Music therapy helps children and adults with special needs improve social skills, communication, and manage emotions. We work with private clients through 1:1 or group music therapy, and also offer adapted instrument lessons.
We also work in schools and various programs serving those with special needs.
As an expressive therapy, music therapy helps clients connect to their emotions and experiences through creativity. We work in behavioral hospitals, treatment centers, and with private clients and see some pretty amazing results.
Request a demo and see how we can improve your mental health.
We provide drumming workshops to help strengthen teams and improve workplace wellness. These team drumming workshops are incredibly energizing, powerful, and completely customized to your organization.
Contact us to learn more about our In Harmony Team Development Program!
We provide private group and individual music therapy services for individuals with Autism, ADHD, Down Syndrome, and Developmental Delay. We have a wide range of programs for private clients, and also contract with private and public schools for group and individual music therapy.
We contract with residential treatment centers, hospitals, and foster care programs in Salt Lake, Davis, and Utah Counties. We serve children, adolescents and adults in both outpatient and residential settings.
Our team drumming workshops are energizing, effective, and entertaining. Your team will walk away with concrete applications for how to work well together, manage stress, and improve morale.
Are you ready to get your groove on??
When you work with a Board Certified Music Therapist (MT-BC), you are not just bringing music to your patients, you are bringing a depth to therapy unmatched by any other approach.
Board Certified Music Therapists must complete a Bachelor’s degree in Music Therapy, complete 1,200 clinical training hours, and pass the national Board Certification Exam. Board Certified Music Therapists are trained clinicians who have studied how to effectively use music for therapeutic outcomes.
Music shares neural systems with functions such as memory, motor control, gait, rebuilding neural pathways, language, executive function, emotion and attention. For those with damage to areas responsible for these processes, music can optimize their function and play a key role in the rehabilitative process.
“Music therapy can make the difference between withdrawal and awareness, between isolation and interaction, between chronic pain and comfort — between demoralization and dignity.”
–Barbara Crowe, Past President of the American Music Therapy Association
People with brain injuries often find that they are able to sing even if they cannot speak (or have difficulty speaking). This is because music stimulates other areas of the brain that still allow for speech output even if there has been brain damage. Music Therapists use music to strengthen these areas of the brain and can help in regaining speech and language function.