|
WHY, WHEN AND HOW WAS PMF STARTED?
PACIFIC MUSIC FOUNDATION WAS STARTED AS A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION IN
2005. OUR MISSION STATEMENT IS TO FACILITATE MUSIC THAT SOOTHES.
WHAT ARE PMF’S LONG-TERM GOALS?
Our long term goals are to
secure facilitation of music that soothes through development of
programs in music instruction, language instruction, dance appreciation
(especially dance/motion therapy) and worldwide cultural exchange
activities.
WHAT ARE SOME PRIOR AND CURRENT ACTIVITIES
Our first musical activity was singing at Castle Hospital, Hale Ku’ike
(a rest home located in lower Nuuanu) as well as a Kupuna Hale in
Waimanalo. Prior to formal inception of Pacific Music Foundation, Mr.
Hussey was invited to organize and present a workshop in Music Therapy
at Castle Hospital. This invitation was based on documented work in
music Mr. Hussey had previously accomplished at Castle Hospital. Our
facilities presentations were reduced in order to satisfy other musical
initiatives and address organizational issues. We have also played in
several different venues including Merrie Monarch, where our music was
received quite well by everyone. Our first full-length concert was held
at Mission Memorial Auditorium on May 4, 2006. We have raised funds to
support a trip to Alaska this July, 2006, to participate in a folk
festival. One of the reasons Alaskan planners coordinate these
festivals is to bring Hawaiian music and dance to the growing community
of Hawaiians living in Alaska. Pacific Music Foundation’s involvement
with promotion of ukulele has been significant. We have already made
several mainland appearances to support workshops and performances
WHAT HAS BEEN THE IMPACT OF SOME PAST ACCOMPLISHMENTS?
To date, Pacific Music Foundation’s services to community have
reached a minimum of 250 youth. The number of adults we’ve influenced
through music and instruction exceeds 4500. Though our “clients” have
come from Hawaii, various states on the mainland, Alaska, Japan, China,
Korea, Australia, Canada and Germany, a significant majority are local
and native Hawaiians. Students have departed our workshops determined
to work toward proficiency goals we’ve established jointly. Those who
have experienced our music leave in awe and appreciation of “nahenahe”
stylings of Hawaiian music. Most importantly, kupuna have raved, tapped
their feet, smiled, relaxed themselves to slumber, sung with us,
clapped their hands, danced and even prayed with us for guidance and
strength to promote our mission.
WHAT DOES PMF SEEK TO CHANGE OR IMPROVE?
Scientific research as well as empirical information gathered over
centuries indicate with certainty that music has the capability to
soothe and even heal. Seventy universities on the mainland have degree
programs in music therapy, so we are well-aware of music therapy’s
capabilities. Many hospitals on the mainland utilize specially recorded
music in their neo-natal care units to soothe newborns. This same kind
of technology is practiced in Europe as well. If music for therapy were
to be similarly practiced in Hawaii, so many benefits would accrue.
Hawaii is blessed to have so many people who love music and enjoy
performance ----- and music therapy would be a wonderful means of
permitting interests to flourish, whether through education,
performance or listening.
WHO ARE PMF’s BENEFICIARIES?
Pacific Music Foundation’s primary beneficiaries are communities
and citizens . We provide Native Hawaiians special consideration and
deserved recognition by using the music they developed since it so
readily portrays those values and disciplines which give music therapy
its wonderful integrity. The application of our work does not presume
there is a problem, but promises it can take a person in almost any
state and enhance that person’s sense of calm.
DOES PMF HAVE ANY PARTNER AGENCIES?
We are currently working with a music therapist from Germany in an
attempt to structure a memorandum of understanding permitting exchange
of information with Europe and Hawaii. We have begun work with the
State of Hawaii to use music to create cultural exchange with China. We
will continue to work closely with Dr. Arthur Harvey, a recently
retired University of Hawaii music professor who is world-renowned in
the field of music for therapy. Through board chairmanship, we also
work in close coordination with Sounding Joy Music Therapy, Inc, whose
specialty is the practice of clinical music therapy. The Ukulele Guild
of Hawaii was started by individuals who shared a common interest in
making ukulele and guitars. We currently do several joint projects with
this guild and help them promote quality instruments made in Hawaii.
There have been three instances of partnership with the City of
Honolulu to sponsor two concerts and one workshop in promotion of music
therapy’s benefits. Numerous times we have partnered with Castle
Hospital, Hale Ku’ike and Waimanalo Health Center to permit their
clients opportunities to experience music that soothes. On a trip to
Alaska in July, we’ve partnered with the State of Alaska and two
Hawaiian Clubs in Anchorage to provide them music that soothes.
WHAT ARE SOME ACTIVITIES YOU ARE PLANNING?
Our initial objective is to recruit people to our organization to
become students of “music that soothes”. By training these people to
help us take our music into hospitals, care homes and other client
community organizations, we develop more reach and continue to grow
those benefits we seek for the Hawaiian community. As we do this, we
also develop expertise in developing strategies to preserve/enhance our
culture while simultaneously promoting cultural exchange worldwide. The
music we develop gives us opportunities to educate our Hawaiian people
to the benefits inherent in clinical music therapy and we are thereby
able to make referrals to certified music therapists. We’ve also begun
preliminary planning to institute a program of instruction in the
Hawaiian language with an emphasis in writing poetry. This will enable
Hawaiians to continue to develop a facility for artistic expression of
our history, culture or folklore. We seek to develop this poetry so we
can then make good use of our musical backgrounds and use these works
to develop original music compositions. In so doing, we enable
meaningful education in the arts at a time when diminishing dollars are
reducing arts education in schools. In our Hawaiian culture, hula is
very much tied to our music. Pacific Music Foundation is well-aware of
meaningful, empirical research which documents several positive results
of dance therapy. We will structure a program of hula instruction which
includes the benefits of dance therapy. The popularity and benefits
dancers accrue from hula will be enhanced through education in
therapeutic aspects of dance.
|