Showing posts with label Singing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singing. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

SING YOUR WAY OUT OF STRESS!


SING YOUR WAY OUT OF STRESS!


BY DEBBIE ALMOCERA


I love to sing. There was a time when I thought I was good at it. I remember having benefit concerts in my college days whose main attraction were my friends and I - a bunch of delusional wannabes drowning in our own grandiosity. It was a daring time.

Unfortunately, my friends and I are now immersed in lives completely different from what we originally envisioned. We didn’t become professional singers, nor did we achieve stardom beyond our wildest dreams. Whenever we get together, we reminisce and laugh at our “misfortune” of not being able to adhere to our original calling – to become rock stars for the masses! Instead, we raised kids, worked day in and day out, and got credit cards and mortgages that bound us eternally to a nine-to-five job. Our singing dreams went up in smoke and into the shower.

The value of music cannot be understated. Singing, listening to, or playing music are effective tools in coping with stress and venting emotional frustration. Music relieves stress, and boosts memory and learning.

Studies compiled by Northwestern University researchers reveal significant benefits acquired from early musical training and experience. Children who have early musical training evidently have a more developed vocabulary, and better reading ability . They appear to be more focused and attentive in school. Studies with older adults with lifelong musical experiences and skills indicated slowed memory losses .

Music appears to help trigger memory of certain events in life. They have also found out that playing a musical instrument sharpens one’s auditory ability to distinguish speech and sound . Apparently, somebody with musical skills can detect emotion in sound better than those who have no musical talent whatsoever.

I have experimented on using music with Alzheimer’s patients to calm them down, when they appear restless and agitated. I have noticed immediate calming effects. However, I think more studies still have done in this area.

Although there is a significant amount of research that shows evidence of the positive impact of music in mood, we don’t have to be scientists and scholars to know that music is a mood enhancer. Music makes us happy, and helps make us feel relaxed. Whether you want to feel romantic and ecstatic, or wallow in self-pity and despondency, music would set off these emotions like an arrow to a target. Listen to a dancing beat, and you will find yourself bobbing your head, and tapping you toes. Listen to sad melodies, and you remember the time you nursed a broken heart.
Once again, music facilitates the release of “feel good” hormones and neurotransmitters in the brain, particularly oxytocin and serotonin.
I learned to play the drums not because I wanted to bang on things (although I do question this sometimes), but because I was fascinated by the simplicity of an instrument that gives pulse to music. I was amazed at how drums could carry the beat of a song, by a simple repeated note. I look at drum sets and admire the combination of pieces that diversify a beat. In the process of learning how to play, I found out that playing (or banging in things), is an effective stress management technique. Since then, I have committed to become a drummer.

But I will keep on singing. Hopefully so would my friends, unless they have plunged completely into the abyss of hopelessness when it comes to their singing aspirations. Whether you can sing well or not, (most of us think we can, including me, to the dismay of my daughters, and perhaps all my friends), do not hesitate to bellow out a note to the top of your lungs, and declare your operatic skills to the Gods. Trust me, you will feel better.

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Debbie Almocera is a licensed therapist working in the behavioral medicine department of one of the largest hospitals in St. Louis, Missouri. For her, there has not been a more fulfilling and rewarding career than the one she has now. She can be reached at dholderle@yahoo.com

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Kirby Asunto: On the Way to Int'l Stardom!

BY MARIVIR MONTEBON

Maria Kirby Asunto is well-known in the Filipino-American circles in the East Coast. She is a rising star, a promising young voice who needs just a little bit more of promoting and relentless polishing of artistry to reach perfection.

Singing the Philippine national anthem may be her biggest ticket to international status, as the much-awaited fight of international welterweight champ Manny Pacquiao between Timothy Bradley takes place at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas on June 9.  After all, she was personally chosen by the champ Pacquiao himself.

On Facebook, 14-year-old Kirby is your typical teenager who writes just about any thing going on with her daily routine – coming home tired from a long trip, asking for well wishes on her singing auditions, and ah, waiting in excitement for her new braces.

But this young girl, who is enrolled at the McManus Middle School in Linden, New Jersey, has big dreams, and is creating her name as a singer and performer in New York and the neighboring states.                 She has performed in major Filipino-American events in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and the US capital region with her mother, Shirley Asunto, ever supportive of her budding career.
Kirby had won major awards and recognitions, like First Place at the Regional and National Competition at Access Broadway in Groton, Connecticut, Grand Champion at the Philippine American Idol Competition (Philippines Fiesta, Secaucus, NJ) and New Rising Star at the 2010 Kollaboration DC (Washington, DC).
                She was also the featured rising star performer for the 2010 Migrant Heritage Commission’s (MHC) Annual People’s Ball, the biggest Fil-Am Community Gala in Washington DC and Asia Heritage Foundation’s Fiesta Asia, considered the biggest Asian street Festival in the U.S. capital.

Kirby also performed for Philippine President Nonoy Aquino’s 2010 Proclamation Inauguration Ball in Manila and Arnel Pineda’s Atlantic City Concert as the front act.

Kirby performed as Special Guest of the Rising Young Stars Competition at the MHC’s 2010 International Migrant Heritage Festival in Metropolitan Washington D.C.

She trained vocally under Corazon Demaano Samonte in the Philippines. In the US, Kirby goes to Catherine Kuenzel and Bituin D. Escarcha for voice coaching and dance lessons with Miguel Braganza.

In December 2010, she held her first solo Christmas show, dubbed as “Pasko sa Payag” at the Payag Restaurant in Queens, New York.

“I want to be a professional singer and work with some famous people in the Philippines and the US, especially Hollywood. I also want to be like the big stars who are helping people in Haiti and other countries in need,” she quipped.
Kirby started showing her extraordinary singing talent at age two. Upon discovering her singing voice, her parents have since then encouraged her to join in musical plays, special events and competitions.

Mom Shirley (whose roots are from Davao and Leyte) always reminds her to balance her singing with studies.  “I tell her she needs to be educated so that she will not be fooled by ways of the world. I am here to protect her, first and foremost and I want her to be a respected singer someday.”

Like in her previous performances, Kirby’s sweet rendering of the Lupang Hinirang may send in the goose bumps for all those who hear it live at the MGM Grand or on the ‘tube.