We were so excited when we heard that the guys had been given permission to put on a live show and we just had to be part of it and lend our support. It was unfortunate that some people were against it and tried to sabotage the performance, but that just made everyone more determined to make it work.
This was a very brave step for the prison authorities to take and the guys didn't want to let anyone down or betray their trust. They were absolutely great and although this music therapy program is still very much in the early stages, it's proving to have a really positive effect on everyone involved.
Oh my, you look so sad
Is it just the kind of day you've had?
I don't like to see you
When you're feeling bad
And all I want to do
When you're down like that
Is take you in my arms
And hold you tight
Tell you everything is gonna be alright
And try to show you just how much
You mean to me
And take away the sadness
From your memory
And be what you want me to be
Oh my, it's been so long
Maybe I don't know what's going on
I don't like to think
We could be going wrong
And all I want to do
To keep our love as strong
Is take you in my arms
And hold you tight
Tell you everything is gonna be alright
And try to show you just how much
You mean to me
And take away the sadness
From your memory
And be what you want me to be
Music therapy programs are now used extensively in prisons as part of the rehabilitation process. Advocates of these programs point to the therapeutic nature of music, the positive outlet of energy and the stimulation of the creative processes as reasons to support the continuation and proliferation of music therapy. Music programs emphasize cooperation and provide a skill that can be used outside of prison. If not as a source of income, then as a productive hobby.
Music programs have traditionally been offered in all kinds of facilities, from lower-security to maximum-security prisons. These sessions include music lessons, playing and performing in groups and the opportunity to make recordings or perform live on radio and television. Some bands are allowed to travel outside the prison to perform. Others are limited to performing inside the institution for their convict peers only. Instruction varies from hiring professional music instructors to volunteers and prisoner teachers. Music programs can be part of larger overall arts programs that include theatre, dancing, and painting, while sometimes they are part of other self-help groups organised by the prisoners themselves.
Supporters of art and music programs believe that such classes restore a sense of humanity and safety that is vital to rehabilitation. The sense of completion and of contribution to the creation of something that society values can help inmates increase their self-esteem and recapture a sense of pride and satisfaction in themselves and their work. Other benefits can include relearning responsibility and discipline through individual and group practice and performance.
These programs have also been shown to reduce repeat offending rates. They provide an alternative to traditional education classes to which inmates who have had negative experience with schooling in the past may be averse. The open structure of these programs also helps them bring together diverse groups of individuals from different racial, ethnic, geographical and social backgrounds into a harmonious cooperative atmosphere. Music programs have even been used as a form of psychotherapy to develop the relationship between the therapist and the client. Therapists believe that music particularly helps those individuals who would otherwise have a difficult time communicating and expressing themselves.
Be What You Want Me To Be (c) Steve Nielson (Musical Juice) All Rights Reserved