pretty
sensitive too. For example, the human retina
is capable of registering the impression of
a single photon of light. Amazing!
So
by utilizing our own natural sensitivity and
harnessing the ability of sound vibrations
to transmit the healing intentions of a practitioner
Dr. Crow might just bring about her dream.
Stay tuned.
Conclusion
I
hope you enjoyed this brief look at music
therapy.
The
American Music Therapy Association can
tell you where to find info about music therapy,
and can hook you up with practitioners in
your area. Also, they are up on all the latest
research. You can get their journal, the Journal
of Music Therapy to get more in-depth
info.
As
a spokesperson for the AMTA, I am trying to
promote awareness of this promising new field.
I am looking for ways to spread the word around,
as well as to learn more myself.
Also,
any music therapists coming to this site or
other practitioners in sound healing are invited
to send email. I can't promise I'll be able
to answer every email message, but I would
like to know what people are doing out there.
Send
e-mail to:
musictherapy@stanleyjordan.com
Music
Therapy Links:
The
Mozart Effect: Tapping the Power of Music
to Heal the Body, Strengthen the Mind, and
Unlock the Creative Spirit,
by Don Campbell.
Published by Avon
Books, 1997. An excellent introduction
to Music Therapy.
Stephen
Halpern. A composer who found new possibilities
in music therapy.
He has a whole catalog of recordings and other
products geared toward music therapy.
AMTA
American Music Therapy Association
British
Society for Music Therapy
Amanda Phillips' Music Therapy Links
Music
Therapy Info Links
Stanley
Jordan's Music Therapy Links Page
Effects
of Music Therapy
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