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Music Eases Stress in Heart Disease Patients

May 12th, 2010 · music and the heart

It’s a fact that music eases stress is patients with heart disease.  Heart disease runs in my family.  My grandfather died at age 40 of a massive heart attack.  My mother has 5 by-passes almost 20 years ago, so I think about my heart a lot and do everything I can to keep it healthy.  As a professional musician, I believe that my heart benefits from all of the music I hear, play and create!  I am sure that music eases stress for me and my heart!

ScienceDaily (Apr. 16, 2009) — Listening to music may benefit patients who suffer severe stress and anxiety associated with having and undergoing treatment for coronary heart disease. A Cochrane Systematic Review found that listening to music could decrease blood pressure, heart rate, and levels of anxiety in heart patients.

Living with heart disease is extremely stressful. The uncertainties and anxieties surrounding diagnosis and the various medical procedures involved in treatment can significantly worsen the condition. For example, stress can increase blood pressure, leading to increased risk of complications. Music listening may help to alleviate stress and therefore reduce this risk.

“Our findings suggest music listening may be beneficial for heart disease patients,” says Joke Bradt, who works at the Arts and Quality of Life Research Center at Temple University in Philadelphia. “But the trials we looked at were generally small and varied in terms of styles of music used and length of music sessions. More research on the specifics of music listening is certainly warranted.”

The researchers reviewed data from 23 studies, which together included 1,461 patients. Two studies focused on patients treated by trained music therapists, but most did not, using instead interventions where patients listened to pre-recorded music on CDs offered by healthcare professionals.

Listening to music provided some relief for coronary heart disease patients suffering from anxiety, by reducing heart rate and blood pressure. There was also some indication that music listening improved mood, although no improvement was seen for patients suffering from depression due to the disease.

“We all know that music can impact on our emotions, our physiological responses, as well as our outlook on life, and this early research shows that it is well worth finding out more about how it could help heart disease patients. In particular, it would be interesting to learn more about the potential benefits of music offered by trained music therapists, which may be differ substantially from those associated with pre-recorded music,” says Bradt.

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Top 5 Charities that Support Musical Education for Children

May 6th, 2010 · Announcements

 

This guest post was written by Wendy Graham, a stay at home mother and freelancer who often writes about education for Online College Guru, a directory of online colleges.

Music education is quickly being removed from many elementary schools across the country as a way to cut back on the budget. While this is a saddening occurrence, the good news is that there are many charitable organizations that help support children’s music education and are working to bring it back into schools across the nation. If you want to help out a charity that will bring harmony back into America’s youth, here is a list of the top five ones to donate to.

The Mockingbird Foundation: The Mocking Bird Foundation was developed in 1996 by a few Phish fans looking to bring music back to children. The staff of the foundation is entirely volunteer, so 99% of the money that is donated to this charity gets spent directly on the kids. They’ve raised more than $600,000 in their short life thus far, and those numbers are growing every day. All donations that are sent in can be reported for taxes, as well as any products that are purchased on the site. Those products include CD’s, shirts, books, pendants and more. Their website even has an option to make a donation through PayPal if you would be interested.

The Chateauville Foundation for Music Education: This foundation was made for the purpose of providing children with a place to play music. The house that the foundation runs around was built in the 1800s, but it is now used for concerts, performances, and classes that teach children about music and other theater arts. The founders of the foundation were and are passionate about music, enough so that they got the entire community in the festive spirit. To make a donation to this foundation, you can o to their website and fill out the form. Mail in donations are also accepted, or you could purchase concert tickets instead and actually see what your money is helping create.

The Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation: If you have seen the hit motion picture Mr. Holland’s Opus, you should have no trouble understanding the reason behind this foundation. Established in 1996, this charity was made for the sole purpose of keeping music alive in the American school system. The foundation donates a variety of instruments to schools across the country, and it also provides funding for music programs in schools that cannot afford to keep theirs going. When music is removed from a certain school, MHOF steps up to create an after school program so kids can still learn and develop their musical abilities. Donations are 100% tax deductible, and you can choose to mail in a check or donate right on their website.

The Fender Music Foundation: Fans of Fender guitars should be thrilled to learn that this company has a music education charity all its own. The Fender Music Foundation provides funding to schools all across America o help keep their music education programs on the right track. This charity has helped countless children learn about instruments and the arts, and they work with other charities to make the most out of all of their funding. 100% of the money sent into the organization goes right back into music education, so you know your money is going to good use. Donations can be made on their website either through PayPal or a direct pay option.

