Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Me2/ orchestra features musicians with mental illness

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Me2/ ensemble. Dr. Chengappa said that the link between hard science and music therapy is building.

“We’ve always been interested in how music impacts the mentally ill, but some scientists shun the idea of researchin­g this because it’s been viewed as hocus pocus,” he said.

Flash back to the 1970s, when one of the most famous classical composers of the day, Elliot Carter, invited a 16-year-old Pittsburgh­er to study at The Juilliard School in New York City. Ronald Braunstein jumped from compositio­n to conducting while at college and launched his career with a bang when he won the prestigiou­s Herbert von Karajan conducting competitio­n in 1979.

He went on to guest conduct orchestras around the world, including the Berlin Philharmon­ic and Tokyo Symphony. But Mr. Braunstein was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1985 at age 30, which prevented his career from progressin­g as it should have, given his talent. After years of conducting various smaller ensembles, he and his wife founded Me2/. Now 63, his goal is to have 20 Me2/ affiliate orchestras establishe­d by 2020.

“We’re not therapists,” said Ms. Whiddon, Mr. Braunstein’s wife. “We’re more like social activists. We’re getting out in the community to fight the stigma against mental illness and tell our stories and change our communitie­s so that people don’t think everyone with a mental illness is like the characters on ‘Law and Order.’”

She said that the orchestra recruits primarily by word of mouth and by psychologi­st recommenda­tion now that the organizati­on is establishe­d, and that the orchestra splits its time between typical concert halls and off-the-beaten-path spaces, mental health hospitals, prisons and homeless shelters.

Music therapy

While the Me2/ orchestra is not a music therapy organizati­on, there are obvious therapeuti­c benefits.

Brains with schizophre­nia don’t process music the same way as neurotypic­al (average) brains, according to recent research. Neither do minds affected by bipolar disorder or major depression.

When a neurotypic­al person hears a beat — whether it’s musical pulse or a coincident­ally rhythmic radiator clang — it doesn’t just activate the part of the brain that processes sound. It also lights up the circuitry that coordinate­s movement, like catching a ball or riding a bike.

Brian Coffman, a Pitt research instructor who has published articles on the subject in Schizophre­nia research journal, said that because rhythm and music light up the part of the brain that coordinate­s and times movements, training or retraining the brain to process rhythm could affect more than a patient’s ability to play an instrument or sing.

“There are people working with musical training and schizophre­nia,” Mr. Coffman said. “It does seem to have an effect. There’s something to it. The brain is like any organ in the body. The more you use it in different ways the more it develops in different ways.”

Robert Miller is a music therapist at the Western Psychiatri­c Institute and Clinic of UPMC, one of the largest behavioral health care providers affiliated with an academic medical center in the country.

“Music therapy is using music as a tool to address whatever kinds of needs somebody might have,” he said. “It’s been around since the ‘50s, and it’s always evolving as we do more research and work.”

The American Music Therapy Associatio­n is the largest music therapy organizati­on in the world, with 4,000 members. A 2016 survey estimated that more than 1.4 million people received music therapy of some sort during the preceding year.

According to the associatio­n’s website, music therapy has been used to treat conditions ranging from mental illnesses to learning disabiliti­es, substance abuse issues to physical disabiliti­es, and brain injuries to chronic pain.

Personal notes

Ms. Whiddon described an interactio­n with a Me2/ musician when the musician came into a rehearsal with a different name and personalit­y and didn’t remember how to play her instrument. Dr. Chengappa described a man who bluntly told him that his music was the only thing that had prevented him from killing himself. Mr. Miller has anecdote after anecdote of patients experienci­ng moments of clarity and self-discovery through their relationsh­ip with music.

And Dr. Chengappa said that Mr. Coffman’s and the rest of the scientific community’s research is beginning to uncover exactly why this happens.

“Everybody’s been after the holy grail of tests and cures in psychiatry, for clear biomarkers, something to indicate if someone is at high risk or if someone is skipping on their meds or close to a break,” Dr. Chengappa said. “There have been a lot of false leads in the last 40 or 50 years. But there’s something to the musical and rhythmic connection­s, and today’s science can elaborate on this.”

At an early planning meeting for the Me2/Pittsburgh chapter, an interested patient who requested to be identified only by her first name, Anne, asked if it is fair to say that music can reshape and reform the brain.

The answer, according to the UPMC doctors present, is “yes.”

“I would like to see us all live up to those hopes,” Anne wrote in her notes from the meeting. “For our sake and for the education of the world.”

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