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As I’ve discovered on my own journey, being deaf doesn’t mean you can’t have a relationship with music.
I actually believe a person’s affinity with music does not depend on their ability to hear sound. Music in its simplest form is vibration. Vibrations are heard but they can also be felt, and they can also be seen.
So really, music is most certainly not exclusively for hearing people. But as traditional music or dance classes stand, deaf people – and deaf children in particular – are not being given a fair chance to access these.
And even now it still surprises people when I tell them I work with music, given how profoundly deaf my ears are. Sooooo deaf that I wouldn’t hear my own voice screaming – and believe me, I’ve tried.
But this is where I hope we can continue to break down misconceptions. Despite my ears, music makes a lot of sense to me. And my daughter, who is also Deaf seems to have inherited the same inner rhythm.
My family joke that all the Withey women are born dancers, and it seems that to some extent it must be true. Rhythm is in our blood, if not in our ears.
So throughout my musical career, I’ve developed a system that has seen deaf adults and children discover and develop a love for music.
I remember teaching a signed song workshop and a young boy, a native BSL user, sat arms crossed in the front row. He didn’t seem very happy to be there.
I asked him what was wrong and he told me that there was no way he could take part because he was ‘too deaf.’ Not like the others, he added.
On the other side of him were a trio of deaf children who didn’t use sign language and were warbling Katy Perry’s “Firewooooooork” at the tops of their voices. The BSL boy had no idea what the trio were singing, he couldn’t hear it, he couldn’t feel it and he couldn’t see it. So he concluded that music was definitely not for him.
On I went with the workshop. Now in the sessions I deliver, I always use my very trusty, and very heavy boombox. (Note to self: I really need to get a trolley to lug it to sessions in future…)
It’s loud and clear enough that those with hearing aids can pick up its sound, and its powerful enough that you can feel its vibrations pound.
The first task in my session was to retell a lyrical story. Participants can use their voices or they can use BSL – whatever they fancy. And I noticed the young BSL boy coming out of his shell. He had a story to tell and he wanted to express himself.
Working on a basic beat to accompany the lyrics, the young guy came and sat beside me so he could feel the “booms” from the speaker. He continued to sign his short verses, stamping his feet whenever he felt the “booms” as he watched the visual metronome from my hands indicating the pace of the piece.
At the end of the session small groups were invited to stand up and perform their pieces if they wished. This young BSL boy who was initially sulky and reluctant to take part asked me if he could perform solo. He took centre stage – alone! – and revelled in it.
This little success story showed me that deaf kids are still being made to feel that unless they can sing with their voice box, they’re not really singing at all. But when they’re given the opportunity to express themselves in a supportive environment using their preferred language, they can truly shine.
There are countless ways to make musical teaching more accessible. Here are a few ideas that have worked for me…
- If you’re playing music – get the best equipment. No playing from iphones or laptops or through tiny speakers. Live instruments are great for visually and physically learning rhythms and amplified speakers are best for feeling vibrations and super sonic sound!
- Explore basic beats and demonstrate these physically. Offer participants the chance to copy and create their own. Use claps, stamps, head nods, dance moves, pounding of the fists. Encourage the exploration of pace and basic beats before moving onto syncopated rhythms.
- BE the music. If participants cannot hear or feel the songs, you will have to show them how it looks. This means visually demonstrating the songs beat, mood, and lyrical rhythm. If you’re focusing on the storytelling then your task is to infuse a visual meaning along with the musical structure of the vocals. No easy task, but definitely not impossible.
- Project lyrics for students to see. Projecting these while demonstrating the rhythm of the vocals (by lipspeaking or singing) can help those who use speech/hearing aids to pinpoint where the lyrics are in the music. You can also use visual projection for BSL users and not giving out handouts leaves everyone handsfree!
- Finally, get to know who you are working with. Find out what works for them. They might offer you insight themselves! Make room in the session for exploration and freedom and most importantly – let go of all assumptions.
During my University Studies, my dissertation argued that rhythm is innate and it’s acquisition is not dependent on sound. I have met enough deaf and hearing people to support my belief that it’s not deafness that is a barrier to being musical, it’s deeper than that. It’s something in your soul. (Oh gosh, I’m going all corny again)
Given the right environment and opportunities to access musical training, Deaf people can succeed in this field. Even if – like me – they can’t audibly distinguish a flute from a clarinet. It might mean doing things differently, but whatever works!
I’m thrilled to see organisations such as the NDCS with their Raising the Bar initiative, celebrating and supporting young deaf musical artists. I hope opportunities for deaf young musicians and performers can eventually be mainstreamed and not such an rarity.
And as for the tone deaf, two left feet, not-a-musical-bone-in-my-body folk, well there’s plenty of other careers to choose from.
Rebecca-Anne Withey is a freelance writer with a background in Performing Arts & Holistic health. Read more of Rebecca’s articles for us here.
She is also profoundly deaf, a sign language user and pretty great lipreader.
Her holistic practices and qualifications include Mindfulness, Professional Relaxation Therapy, Crystal Therapy and Reiki.
She writes on varied topics close to her heart in the hope that they may serve to inspire others.
Hartmut Teuber
April 3, 2018
Much myth has been going around about deaf people enjoying music.
Music consists of two major components, rhythm and melody.
Only the rhythm part is what people with hearing inability or strongly diminished hearing ability have access to. Not the melody part which requires ability to distinguish between frequencies and thus can appreciate the melodies between vibrations of combinations of different frequencies. The perception of music through their tactile sense of vibration is entirely different than by hearing people aurally through the ears. Sensing vibrations tactily is highly binary in whether the vibration is present or absent, distinguished by perhaps five grades of vibratory intensities (“loudness”). The vibration induced by a high frequency tone is perceived as a beat of low intensity. Very high frequency tones cannot be received and become silent inside the body. The sensed vibrations translate as a phrase of punctual beats spaced in varying temporal intervals between the beats that repeats and become “understood” as bodily movements like dance.
The perception of a melody on the other hand goes differently. The sounds changes analoguously (continuously) over time. They affect the human body differently. It swings back and forth, not abruptly like when it is responding to drum beats. The main criterion is that the tunes must harmoniously follow the previous ones. What harmony is can be shown by mathematics. Perceiving the melody part of music is the domain of hearing, not deaf people. It is the major part of their music appreciation.
Teaching music to deaf people can only go along the aspect of rhythm and developed in dance.
Hartmut Teuber
April 3, 2018
The hard-of-hearing people, that is, those with much residual hearing certainly can appreciate the melody part of music. How much their appreciation differ from hearing people is wholly an empirical question. The deafened folks use their memories of their past hearing times to appreciate melody. Their appreciation is an act of projection how they believe their musical creations would be perceived by the hearing. It is known that a dog can hear sounds at higher frequencies that humans cannot hear. A deaf person can sense very low vibrations that hearing people don’t hear. Could a Beethoven create a music that involves those inaudible tones – for dogs or for deaf people? Certainly not!