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Scales to Scalpels

Doctors Who Practice the Healing Arts of Music and Medicine: The Story of the Longwood Symphony Orchestra

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The true story of an orchestra made up of medical professionals that "makes the connection between music and medicine visible and palpable" (Yo-Yo Ma).

You may have read about the Longwood Symphony Orchestra (LSO) in the paper or heard them on your favorite radio station. But the LSO is not just any orchestra. It began in 1982 with a group of talented Boston-area physicians, med students and health-care professionals and has since flourished under the leadership of violinist Dr. Lisa Wong, who became president of the LSO in 1991. The orchestra is now a proud, extraordinary group of musicians with fans around the globe.

In Scales to Scalpels, Dr. Wong and Robert Viagas chronicle how the musical acumen of these physicians affects the way they administer healing and, in turn, how their work affects their music. What cognitive and emotional shifts occur when a surgeon transitions from the chaos of the ER to the discipline of the orchestra rehearsal studio? What's it like to make a house call to a poor neighborhood in the morning and then play trumpet in a jazz group that night? Does music heal the doctors the way the doctors heal their patients? How does practicing the art of music transform the art of practicing medicine?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2012
      It’s the secret life of some remarkable doctors who heal ailing bodies and minds with medicine by day: by night they heal with music. In this loving ode to the health-care providers/musicians who volunteer their talents with the famed Longwood Symphony Orchestra of Boston, pediatrician, violinist, and retiring LSO president Wong profiles the fascinating professionals who shed their white coats once a week to make great music, and then explores how music helps them deliver better care. Gastroenterologist Stephen Wright, a Tufts Medical School professor and chief of medicine at Faulkner Hospital, displays skill with the bassoon reed that mirrors his precision as a physician; violinist and occupational therapist Tamara Goldstein works with elderly patients with dementia and shows how music reached into the deepest part of one woman to reawaken her memories—and participation in life. And physical therapist and cellist Denise Lotufo found music sharpened her ability to hear not only when she was playing in tune but also what her patients were telling her. Wong argues that there may soon come the day when doctors will write prescriptions for Bach or Haydn “the way we now write for amoxicillin or Ambien.” 8 pages of b&w photos. Agent: Linda Konner, the Linda Konner Agency.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2012
      With the assistance of playbill.com founder Viagas (I'm the Greatest Star: Broadway's Top Musical Legends from 1900 to Today, 2009, etc.), Wong sums up her experiences as president of Boston's Longwood Symphony Orchestra. The author joined this relatively unique orchestra of semi-professional musicians who are also medical practitioners in 1985, at a time when it was made up of "an enthusiastic but rather motley band of eighty or ninety musicians." In college Wong had dreamed of becoming a professional violinist but decided on a medical career instead. Despite the demands of a thriving pediatric practice, marriage and motherhood, she joined the LSO and served as president from 1991 to 2012. She provides thumbnail sketches of other members of the orchestra to substantiate her assertion that music and medicine can be complementary, and she explains that the ability to listen is crucial both for musicians performing in an orchestra and doctors treating patients. Both disciplines require "passion, focus, training, and the sharing of humanity with those around us," and for doctors who need to suppress their own emotions in professional situations, playing music can be a welcome release. Wong also discusses the clinical benefits of listening to music--e.g., stroke victims who regain their lost ability to speak by singing; withdrawn patients suffering from dementia who become responsive through music--and pays special tribute to Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the Nobel Prize-winning doctor whose combined career as a missionary and musician remains an inspiration. Wong's message is simple yet profound: Music heals.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2012
      Many medical doctors over the centuries have been fascinated by music. In this quite marvelous exploration of two very different and yet strangely similar disciplines that combine the two ancient archetypes of the healer and the troubadour, pediatrician Wong and author and editor Viagas, founder and manage of Playbill, Theater.com, and Broadway Television Network, explore the relationship between the two. Medicine, Wong persuasively maintains, is just as much an art as music, and the crux of the book explores the history of music as a healing art. Wong is also president of the all-physician Longwood Symphony Orchestra in Boston, an organization that includes internists, surgeons, oncologists, cardiologists, psychologists, therapists, chiropractors, and medical students, one of more than a dozen all-doctor orchestras in the United States. Viagas and Wong offer fascinating anecdotes and insights about why our brains like music, music and IQ, music and autism, and humanism in medicine. What's more, the authors raise the tantalizing possibility of using specific pieces of music to treat specific illnesses. With an introduction by Yo-Yo Ma, this is accessible, enjoyable, and inspiring.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

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