PP Book Therapeutic Voicework in MT May 2010 V Cadiz
PP Book Therapeutic Voicework in MT May 2010 V Cadiz
PP Book Therapeutic Voicework in MT May 2010 V Cadiz
3. Book subjects
Involving:
• Client groups of neonates,
• Children with autism,
• Brain injury
• Parkinson's patients
• Dementia patients
• Spinal patients
• Patients with ranges of mental health problems; engaging in vocal improvisations and vocal
techniques to address disorders or possibilities for personal growth.
Felicity Baker;
Director of Music Therapy Training/Director of Research; The University of Queensland Australia. She is a
pioneer in developing and researching voicework techniques in neuro-rehabilitation (10 of her publications
relate specifically to voice methods).
Sylka Uhlig;
Lecturer/Faculty member Creative Arts Therapies; HAN University Netherlands. She integrates emotional,
relational, cognitive, physical, aesthetic, spiritual and technical aspects of voice and singing into a
multicultural clinical method. Published book in 2006 Authentic Voices Authentic Singing, Barcelona
Publishers and other articles.
Significant effects of this primary instrument on our clients > collecting and supporting
development of methods and research about voice.
Most published work focuses on outcomes without specific details to clinical methods used.
Lack of guidelines and sufficiently detailed theory and method for which students, clinicians
(music therapy, psychology, speech pathology, music education, social work etc), and
researchers can draw upon when preparing clinical sessions or clinical research.
Evidenced-based practice requires methods to be detailed to allow for replication however >
there is no text of voicework interventions.
Part 1 Introduction
Felicity Baker (Australia) & Sylka Uhlig (Netherlands) Concept of therapeutic voice work:
Socrates’ expression “Speak, for I can see you” suggests the voice goes beyond pure function of speech.
Personality comes from the Latin word “persona” (mask, person), “per sona” actually means “by the sound”
Development of the voice plays a central role in human existence, a “sound-like biography".
Music therapy can counter-balance the non-contingent experience of major medical care.
When babies are born, their brains are hard-wired to seek and make use of auditory stimulation from
significant people > for hospitalised babies interaction is discarded through major surgical or medical care.
Infant-directed speech and singing involve well-established patterns in register, melodic intonation, tempo,
attack and timbre.
Joanne Loewy (USA) Tonal intervallic synthesis as integration in medical music therapy:
Primary use of the voice as the bridge between harm and healing in treatment.
Voice is the one instrument that is inside the body and as such, between breath and timbre, has capacity to
assist integrating aspects of body function.
Technique of 'tonal intervallic synthesis' describe and explicate several cases: treating asthma, pain, and
assisting a musician in the recovery of her voice amidst past traumas.
Lucanne Magill (Canada) Gathering together through voice in oncologic music therapy:
A Circle of Love
Clinical context and the needs of cancer patients and families across the continuum of illness > fragile and
vulnerable conditions of patients and families
Commonly use of voice to convey human presence > voice has inherent associations with nurturing and
relationship, significant during times of isolation, loneliness and grief.
Music therapist’s skill is essential, various vocal methods are included in sessions to inspire expression,
improve comfort, sense and connectedness.
Cheryl Dileo (USA) Therapeutic uses of the voice during life’s final days:
Clinical needs of individuals receiving inpatient hospice treatment and who are imminently dying.
Therapists voice is an essential component of human contact with the person who is dying and to address
family needs and support the patient’s transition
Use of the therapist’s voice to: create patient-based iso-music, facilitate entrainment, to shape the
environment at the bedside, to communicate without words, to support relationship completion, to relieve
pain.
Susan Summers (Canada) Vocal presence for healing in a community-based hospice care;
All humans are singers who can resonate easily with vibration and voice. Energetic voice presence has a
strong healing component.
Skilled music therapist with vocal strength, emotional sensitivity and energetic awareness, can easily and
quickly match, support mood, vibration, energetic feel in a room, a rhythm or can turn lyrics into a
personalized improvisation.
Voice offer patient normalized experience of socializing, enjoying music together with family/others,
opportunities to reminisce about a song/memory, deep spiritual, emotional and physical healing, even in
the presence of death.
Hanne Mette Ridder (Denmark) How can singing influence social engagement:
People with severe dementia show agitated behaviours and are difficult to engage in social interaction >
are often isolated.
Psychological/behavioural symptoms of dementia increase when psychosocial needs are not met.
Processing of the human voice is neurobiologically different from the processing of other acoustic signals.
This has an impact on social engagement via hippocampal function, stress-related responses and self-
soothing behaviours.
Sylka Uhlig (The Netherlands) Effects of vocal interventions (Rap/Singing) on emotional and
cognitive development of at-risk-children in music therapy:
Primary expression like shouting, riming, rapping and singing > aggression regulation can be achieved;
rhythm & repetition comforts expression
cognitive development will be stimulated by searching for fitting words for rimes and poems.
Focusing on the release of stress and anxiety, emotional (subcortical) and cognitive (cortical) development
of at-risk children while using rap.
Esther Thane (Canada) Voice- the therapeutic connector: vocal methods and strategies for
children with Autism Spectrum Disorder:
Voice can be accessed in both therapist and the child with Autism; voice as “delivery system” in musical
experiences, children with Autism often respond with reduced anxiety surrounding expectations; accessing
and modulating his or her own voice, especially for the purpose of interpersonal communication.
