April 28, 2010 Bramwell Tovey: “We believe an education without a significant musical component is no education at all”.
Full text of the speech presented by Bramwell Tovey to Vancouver School Board (VSB) Trustees at a public meeting at Mount Pleasant Elementary, Vancouver April 20th 2010.
Good Evening. My name is Bramwell Tovey. I am the Music Director and artistic head of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. I am also a parent of two students in a VSB French immersion program, aged 9 and 11. My wife, Lana is a music educator with several years experience of inner-city school teaching in Winnipeg. For four years she volunteered as teacher of music and choir for Queen Elizabeth Annex Elementary School where she taught every class as this VSB school had no provision for music.
The VSO performs to 50,000 children every year in our educational and other concerts for children with a great deal of support from the public and private sector, led by TELUS, our Premier Education Partner.
The VSO Connects educational program works in partnership with school boards across the Lower Mainland. This program provides a link between the VSO and selected schools on a year to year basis and brings the orchestra into direct contact with thousands of students throughout the Lower Mainland. We have worked in harmonious partnership with the VSB and sincerely thank you for your tremendous support of this important program which also brings students to rehearsals at the Orpheum in downtown Vancouver .
One of the modules we present is a “Meet the Maestro” program. I have visited dozens of schools in this program as a guest speaker and performer, speaking to the whole school community, students, parents who wish to attend, and of course, the teachers whose dedication and skill is so inspiring. I talk about music, the VSO, the language of music, the elements of composition and of course, I play the piano- the highlight is usually a short movement by Beethoven whose music always connects with young listeners.
I make the point that Beethoven had a seemingly insurmountable handicap for a musician – he was deaf. He lived in a world of silence yet understood the language of music better than any of his contemporaries. He created some of the most extraordinary music to have captivated hearts and minds during the last two hundred years.
At the VSO we believe an education without a significant musical component is no education at all.
Music is a form of language which reaches every human being. It needs little or no translation. In a school district like Vancouver, where dozens of languages are spoken by our widely diverse community, music is the only language common to everyone.
The proposal to cease investing in the Band and Strings Program is one that the VSO strongly urges the VSB to withdraw. In many Vancouver schools we have witnessed first hand the benefits of the VSB supported band and strings program. The option of a user-pay or school funded program does not embrace the inner city child whose only connection with live music may be the saxophone or drum set that has been offered to them. The saving of half a million dollars is paltry when considering the life enhancing benefits of this contact with the world of music. In fact, I doubt this amount would even buy a family home within 10 blocks of the illustrious VSB building on West Broadway. When I heard the actual figure I found it hard to believe so much had been achieved with so little.
I do not bring these remarks to you from a lofty aesthetic perch. I grew up in England in the East End of London – my father died when I was a boy. Without the band and orchestra experience that I benefitted from in the state school education that I received, I would never have been able to compete and succeed in the music profession. As a single parent my mother could not have afforded the cost of these activities. I have a personal motive for standing here tonight – I don’t want a kid like me to fall through the cracks because of this proposal.
The Vancouver School Board has done a wonderful job supporting the band and strings program. Rather than cutting it I would suggest that you expand it, and consider adding a choral component to it – the magical sound of children’s voices has largely been silenced in many of the Vancouver schools I have visited. This should be the legacy of the VSB in these post-Olympic times.
What kind of message does this give to our children about the values of our society?
“Here’s an instrument. Now give it back.”
The social benefits of music are extraordinary – If a student holds a musical instrument then he or she can’t hold a knife, or a joint, or a needle or a crack pipe – or a gun.
If a student is in a choir or a band or an orchestra, they are communicating through the universal art of music at the heart of our community.
After a recent VSO educational concert of Beethoven’s music at the Orpheum in Vancouver, a teacher wrote to us with a comment penned by a young student who had spent his brief life in foster care due to a litany of misfortune that made Beethoven’s disability seem negligible by comparison. He wrote:
- “It was the most beautiful building I have ever seen
- It was the most wonderful music I’ve ever heard
- It was the greatest day of my life.”
That is the power of music – to heal, to inspire, to communicate, to transform and so much else besides.
Beethoven had no choice but to live in a world of silence.
Please, do not let your choice bring silence to the world of a single child.
Thank you for your attention.
Bramwell Tovey
Music Director Vancouver Symphony Orchestra
Tags: bramwell tovey, music, vsb
- 3 comments
- Posted under letter
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Yaraee
said
Thanks for putting the power of music into words and acts.
That’s true: the best known methods of learning and educating incorporate music as a perfect tool. Also, music helps the balance of neurotransmitters in the brain and develops the habit of organized thinking. Music enables our mind to apply the concept of progressive patterns into other areas of lives as well.
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SUSAN WEISS
said
I commend Maestro Tovey on his courage and conviction to share his views both, professional and personal, about: “an education without a significant musical component is no education at all”. Thank you, Maestro for stepping up and speaking out.
I agree with the comment of Yaraee about “neurotransmitters”; having worked in the field of “neurofeedback” for ten years in Oregon, I saw and experienced firsthand the benefits of “music” and its power on “neurotransmitters” in the brain.
The “music” component, (especially Mozart), was an enabler and facilitated these children in achieving a better control over their “brain” functions, during and after their training sessions.
Several of these children went on to join a school music program. One of them, (who hated to read), formed his own “Mariachi Rock Band” and told me many years later that “music helped me to learn how to read”. (Actually, music was just one component).
I, as the former Director of Education at the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, rescued the VSO music in the schools program that was dormant for years. (I know, I saw the VSO play at my junior high school in North Vancouver).
In the first year of my efforts I linked music, art and writing together in a school wide contest in the Vancouver Schools.
One piece of writing, a short letter entered into this contest, from an eight year old boy on his first visit to the Orpheum Theatre to hear the VSO play a concert for school children sticks in my mind after so many years, and I quote: “I like the “orkestera” because they “smell good”.
I was so curious that I tracked down this child and asked him where he was sitting in the hall. He told me by the “lower orkestera left wall”.
So, at the next orchestra rehearsal I went and sat where he sat. Yes, he was right!, “smelled good”, but alas it was not the orchestra that smelled good, it was the “good smells” from the bread baking in the Bon Ton Café which, at that time was located next to the Orpheum Theatre….“the power of music”.
To the Vancouver School Board Trustees, I quote your chairperson, “once it, (the music programs), are dismantled it will be impossible to bring them back”.
How true, I have been there, seen that, and it is not “pretty”.
I share a thank you to Sharon Gregson, VSB Trustee, who put me in direct contact with Associate Superintendent of Learning Services, Valerie Overgaard. I shall meet with Associate Superintendent of Learning Services Valerie Overgaard in early June, (at her request), to explore and discuss a “business plan”, to help make the Music Programs in the Vancouver Schools permanent, and hopefully, resistant to “cuts”, and I do so as a volunteer.
There was a caveat, a suggestion to Sharon Gregson, from Valeria Overgaard, “IF we are able to save the band and strings program this year, we should spend the next year finding ways to offer the program in a more cost-effective model, and to explore additional funding sources”.
I shall persevere, I am passionate about music in education.
I am a product of this.
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Glenn Swift
said
A friend of mine told me about a three-year-old budding conductor – what immediately came to mind was ‘Bramwell Tovey would be interested in this!’ http://www.choralnet.org/view/268945
Long time Winnipeger and amateur musician