The Healing Power of Harp Music (for Laura!)

PepperFritz

The Cosmic Force
Found this fascinating article on _www.livescience.com, which has potentially helpful information for everyone -- but will be of particular interest to Laura!


Pets Enjoy Healing Power of Music
By Maryann Mott, Special to LiveScience
07 January 2008
Link: _http://www.livescience.com/animals/080103-harp-therapy.html

The healing power of music has long been established in people. Now a handful of harpists throughout the country are harnessing that power for animals.

Alianna Boone is one of those musicians.

“The structure of the harp is considered to be the most healing instruments next to human voice,” said Boone, an Oregonian who plays for ill family pets and produced a CD "Harp Music to Soothe the Savage Beast."

While anecdotal reports abound, Boone conducted one of the few studies on harp music’s effect on animals. In 2000, she performed for recently hospitalized canines at a Florida veterinary clinic. The hour-long sessions immediately began to lower heart rate, anxiety, and respiration in many cases, she said.

Cow control

Dogs aren’t the only animals benefiting from the good vibrations.

Cassie, a black and white cow, lives at the Maple Farm Sanctuary in Mendon, Mass., with about 80 other unwanted livestock. She arrived there last year after jumping a 7-foot-high fence to escape from a slaughter house, said volunteer Tracie Russell.

Even though the cow is now living the good life, it has demonstrated anxiety-related behavior issues.

On a recent morning, for example, Russell walked into the barn to find the 1,500 pound Holstein snorting and stomping.

“I was little bit afraid for my safety, I have to say, for the first time,” said Russell.

She’s not sure what upset Cassie but decided to try calming her by playing a CD of harp songs.

Within 20 minutes, Russell said, the bovine dozed off.

Rave gorilla reviews

At the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston, a gorilla group appreciated Sue Raimond’s live harp performance a few years ago. The youngest member, named Little Joe, even blew her a kiss before falling asleep.

Both wild and domestic animals can benefit from music therapy but not all of them respond to it.

“It’s not a magic bullet,” cautions Diane Schneider, who produced "Harp of Hope: Animal Therapy Edition," the music that lulled Cassie. “But for animals for which it works, it works incredibly well.”

Schneider trained at the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music. Later, as a pastoral theologian and hospital chaplain, she began to use the harp with hospitalized human patients.

"I use certain harp vibrations to resonate with, or entrain, a patient's own cellular rhythms to help release tense muscle tissue, calm anxiety, improve digestion, induce restful sleep, increase endorphins for pain management — to aid the body's own efforts to heal itself," Schneider said.

The same holds true for animals, she said.

Animal CD

"Harp of Hope," a collection of 17 songs, was originally recorded for people but Schneider decided to release an animal edition last year after owners reported it helped their arthritic dogs fall asleep and calmed their agitated cats.

Veterinary hospitals also acknowledged the CD's success in soothing nervous pets — and their owners.

She said every detail of the instrumentals — the tempos, rhythms, keys, note intervals, chord structures and plucking techniques — are carefully arranged to promote progressive peace and relaxation.

Animals usually begin to relax after listening for just a few minutes.

Schneider recommends playing the music on an as-needed basis or before a stressful situation, such as a veterinary or grooming appointment.

“I’m hopeful that there will be a great increase in the use of this benevolent therapy,” said Schneider. “It is a very cost-effective, beneficial, soothing, calming intervention for animals and the people who love animals.”
 
Thanks! I have always thought the harp was the most beautiful sounding instrument ever. Everybody loves it, so I wonder why more people don't choose to learn to play?
 
Laura said:
Thanks! I have always thought the harp was the most beautiful sounding instrument ever. Everybody loves it, so I wonder why more people don't choose to learn to play?
Its a tough axe to haul to a gig.
 
Now, come on! It doesn't take that long to tune it... only about 10 or 15 minutes, max with an electronic tuner! Mine has gotten to where it holds the tuning longer now, so it's usually only the lower register that needs attention, so I start in the middle and work down and then give the upper register a quick check.
 
lol you guys clearly never tried to tune a piano! (which is actually pretty similar to a harp and even shaped similarly if you look at a grand piano from above). Or how about setting up a drum set? That takes bloody ages (especially if the drummer is anal about every nanometer of the setup). And while there are different kinds of gigs, usually it's not the instruments that are a pain in the butt to haul but the rest of the equipment - like speakers, amplifiers, etc.

As for anyone doubting whether the harp goes well with bands, it seems to work with anything:

Here's a great solo piece. I'm not exactly sure which part of this was the most mesmerizing. Was it the amazingly beautiful harp? Or the beautiful girl playing it? Or that she is really, really good? Probably all of the above:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBhVX5HZYqw

Some clips of a jazz festival with Lori Andrews, a professional jazz harpist playing with a band:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnRPX7nGjpE

Electric Latin Jazz Harp:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulxODXj71iQ

Violin, Cello, and Harp trio: Girl from Ipanema
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_GEOONqeLI
 
ScioAgapeOmnis said:
lol you guys clearly never tried to tune a piano! (which is actually pretty similar to a harp and even shaped similarly if you look at a grand piano from above). Or how about setting up a drum set? That takes bloody ages (especially if the drummer is anal about every nanometer of the setup). And while there are different kinds of gigs, usually it's not the instruments that are a pain in the butt to haul but the rest of the equipment - like speakers, amplifiers, etc.
Having been a professional drummer for the better part of two decades I can attest to the reality of your observations. I must either break down and pack my kit today or move it to the living room, as I have house guests coming and the presence of a full drum set in their chambre might send a message that is less than hospitable.

The schlepping is in fact the reason that I tired of drumming as a profession. We got paid for for the load in and load out... we played the music for free. At one point I even toured with tympani, but that was when the budget permitted roadies. Most of the time, while the guitarists rolled up their cords and headed back to the hotel, the drummer was left folding stands and pedals and bagging the gear. This was completed just in time to help the keyboard player move a Hammond B3 organ down a couple of flights of stairs. Now that is the ultimate piece of work instrument.

It is for this reason that I look askance at the unwieldiness of a harp... although I love the sound of the instrument. It was not engineered for portability. Fortunately, the lute came along in time prevent squelching the courtly love and chivalric message of the troubadour movement.
 
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