RockSTAR Music Education: Based in California, this organization works by way of after school rock and roll programs to show kids the fun side of music. The group provides all of the equipment students would need to learn, and it’s backed by some of music’s greatest legends. Gene Simmons, Sammy Hagar and Carlos Santana are all frequent contributors to this organization. You can make a donation to the RockSTAR program on their site or by contacting them through the information found there. You could be supporting a local band or providing funds for the education itself.

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The Joy of Music in the Golden Years

May 2nd, 2010 · Music and the Golden Years

My mother is an amazing woman, if I do say so myself.  Four years ago, at “almost” 80 years old, she went to live in a lovely assisted living facility.   Like many families we were not sure how much she would like it, even though she chose it herself, but to our delight and surprise she really did take to it and really participated in most all of the activities.  She even started a chorus there of her elderly friends and they call themselves the “Melody Makers” and they sing for holidays and other special occasions.  They have begun to have quite a good reputation in their S.C. town and tonight were invited to sing the National Anthem before the start of a baseball game at Wofford College!  I just heard all about it from my sister who is pictured here with my mother.   The college provided a tent for them that had rocking chairs for each chorister and they were fed plates of hot dogs, chips and iced tea!  My sister said that she also accompanied them on her violin!  That must have been quite a performance.

I do believe that many people become less inhibited as they age and are willing to “put themselves out there” a little bit more.  Tonight the Melody Makers from Eden Terrace brought a lot of joy to a lot of people…including themselves!  Have YOU thought of joining a community chorus, band or other musical ensemble?  Do think about it!

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Music & Emotions: Can Music Make You Happy?

April 30th, 2010 · Music Healing

We all know the power of music & emotions.  We’ve been overcome with emotion at hearing an old song that was associated with happy times…or sad times.  How many times have you turned to music to uplift you even further in happy times, or sought the comfort of music when melancholy strikes?

Music affects us all. But only in recent times have scientists sought to explain and quantify the way music impacts us at an emotional level. Researching the links between melody and the mind indicates that listening to and playing music actually can alter how our brains, and therefore our bodies, function.

It seems that the healing power of music, over body and spirit, is only just starting to be understood, even though music therapy is not new. For many years therapists have been advocating the use of music – both listening and study – for the reduction of anxiety and stress, the relief of pain. And music has also been recommended as an aid for positive change in mood and emotional states.

Michael DeBakey, who in 1966 became the first surgeon to successfully implant an artificial heart, is on record saying: “Creating and performing music promotes self-expression and provides self-gratification while giving pleasure to others. In medicine, increasing published reports demonstrate that music has a healing effect on patients.”

Doctors now believe using music therapy in hospitals and nursing homes not only makes people feel better, but also makes them heal faster. And across the nation, medical experts are beginning to apply the new revelations about music’s impact on the brain to treating patients.

In one study, researcher Michael Thaut and his team detailed how victims of stroke, cerebral palsy and Parkinson’s disease who worked to music took bigger, more balanced strides than those whose therapy had no accompaniment.

Other researchers have found the sound of drums may influence how bodies work. Quoted in a 2001 article in USA Today, Suzanne Hasner, chairwoman of the music therapy department at Berklee College of Music in Boston, says even those with dementia or head injuries retain musical ability.

The article reported results of an experiment in which researchers from the Mind-Body Wellness Center in Meadville, Pa., tracked 111 cancer patients who played drums for 30 minutes a day. They found strengthened immune systems and increased levels of cancer-fighting cells in many of the patients.

“Deep in our long-term memory is this rehearsed music,” Hasner says. “It is processed in the emotional part of the brain, the amygdala. Here’s where you remember the music played at your wedding, the music of your first love, that first dance. Such things can still be remembered even in people with progressive diseases. It can be a window, a way to reach them…”

The American Music Therapy Organization claims music therapy may allow for “emotional intimacy with families and caregivers, relaxation for the entire family, and meaningful time spent together in a positive, creative way”.

Scientists have been making progress in its exploration into why music should have this effect. In 2001 Dr. Anne Blood and Robert Zatorre of McGill University in Montreal, used positron emission tomography, or PET scans, to find out if particular brain structures were stimulated by music.

In their study, Blood and Zatorre asked 10 musicians, five men and five women, to choose stirring music. The subjects were then given PET scans as they listened to four types of audio stimuli – the selected music, other music, general noise or silence. Each sequence was repeated three times in random order.

Blood said when the subjects heard the music that gave them “chills,” the PET scans detected activity in the portions of the brain that are also stimulated by food and sex.

Just why humans developed such a biologically based appreciation of music is still not clear. The appreciation of food and the drive for sex evolved to help the survival of the species, but “music did not develop strictly for survival purposes,” Blood told Associated Press at the time.