Vocal methods target development and refinement of vocal parameters (duration, dynamics, breath
control, flexibility, vocal range, inflection etc.), circles of communication and concept of self: Who am I?
What do I prefer?
Hyunju Jung (Korea) Sori (=sounding the voice) for healing emotional trauma is essential
music resource in Korean music.
Sori > contact with one’s identity through voicing emotional traumas > clients continuous rejecting inner
feelings and impulses and tensions/shyness in their use of voice.
Sori explore existential aspects of “self” through voicing: meeting own voice, finding one’s tone within the
pentatonic idiom, vocalization, iconic singing (associating quality of emotion with vocal timbre), and vocal
grounding.
Sanne Storm (Faroe Islands) Psychodynamic Voice Therapy: “body and voice” as primary
instrument
Human voice most personal and intimate instrument for both: client or music therapist > you are the
instrument,
Tool for embodying psychological/physical state > working towards the integration of feelings.
Establishing principles to understanding of the human voice as a primary instrument in music therapy.
Exploring and challenging ones voice, expressions through improvisation directed by imaginations,
sensation of borders, sensation of dialogue.
Specific emotions can give a focus of being present in and relating to the world, can influence ones self-
identification and self awareness.
Focus on a phenomenological study of such experiential imaginative voice work which is a part of their
music therapy training.
Voice symbolically reveals personality, emotion and diversity of self image which subsequently facilitates
self understanding.
Voice could become a central part of our personal empowerment in a therapeutic context.
Client’s inner world and influences changes to the world around her, including her family, friends and
community.
Nicola Oddy (Canada) A field of vocal discovery: Self discovery through community singing.
Entrainment, the voice can reflect a melody right down to the microtone, follow key changes, create
harmonies, and match rhythms.
Voice follow and join the texture or timbre of another voice, can reflect despair, joy, and every variation in
between.
Diversity of the voice as a reflection: people who were not able to sing as children > rediscover their voices
through community singing.
Exploring the resources and power within the process of finding and freeing one's voice: breath, tone, touch,
imagery and vocal improvisation.
Developmentally sequenced exercises to connect to impulse and information in the body > move into
exploration, awareness, release, strengthening and integration of the body, the voice and the self.
Symptoms are understood as messages and communications > deeper mind of the individual that contain
individual path towards wholeness.
Felicity Baker (Australia) Reclaiming emotional expression in the dysprosodic voice of people
with traumatic brain injury:
Rehabilitating apraxic, dysarthric and dysphonic voices of people with neurological damage.
Neurological damage caused by stroke, neurological disease, or brain injury may lead to severe
communication impairments.
Difficulty articulate words or coordinate respiration in order to achieve phonation > negative impact on
community reintegration and may lead to breakdown in family and social relationships.
Using therapeutic singing and vocal interventions to improve respiratory function and voice projection for
people with a spinal cord injury.
Respiratory impairments resulting from spinal cord injury are a major cause of morbidity, mortality and
economic burden.
Respiratory system plays major role in vocal production >provides the driving air pressures required to
initiate and maintain vocal fold function as well as control prosodic features of vocal intensity and stress.
Madeleen de Bruijn,
Joost Hurkmans & Tea Zielman (The Netherlands) Speech Music Therapy for Aphasia
(SMTA):
Combinatory treatment of speech-language therapy and music therapy for clients with aphasia and/or
apraxia of speech, offered simultaneously.
Music can facilitate speech fluency, particularly through melody and rhythm; words and sentences are
performed with support of tone ladders and newly composed melodies.
Speech-language exercises, including all linguistic levels i.e. Sounds.
Grocke, D. and Wigram, T. (2007) Receptive methods in music therapy: techniques and clinical applications for
music therapy clinicians, educators and students. London: Jessica Kingsley. (translated into other languages)
Wosch, T. and Wigram, T. (2007). Microanalysis in music therapy: methods, techniques and applications for
clinicians, researchers, educators and students. London: Jessica Kingsley. (translated into other languages)
Gardstrom, S.(2007). Music Therapy Improvisation for groups: Essential leadership competencies. Barcelona
Publishers.
Wigram, T. (2004). Improvisation: methods and techniques for music therapy clinicians, educators and
students. London: Jessica Kingsley. (translated into other languages)
Baker, F. and Tamplin T. (2006). Music therapy methods in neurorehabilitation: A clinician's manual. London:
Jessica Kingsley Pub. (currently being translated into other languages)
Baker, F., and Wigram, T. (Eds). (2005). Songwriting: Methods, techniques and clinical applications for music
therapy clinicians, educators and students. London: Jessica Kingsley. (translated into other languages)
Uhlig, S. (2006) Authentic Voices – Authentic Singing: A Multicultural Approach To Vocal Music Therapy.
Barcelona Publishers USA.
Uhlig, S. (in press 2010) From violent RAP to lovely BLUES The Transformation of Aggressive Behavior
through Vocal Music Therapy.. In Tony Meadows Developments in Music Therapy Practice, Barcelona
Publishers, USA.
Denzin, N. (2001). Interpretive interactionism (2nd ed. Vol. 16). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Shoemark, H. (2008). The markers of interplay between the music therapist and the medically fragile newborn
infant. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Melbourne, Australia. Retrieved
http://eprints.infodiv.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00004141/
Austin, D. (2009). The theory and practice of vocal psychotherapy. London: Jessica Kingsley publishers.
Paperback: £22.50/ US $45.00 ISBN: 978-1-84310-878-8, 224 pages.
Please,
keep singing & writing about it !!