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This
book traces the development of the Nordoff-Robbins approach
to Creative Music Therapy. It is in the nature of a clinical
autobiography in which Paul Nordoff and Clive Robbins
describe in detail the successive treatment and research
projects through which they empirically shaped their
seminal contribution to the international field of music
therapy. Nordoff, a pianist trained for the concert platform
and an eminent composer, turned his creative skills to
reaching and engaging the musical sensitivities inborn
in a wide range of mentally, emotionally and multiply
disabled children. Robbins, with extensive experience
in special education and arts therapies, supported and
augmented Nordoff’s insightful, searching work. Their
imaginative collaboration took them on a journey of investigation
into the then largely unexplored world of musical responsiveness
in special needs children.
The
Nordoff-Robbins approach took two fundamental directions,
both creative. With individual children, they based their
clinical practice on interactive improvisation.
Processes of therapy were initiated as individual clients
participated in music created spontaneously to meet,
answer and enhance their musical and behavioral responses.
In their approach to group music therapy, they mainly
relied on composition, on songs, instrumental
activities and forms of music theatre composed especially
with children’s abilities and developmental needs in
mind. The book recounts their discoveries and presents
a broad range of technique in both modes of therapy.
Musical factors are considered and discussed extensively
and the reader is invited to accompany the authors as
stage by stage they develop their theory and rationales
of Creative Music Therapy.
It
is on the work described in this book, beginning in the
UK and Europe in 1959, and maturing in Kansas and Philadelphia
through 1966, that the entire later development of the
Nordoff-Robbins practice is founded. The processes of
creative therapy that the pioneers researched in children
inspired succeeding generations of therapists to apply
their approach to adult clients and across the entire
spectrum of human disability, illness, deprivation, and
need.
Within
their global musical orientation, Nordoff and Robbins
were intensely client-centered, and the book is replete
in mini case stories. A selection of captioned photographs
illustrates the clinical focus of both modes of their
approach. (2004;ISBN:
1-891278-19-3 $23)
Reviews
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- Rick Soshensky in the Nordic Journal of Music
Therapy, Book Reviews Online March 2005
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