She also believes that because music activates the parts of the brain that make us happy, this suggests it can benefit our physical and mental well being.

This is good news for patients undergoing surgical operations who experience anxiety in anticipation of those procedures.

Polish researcher, Zbigniew Kucharski, at the Medical Academy of Warsaw, studied the effect of acoustic therapy for fear management in dental patients. During the period from October 2001 to May 2002, 38 dental patients aged between 16 and 60 years were observed. The patients received variations of acoustic therapy, a practice where music is received via headphones and also vibrators.

Dr Kucharski discovered the negative feelings decreased five-fold for patients who received 30 minutes of acoustic therapy both before and after their dental procedure. For the group that heard and felt music only prior to the operation, the fearful feelings reduced by a factor of 1.6 only.

For the last group (the control), which received acoustic therapy only during the operation, there was no change in the degree of fear felt.

A 1992 study identified music listening and relaxation instruction as an effective way to reduce pain and anxiety in women undergoing painful gynecological procedures. And other studies have proved music can reduce other ‘negative’ human emotions like fear, distress and depression.

Sheri Robb and a team of researchers published a report in the Journal of Music Therapy in 1992, outlining their findings that music assisted relaxation procedures (music listening, deep breathing and other exercises) effectively reduced anxiety in pediatric surgical patients on a burn unit.

“Music,” says Esther Mok in the AORN Journal in February 2003, “is an easily administered, non-threatening, non-invasive, and inexpensive tool to calm preoperative anxiety.”

So far, according to the same report, researchers cannot be certain why music has a calming affect on many medical patients. One school of thought believes music may reduce stress because it can help patients to relax and also lower blood pressure. Another researcher claims music allows the body’s vibrations to synchronize with the rhythms of those around it. For instance, if an anxious patient with a racing heartbeat listens to slow music, his heart rate will slow down and synchronize with the music’s rhythm.

Such results are still something of a mystery. The incredible ability that music has to affect and manipulate emotions and the brain is undeniable, and yet still largely inexplicable.

Aside from brain activity, the affect of music on hormone levels in the human body can also be quantified, and there is definite evidence that music can lower levels of cortisol in the body (associated with arousal and stress), and raise levels of melatonin (which can induce sleep). It can also precipitate the release of endorphins, the body’s natural painkiller.

But how does music succeed in prompting emotions within us? And why are these emotions often so powerful? The simple answer is that no one knows… yet. So far we can quantify some of the emotional responses caused by music, but we cannot yet explain them. But that’s OK. I don’t have to understand electricity to benefit from light when I switch on a lamp when I come into a room, and I don’t have to understand why music can make me feel better emotionally. It just does – our Creator made us that way.

Duane Shinn is the author of over 500 music books and products such as DVD’s, CD’s, musical games for kids, chord charts, musical software, and piano lesson instructional courses for adults. He holds an advanced degree from Southern Oregon University and was the founder of Piano University in Southern Oregon. Previous to that he worked as an assistant music therapist at DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn, California. He can be reached at http://www.pianolessonsbyvideo.com He is the author of the popular free 101-week e-mail newsletter titled “Amazing Secrets Of Exciting Piano Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions” with over 55,000 current subscribers. Those interested may obtain a free subscription by going to http://www.playpiano.com/

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Duane_Shinn

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Despite Anxiety and Naysayers, Composer Wins Her Pulitzer

April 27th, 2010 · Announcements, Classical Music

Being a serious composer in this day and age is not easy for anyone, but despite the critics and the naysayers, this young woman prevailed!  Article was taken from the New York Times.
By VIVIEN SCHWEITZER
Published: April 21, 2010
PHILADELPHIA — Jennifer Higdon wishes there were a 12-step program on how to deal with all the various stages of composing anxiety, she said, laughing, on Sunday in the spacious apartment here that she shares with her partner, Cheryl Lawson.

“Starting a piece is the worst,” she said, “and that can stretch from one day to three weeks of agony. The cats run and hide.”

Despite the angst, Ms. Higdon, 47, comes across as friendly, down to earth and upbeat. And her creative struggles have paid off. She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize this month for her Violin Concerto, which she wrote for the young soloist Hilary Hahn. The Pulitzer committee praised the work, which received its premiere in February 2009 with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, as “a deeply engaging piece that combines flowing lyricism with dazzling virtuosity.”

