Patients at a mental health hospital in Blackburn are taking part in a life changing music therapy programme to improve their wellbeing.

A music therapy initiative called ‘Music 2 Empower’ has been introduced to patients at Cygnet Fountains on Pleasington Close, Blackburn to help them look to the future with a renewed sense of confidence and hope.

Music 2 Empower provides music sessions for service users and gives them studio time to record their own music.

For service-user and keen drummer, Alan, the initiative has allowed him to use music as a tool for recovery. He has spent the past 14 years in hospital after an attack left him with neurological damage.

Lancashire Telegraph: Music room at Cygnet Fountains, Blackburn. Photo: Cygnet Fountains website Music room at Cygnet Fountains, Blackburn. Photo: Cygnet Fountains website

He said Music 2 Empower has given him renewed sense of confidence and an added motivation to recover and be discharged.

He said: “Without music, I wouldn’t be here.

“When I’m playing the drums, I’m not mentally ill anymore.”

Alan spent ten years learning to play jazz rock and is having to re-learn how to play following his injury.

He added: “The difference now, thanks to this programme, is that I know I can do it."

CEO of Cygnet Health Care, Dr Tony Romero, said: “Being creative and expressing yourself through music is an important outlet for many of our service users and I am proud to see the impact Music 2 Empower is having across so many of our services. 

“Although our connection to music can be incredibly personal, projects like Music 2 Empower allow our service users who have shared experiences to come together and experience the benefits of being around like-minded individuals.”

Lancashire Telegraph: Cygnet Fountains mental health hospital for menCygnet Fountains mental health hospital for men

Therapy co-ordinator for Cygnet Health Care, Faye Thornton, described the impact the programme was having on people like Alan.

She said: “When I first met Alan, he’d suffered a lot of negative experiences and these were at the forefront of his mind when we started working together.

“As we started to talk and open up lines of communication we discovered that we both had a passion for music.

“There’s a light in his eye when he plays the drums and it puts a cheeky smile on his face. He likes a round of applause at the end of the day.

“Projects like Music 2 Empower can really make a difference to a service users’ life.”

Cygnet Health Care launched the ‘Music 2 Empower’ initiative on World Mental Health Day 2019 and has since rolled out the programme across its hospitals, supporting music therapy-related projects throughout the organisation and allowing service users like Alan to showcase their abilities, give hope, inspire others and benefit from this well-established psychological approach.

Forensic psychologist trainee at Cygnet Health Care, Natalia Booth, said Alan hoped music was his route back into community living.

She explained: “Music therapy for most people is a real avenue of managing emotions. For Alan, music plays a really key part of his recovery.

“Since having access to his drum kit, he’s a different guy. He’s very much set on his goal of discharge.

“He’s motivated to get better, he’s got goals and targets that he’s working towards.”

Cygnet Fountains is a high dependency inpatient rehabilitation service for men who have severe and enduring mental illness.

More information about the service can be found at: https://www.cygnethealth.co.uk/locations/cygnet-fountains/