Archive | November, 2010

Tribute to my Grampa

After the 2010 AMTA Conference last weekend in Cleveland, I had the good fortune of visiting my grandfather, whom I hadn’t seen in 16 years! I  stayed with my aunt and uncle and rented a car to drive out to the country to visit him.

He is 90 years old, lives by himself, drives, makes his own meals, does his own laundry. On top of that, he manages an enormous vegetable garden that boasts hundreds of tomatoes, squash, green beans, rhubarb, cabbage, and much much more… While I was there, I captured a few of his stories about WWII, his take on life, death, and love. I told him that I’d like to share his stories with others so we can all learn from his life experiences. He was very excited about the idea! Then I asked my mom, and she thought this would make a nice tribute, too. Here’s the 4-minute trailer to the 90-minute full feature film, available to family by Christmas 2010.

I’m sharing this video because it pertains to my work as a music therapist. There are so many stories relayed in my older adult groups, but there are even more stories that don’t fit into a 50-minute session! For someone who is so closely related to me, it feels very special to have captured these stories. If Grampa participated in one of my sessions, I’d probably invite him to drum with me to Over There, Remember Pearl Harbor, or the Marine Corps Hymn in between stories.

Part of the beauty of making music is that while you reminisce, the music makes the stories relevant to the present moment. Making music brings it all together in the NOW.

Thanks Grampa for all of your inspiration and rich stories!

If you liked this post, you’d probably like People Inspire Me, too.

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AMTA 2010 Presentation Points and Highlights

Cleveland Rocks!

I have a confession. Most (but not all) of the presentation points I made in Cleveland last Friday can be found here at Rhythm For Good via video and written content! Here are some helpful links to supplement what you might’ve seen live in my presentation at the American Music Therapy Association 2010 conference:

1. A Couple of Little Ditties to Get You Started Drumming with Older Adults

2. 12-Bar Blues Improv and Sculpting Trick

3. Drum the Belly Dancing Ayub!

4. The Rainstorm (Yup, every music therapist knows about this one!)

5. Music Therapy at Independent Living Communities? YES!

6. The Mallet Cuff Review

7. Before Walking Into Your First Drumming Session with Older Adults…

8. 11 Reasons Why Drums Work with Older Adults (Oh, and extract some advocacy materials out of this post!)

9. Music Therapy versus Entertainment (…more advocacy materials found here…)

More blogs on music therapy with older adults include:

Music Sparks, JB Music Therapy, Melisma Music, and Embe Music Therapy

The participants in the session were fabulous! *And* the space was standing room only. I was not expecting that kind of attendance, but I was thrilled to present! The more I think about the presentation, the more I realize that some simple education about navigating around Rhythm For Good and all the resources available 24-7 in cyberspace is in order, so I’ll be blogging about that soon, too! I was especially excited that most of the attendees had never seen Rhythm For Good, so I hope that now they can use RFG as a resource in this next year.

More highlights of my conference experience included:

  1. I was a guest on the Music Therapy Round Table, announcing the winner of the boomwhacker contest.
  2. The new Drumify Dances for Older Adults DVD was featured at the Erfurt Music Resource vendor booth. Check out photos here!
  3. There was a super fun Tweet-up (organized by Kim S Moore) with some awesome Twitter friends who I met in person for the first time!
  4. Exciting things are happening for WRAMTA (Western Region AMTA), including our next conference on the Queen Mary in Long Beach!

I had lunches, dinners, and coffees with a lot of good old friends from school, internship, and various other places. But there were so many people with whom I wish I could have spent more time. But that’s what the next conference is for, right? =)

What did you do this weekend? Got some cool conference highlights to share? I’d love to hear it! Throw it down!

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We have a DVD winner!

Big congratulations to Melita Belgrave, PhD, Assistant Music Therapy Professor at UMKC in Kansas City! Thanks to Melita, the next boomwhacker video will be I Wanna Hippopotamus for Christmas!

Runners up were Kim Thompson from Rochester, NY for James Brown’s I Feel Good, and Daniel Tague from Tallahassee, FL for Handel’s Hallelujah.

Thanks to all of the wonderful suggestion for song titles! More information will follow soon …

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Win a free DVD by suggesting the next boomwhacker song!

Roll the dice, take a chance, and suggest a song to win a free Drumify™ DVD!

Here’s the game: If you suggest the song that is chosen for the next boomwhacker video arrangement, then we will ship one Drumify™ DVD to you at no expense to you! Expected video release date will be around 12/1.

Here’s how you can submit your song suggestions:
1. Leave a comment below this post.
2. Leave a comment on the Facebook page.
3. Send me your comment via Twitter.
4. Stop by the Erfurt Music Resource vendor booth at the AMTA 2010 conference in Cleveland. Look for the boomwhacker box.

Here are the rules:
1. ANY song is game, and the holidays are coming up (hint, hint)
2. Only one song suggestion accepted per person per day
3. If two people suggest the same winning song, the person who suggested it first wins…
4. However, if you suggest a different version of the same song, and your suggested version is picked, then you win.
5. We’re accepting suggestions until Friday night, November 19, at 11:59PM.
6. The winner will be revealed on Saturday, November 20, and the video released around 12/1.

Here’s a video sampler.

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The Story Behind Drumify

Click here to go to the sales page!

It’s finally here! You can either click the buttons to purchase the DVD now, go to the sales page to read more, or check out the story behind Drumify in this post!

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“Drumming is dancing with your hands.” -Arthur Hull, Author of Drum Circle Facilitation, Father of the Modern Day Drum Circle at Village Music Circles

It was the summer of 2008 in San Diego, and I had just met up with my friend Meeshi one afternoon for lunch. We were both interested in learning more about each others’ respective practices. I was a music therapist, and he was a dance instructor (swing, specifically) with a genuine interest in using movement for healing.

When I mentioned that I was going to attend a rhythm training that August, he asked who the trainer was. Of course, it was Arthur Hull. I was very excited to attend the 2008 Hawaii training. Meeshi said “Arthur Hull? When I lived in Santa Cruz 15 years ago, I would go to his drum circles. I was totally comfortable with free-form dance with the drum accompaniment, but when it came to drumming, I was very shy and self-conscious. So eventually, Arthur noticed my discomfort. He approached me and said ‘Drumming is just dancing with your hands.‘ That turned on a huge light bulb for me, and I’ve been comfortable drumming ever since!”

Aside from the synchronicity that Meeshi, a random dancing friend I happened to meet, *knew* who Arthur Hull was…

Arthur’s line “Drumming is dancing with your hands” has stuck with me ever since: during the Hawaii training, during my post-Hawaii inspired months of music therapy practice in 2009, during older adult music therapy sessions, during drum circles.

I started using Arthur’s words in my sessions: “Drumming is dancing with your hands.” I found that for a generation who holds dancing (swing, jitterbug, foxtrot, and more) so close to the heart, these words are a powerful trigger to cue dancing memories and play those memories out on the drums! At the same time the reminiscence occurs, the drumming and music bring the group right into the present moment. It’s really an incredible phenomenon to witness!

We started waltzing on the drums, then we tried a cha cha, then polka, then more and more… Dancing on the drums was a HIT with my older adult clients! They shared their favorite songs for each dance. I documented what they told me, I documented how we did it, and Drumify was born.

All in all, the benefits of group drumming are obvious to the participants themselves, caregivers, families, and administrators. But what an even more meaningful opportunity to “dance” for individuals less-likely to stand for long periods of time or dance on the feet. You can always dance on a drum, even if by hand-over-hand assistance!

Read all about the Drumify Dances for Older Adults DVD or buy now below:

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