Those are qualities integral to many of Ms. Higdon’s scores. Her large catalog also includes a piano concerto (which was given its premiere in December by Yuja Wang), a saxophone concerto and numerous chamber and orchestral works. “The Singing Rooms,” for chorus, orchestra and solo violin, recently had its premiere with Jennifer Koh as soloist. The San Francisco Opera has commissioned an opera for fall 2013.

Marin Alsop, music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, has conducted and recorded several of Ms. Higdon’s works, including the lively Percussion Concerto. She described her music as American in its immediacy, vitality and sense of optimism. Echoes of American composers like Aaron Copland can be heard in works like “Blue Cathedral,” the most frequently performed piece in the 2007-8 season of those composed during the past 25 years, according to the League of American Orchestras. Another of Ms. Higdon’s most popular works is the bluegrass-inspired “Concerto 4-3.”

Her scores are “very strong rhythmically,” Ms. Alsop said, “with real scope and shape and architecture. She knows how to bring out the best of the various instrumental colors in the orchestra.” She added that Ms. Higdon’s music is “very immediate, authentic, sincere and without pretense.”

“I’m not sure when ‘accessible’ became a dirty word,” Ms. Alsop said. “I’m not of the belief that something has to be inscrutable in order to be great.”

Ms. Higdon got experimental urges out of her system at a young age. Her parents were hippies, she said, and she and her younger brother were fed a steady diet of avant-garde film, art and theater in Atlanta, where her father, Kenny Higdon, worked as a freelance artist for advertising agencies. A huge black-and-white abstract painting by Mr. Higdon hangs in his daughter’s living room.

When Ms. Higdon was 11, the family moved to Seymour, a tiny town in Eastern Tennessee, where she and Ms. Lawson met in high school.

Ms. Higdon, who still speaks with a lilting Southern accent, had almost no exposure to classical music growing up, but taught herself to play the flute at 15 and entered Bowling Green State University at 18 as a flute major. After catching up on theory classes she began composing at 21. She received an artist diploma from the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where she now teaches composition, before studying at the University of Pennsylvania.

“I was kind of the black sheep of the family going into classical music,” said Ms. Higdon, laughing, but said her parents were fully supportive of her choice. At Bowling Green she took a conducting class with Robert Spano, now music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. He describes her music as “expressive and beautiful and communicative and fresh and inventive.”

She is “very representative of something that’s happened in American music with composers of her generation,” Mr. Spano said, “a palpable aesthetic shift from the generation before them that I find very powerful.”

Ms. Higdon, who studied with George Crumb at the University of Pennsylvania (where she received master’s and doctoral degrees), does use some experimental touches in her scores. The Violin Concerto (which Ms. Hahn has recorded for a Deutsche Grammophon disc to be released in September) begins with percussionists using knitting needles on crotales, or small cymbals, and glockenspiel. In her piano and string duo “String Poetic” Ms. Higdon makes imaginative use of the strange texture of stopped piano strings (a sound created when the pianist damps the strings inside the instrument with one hand and plays the keys with the other).

But any avant-garde touches are mostly incorporated into traditional structures and sound worlds. In the first movement of the violin concerto, after a spare introduction, the violin soars with propulsive vigor over a rich orchestral fabric, with introverted passages alternating with fiery outbursts. A jaw-dropping cadenza concludes the movement.

One of Ms. Higdon’s biggest obstacles has been her own success. As a self-published composer she was overwhelmed with administrative tasks. So Ms. Lawson, a former event planner, now works full time dealing with score rentals, sales and shipping. The average of six to eight orders a day has spiked to a dozen since the Pulitzer announcement.

Lawdon Press, the name under which Ms. Higdon’s music is published, is an amalgamation of the couple’s last names. “I figured it was smarter for us financially for me to take over and keep the copyrights and sales than for me to keep my job and turn it over to a large publishing company,” Ms. Lawson said.

The split-level apartment is their publishing house with all the requisite equipment; Ms. Higdon works seven days a week in her first-floor office, which has a Steinway baby grand, a Yamaha keyboard, a computer and an enormous cactus.

Ms. Higdon said she doesn’t experience writer’s block and composes fast: “I think it’s a little like working out. You get that muscle going, where you’re just using it all the time. So I tend to move on to the next project pretty quickly.”

Despite some days of writing anxiety and dark moods, she rarely puts down her pen. Composing “is a very serious need,” Ms. Higdon said. “I have to express things.” She added that writing “Blue Cathedral” in 1999 after the death of her brother, Andrew Blue Higdon, from melanoma “was the most cathartic thing I could have done.”

Ms. Higdon has had her share of detractors, who told her she couldn’t compose because she had started so late; that a flute performance major couldn’t be a composer; that she would never make a living; and that she would never get into graduate school. Some male composers grumbled to her face that her she’s only been successful because she’s a woman.

