Progressive Music is Western Pennsylvania's leading school music dealer. This blog will be an insight into the world of Progressive Music, the music industry as a whole, music education, life in the City of McKeesport and sometimes random thoughts. Progressive's Mark Despotakis takes you inside Progressive Music.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Feds Turn to ‘Brain Music’ to Boost Emergency Worker Performance

Feds Turn to ‘Brain Music’ to Boost Emergency Worker Performance

readinessoptimizationAs anyone who has ever cranked “Ace of Spades” knows, music can be a powerful tool. And researchers at the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate want to find ways to harness that power.

The program is supposed to study how “brain music” — a customized soundtrack designed to either boost alertness or reduce stress — can improve the performance of police, firefighters and other first responders. As described by DHS, researchers will test how an “instrumental alert track” (click here for a sample) can boost focus and energy, or act to reduce stress. A group of firefighters will take part in the experiment.

“Because of the strains that come with an emergency response job, we are interested in finding ways to help these workers remain at the top of their game when working and get quality rest when they go off a shift,” said Department of Homeland Security Program Manager Robert Burns.

The DHS news item describes how it works. Each two– to-six-minute brain music track is performed on a single instrument, usually a piano. One tune would be tailored for relaxation (Burns says it might sound more like a “melodic, subdued Chopin sonata”), while the revving-up track might have “more of a Mozart sound.”

Neurofeedback soundtracks will be created by Human Bionics, a company that markets a product called “Brain Music Therapy,” used to help correct sleep disorders. The program is part of DHS’s “Readiness Optimization Program,” which is supposed to test ways to improve the job performance of first responders by combining brain music with nutrition education.

While we haven’t seen the details on the nutrition piece, one wonders if that, too, will combine a focus component (Red Bull? Wheatgrass shots?) with a stress-relief component (doughnuts, Cheetos).

[Photo: DHS]

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Fort Myers, FL Hotel Manager Trys To Help Keep Music and Arts in the Schools

Hotel manager in Lee County offers to fly, lodge potential arts savior

SAM COOK • SCOOK@NEWS-PRESS.COM • APRIL 8, 2009

• Blog: Artfest Fort Myers puts up $500 challenge to help save jobs of 80 art, music teachers

If you don't believe art and music are important to folks in the Lee County School District, check out Alan Jarrett's response to an alternate plan to cutting 80 art and music teachers by the superintendent and his board.

"I find (John) Benham's offer intriguing and I am throwing in this offer from Cooper Hotels of Lee County,'' writes Jarrett, the company's regional director of operations and a county resident since 2000.

"We will pay $500 for Mr. Benham's plane ticket, offer him complimentary accommodations at one of our hotels and provide function space for interviews and town hall meetings with the parents and teachers of Lee County.''

That's a superb start.

Superintendent James Browder's solution is to eliminate teachers from traditional public elementary schools if the district's 2009-10 budget comes up $50 million short.

Jarrett isn't shy about what motivates him.

He says Cooper Hotels, which owns and operates the Crowne Plaza Hotel and Homewood Suites by Hilton Hotel at Bell Tower Shops, has more than 200 employees raising families in Lee's school district.

"Our business model is not based upon destination locations, cold winters, warm beaches and six weeks of baseball,'' Jarrett writes. "That is a first-class ticket to bankruptcy. Ours is simple. Tight-knit caring communities, strong schools and a thriving college. This has made our hotels profitable for over 20 years. So there. My cards are on the table.''

Benham, 66, lives near Minneapolis. He has saved fine arts programs in school districts for 28 years. He was recommended by Jeff Hanjian, who worked in Gwinnett County, Ga., when Benham performed his magic there in 1995.

Benham estimates his fee would be $8,000 plus transportation, food and lodging for a week - peanuts compared to Lee's possible financial woes.

Michel Wilk's daughter, Emily, is a junior clarinet player at Fort Myers High.

"Music is our lives in many ways - and my daughter would be lost without it,'' Wilk writes. "I spend countless hours fundraising - because the music program receives a hysterically small amount of money each year.

"The school does not pay for the marching band - the parents do. All of the other band ensembles are also supported by the boosters.We pay for our own buses, equipment trucks, music (for all ensembles) and instrument repair. We drive to and from.

"One wonders what would happen if they cut the sports programs or even one sports program.''

If you want to help, call Hanjian at 470-1895.