Yorkshire Post

Living in harmony thanks to brass

Scientists confirm what many suspected – that playing in a band is good for you mentally and physically

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: alex.wood@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WILL be music to the ears of brass band players the length and breadth of Yorkshire.

Researcher­s in Sheffield have found being a band member can boost people’s health and well being – cutting stress, improving mental health – as well as giving players lungs like an elite athlete.

The study shows playing in a brass band can even help improve some respirator­y conditions and have similar mental cleansing effects to meditating.

With the help of Brass

Band England, the academics circulated a questionna­ire asking players about the positive and negative effects of playing in a band.

One participan­t with over 20 years’ experience, who suffers with asthma, reported how playing helped them gain control over their breathing, leading to a doctor comparing their lungs to a top-class athlete.b Another, who started playing relatively late in life, said: “If you are prepared to spend the time to master a brass instrument, you will never be lonely or bored again. There are so many bands out there and many are crying out for players, that you could be out every day of the week playing with some band.”

The study’s authors, Dr Victoria Williamson and Dr Michael Bonshor, of the University of Sheffield, hope the results encourage people to join a band as a “sociable way” of contributi­ng to physical and mental health. Dr Bonshor said: “Our research has clearly shown that playing in brass bands can be beneficial for individual physical, psychologi­cal and social wellbeing.

“Players report perceived improvemen­ts in respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular health, general fitness, cognitive skills, mental wellbeing and social engagement.

“Our survey respondent­s particular­ly valued the opportunit­ies for community building, reporting a sense of social bonding and belonging, not only within the brass band world but also through their band’s musical role in a range of public events and fundraisin­g activities for the wider community.” Former cancer patient Morag McKay, who plays the B-flat bass, the largest instrument for Dodworth Colliery Brass Band, said when she was going through months of treatment, playing in the band was “the only thing that was normal”. She said: “It’s a safe sanctuary, a place for me time, where it is irrelevant whether you have a disability or an illness, you have come together to collective­ly to make music. It focuses and uses both parts of the brain at the same time – nothing else does that.”

And Julie Harris, a trombone player with the Leyburn Band, said: “It’s like a family – everybody is so different. The youngest is 10 – the oldest is over 80. It’s the most strange mix of people you would think would never go together but we do. It amazes me how individual­ly we are not that good but when we are all together we make a noise that is really, really good.”

Our research has clearly shown playing in brass bands can be beneficial. Dr Michael Bonshor of the University of Sheffield.

 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON; JAMES HARDISTY. ?? BLOWN AWAY: Left, Kirkbymoor­side Brass Band in rehearsal; a scene from hit movie Brassed Off; Friendly Band, Sowerby Bridge and, inset, Rebecca Cobb with the Brassy Tarts WI.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON; JAMES HARDISTY. BLOWN AWAY: Left, Kirkbymoor­side Brass Band in rehearsal; a scene from hit movie Brassed Off; Friendly Band, Sowerby Bridge and, inset, Rebecca Cobb with the Brassy Tarts WI.
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