Charity Music for All are calling upon organisations and influencers in the music industry to join them and pledge their support to improving music making access for everyone in the UK with the launch of the Music Makers’ Charter campaign.
The campaign has come at a time where music making opportunities are under real threat. Government cuts to the arts in recent years have resulted in many primary schools failing to meet basic music curriculum needs for young people1 – and there is a lack of recognition and overall understanding on the power of music to improve everyone’s health and wellbeing, and economy and society as a whole.
To draw attention to the decreasing opportunities in music making, Music for All are launching the Music Makers’ Charter highlighting the enormous benefits and current challenges of making music and to galvanise those interested in music, education, health and social care to join together and demand greater access to music making. The Music Makers’ Charter is asking supporters to call for:
· Greater recognition of the powerful benefits of music making on health, wellbeing and society
· More investment in music making opportunities in formal and informal settings
· Increased support for disadvantaged individuals and groups wanting to access music making
Sonali Banerjee, General Manager of Music All explains: “We believe that music making is fast becoming elitist. Sadly only those who can afford to make music out of the classroom can have access to music lessons in the UK. The positive impact of using music to support and enhance mental and physical health throughout people’s lives has long been documented in numerous academic and social research, however there is a serious lack of acknowledgement with policy makers to make music making accessible for everyone.
Sonali Banerjee continues: Our new campaign, the Music Makers’ Charter, is set out to promote the various benefits of music making and to demonstrate how music making is an essential role in maintaining a successful and healthy society, as well as highlighting the harsh realities for would-be music makers in the UK.”
A recent report ‘Power of Music’ by UK Music and Music for Dementia highlights and supports the significant health benefits music can have on people’s lives;
- Music therapy can reduce agitation and the need for medication in 67% of people with dementia, significantly reducing the spend on anti-psychotic medication2
- Music can ease stress in both physiological and psychological outcomes. This has been proved by reducing stress for patients undergoing surgeries and colonoscopies, for children undergoing medical procedures and for patients with coronary heart disease
- Music is processed in both hemispheres of the brain; it can stimulate cognitive functioning and may be used for a remedy of some speech and language skill
- Research proves that when someone listens to music they like, their brain releases dopamine, a “feel good” neurotransmitter
- Playing music is the brain’s equivalent of a full-body workout. Playing an instrument engages practically every area of the brain at once — especially the visual, auditory, and motor cortex
- People who spent 30 minutes or more each day during the pandemic on arts activities such as listening to music, had lower reported rates of depression and anxiety and greater life satisfaction
There is scientific evidence that people who engage with the arts are more likely to lead healthier lives, including eating healthily and staying physically active, irrespective of their socioeconomic status and social capital.
Music for All has been helping disadvantaged individuals, charities, community groups and schools to access music making for over 25 years. During 2023/24 they awarded £118,000 in cash grants and donated 100 instruments, directly benefiting over 11,000 people across the UK.
Tony Followell, Music for All Chair of Trustees, explains: “Our charity’s growth sits in the context of a worrying and widening gulf between our understanding of the power of music to improve our health, wellbeing, education, economy and social cohesion, and the harsh realities faced by aspiring music makers. The cost-of-living crisis, an overstretched healthcare system and under-valued music education services are all significant contributing factors. Now is the time to get vocal and unify support for funding music making.”
By launching the Music Makers’ Charter campaign, Music for All are determined to close the widening gap between policy makers and music makers and draw attention to the extensive benefits of supporting music makers. They will demonstrate their commitment to the Music Makers’ Charter by taking the following actions over the next 12 months.
- Provide up to 1,000 free music lessons during the Learn to Play events across the UK
- Donate over 200 Instruments to disadvantaged individuals/groups
- Provide access to research resources to educators, healthcare professionals and others to highlight the considerable benefits of making music
- Award over £155K in music making cash grants to deprived and marginalised communities and individuals across the UK
- Award over £56K in music making cash grants to educational establishments supporting the music making capability of their pupils.
To join Music for All in pledging your support to the Music Makers’ Charter organisations and individuals simply need to sign the petition on the Music for All’s website. There is also the option to state your commitment to improving access to music making in the UK on the website. Music for All welcomes all commitments, no matter how big or small.