The Music in Music Therapy: Psychodynamic Music Therapy in Europe: Clinical, Theoretical and Research Approaches
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
''Opening the latest book in the Karl Konig Archives series was like opening a treasure trove! ...Beautiful, interesting and quite poetic.''
-- Edeline LeFevre, Camphill Correspondence
''Even after sixty years, this research and its insights are alive and modern. A real treasure for any music therapist, musician or indeed anyone interested in how music can work on the human being in this scientifically healing way.''
-- Katharina Bues, Anthroposophical Music Therapist for Perspectives
A thought-provoking collection of essays, lectures and notes on music therapy by Karl König.
Music therapy helps to support individuals'' mental and emotional lives through therapeutic exercises that utilize a variety of musical elements. Drawing on the work of Rudolf Steiner, Karl König, a pioneer of various forms of therapy within the Camphill movement, developed the basics of an anthroposophical music therapy, focusing on the fundamentals of music and how they connect to human beings.
This fascinating book brings together König''s lectures, essays and notes on music therapy, most of which have never before been published. In them he explores areas such as studies on hearing, the nature of musical experience, and the role of music in Camphill and music therapy for those with impaired hearing.
Alongside the original writings, an in-depth introduction by music therapist Katarina Seeherr explores the evolution of König''s ideas relating to music and music therapy and how he inspired many musicians and therapists to develop this form of therapy.
Karl König Archive, Vol 23.