“Everyone runs into naysayers,” Ms. Higdon said, “but if you love something enough and feel passionately enough, you just go on ahead, walk right round the person saying it, proceed down the road and don’t look back.”

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Step-by-step instructions for using music in surgery

April 24th, 2010 · Music and Surgery

Who doesn’t want step-by-step instructions for using music during surgery?  So you’ve just found out that you need to have surgery? It’s always a shock to find that you need surgery and people are filled with apprehension, if not fear. The biggest fear of course is always: what if I don’t wake up? Statistics tell us that the vast majority of people do wake up after surgery but the risk is there. One of the biggest unknown factors is anesthesia and how a patient will react and respond. There’s been a lot in the news recently about “anesthesia awareness” and people who say they felt every part of the surgery and heard all the conversations, but were simply paralyzed by the anesthesia and could not let anyone know.

Of course this is terrifying but it happens so very rarely that it doesn’t justify cancelling the surgery or even losing sleep. The thing is, more anesthesia is definitely not the solution. What you want is actually the least amount of anesthesia that will sedate you and keep you comfortable during the procedure. This might be a regional anesthesia and it might be a local anesthesia. It doesn’t have to be a general anesthesia.
One of the things that can help lessen the amount of anesthesia that you need is the addition of music to the procedure. There is ample research now showing that listening to calm, soothing music before, during and after the procedure can decrease the amount of anesthesia needed, in addition to decreasing pain meds requirements afterwards and anxiety meds before. So how do you make that happen?

  • One of the first things you want to do is start thinking about the kind of music that relaxes, calms and soothes you.
  • If you have a playlist of this music that you’ve created you can put it on your iPod or an Ipod shuffle.
  • The next thing is to tell your surgeon that you’d like to take some soothing, relaxing music into the procedure with you.
  • If the doctor says you’ll be asleep and won’t hear it, you can assure him that you just want to have it playing subconsciously and you also want to make sure you don’t hear any of the surgical sounds or conversations.  (Certain procedures require sawing, drilling, hammering, etc.)
  • If necessary you can purcahse a new MP3 player to avoid introducing any germs into the operating room.
  • OR, you can use the Surgical Serenity Headphones which are pre-programmed with the ideal slow, steady, soothing music for surgery.  These are being used at hospitals across the U.S. and have not been to any patient by a surgeon or anesthesiologist.
  • If you take your own iPod, you might want to have 3 separate tracks for pre-surgery, surgery and recovery.  Ideally, the music for surgery is the slowest tempo and is purely instrumental.  The music for the recovery room should be a little more up-tempo and can have words or lyrics that are very positive.  The headphones are already programmed with music for all three phases of the procedure.

If you have any questions at all about the procedures and how to best start them for youself, feel free to contact me through this blog and I will get back to you!

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What music energizes you and makes you happy?

April 14th, 2010 · Announcements

Yesterday I posted this simple question on my Facebook page and got lots of very interesting answers including:

Bach, especially fast movements of the Brandenburgs, and the Italian concerto.

Marching music – gets me going!

I feel good, na na na na na na na!

Bach’s Gig Fugue for Organ. Cool Piece.

Not surprisingly, I decided to go to YouTube to find one of my favorite energizing pieces. I chose the Overture to The Fantasticks. This was one of my favorite pieces of music my senior year in high school and I always wanted to perform it but still haven’t! If anyone is putting this musical on, let me know and I’ll play the piano for you!

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Dr. Cash resumes national speaking circuit with Surgical Serenity Headphones and Music

April 9th, 2010 · Announcements

Dr. Cash speaking for the Venture Club of Louisville

With success all around the sales at an all-time high, Dr. Cash has agreed to begin speaking around the country again and resuming a busy speaking schedule. For the past few years she has been focusing on creating, patenting and marketing her “Surgical Serenity Headphones and Music” and has had to turn down many invitations to speak on The Healing Power of Music” as she did previously. Now the travel will pick up again as she speaks for hospitals, medical schools, universities, corporations, and possibly and few cruise lines ( 😉 about her unique Surgical Serenity Headphones that significantly decrease the amount of anxiety meds, anesthesia and pain meds required before, during and after surgery.
Dr. Cash has been a national speaker since the mid-80’s and loves teaching people and moving them with her powerful stories of music healing and transformation through music. To engage Dr. Cash for YOUR organization, contact her at chantdoc@healingmusicenterprises.com or visit www.HealingMusicEnterprises.com/speaker.html. But hurry, 2010 is filling up fast!

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