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A teenage girl sits in a dimly-lit room wearing sunglasses playing the prelude to Bach's cello suite. A clip of this performance can be found on the internet.
There is nothing remarkable about this until you learn that she is playing every crotchet and quaver using only the slightest movements of her head and thumbs.
At the age of 11, Charlotte White suffered a blow to the head which caused her to lose all movement in her body.
Student makes electronic music using head and thumbs
By Toby Field
Producer, Charlotte White's Musical Fight
A devastating accident left
Charlotte White struggling with severe disability and lack of motivation
until she found the right type of music therapy.
Charlotte now composes her own music
A teenage girl sits in a dimly-lit
room wearing sunglasses playing the prelude to Bach's cello suite. A
clip of this performance can be found on the internet.
There is nothing remarkable
about this until you learn that she is playing every crotchet and quaver
using only the slightest movements of her head and thumbs.
At the age of 11, Charlotte
White suffered a blow to the head which caused her to lose all movement
in her body.
She spent five years in and
out of hospital and eventually went into a period of rehabilitation,
regaining movement in her head and then gradually her fingers.
'Patronising' therapies
But she became very withdrawn:
"All I was expected to do was get physically stronger, which wasn't
happening, so that was quite depressing. I only saw people who were
meant to make my life better but it never seemed to happen."
Continue reading the main story
“
Start Quote
Music inspired me in the belief
that I could achieve anything”
Charlotte White
Student
At 16, Charlotte began attending
St Rose's School in Stroud and initially did not respond well to some
of the activities on offer.
She said: "Music therapy
is somebody sitting in front of you banging a drum or playing a guitar,
and you're meant to tell them all your worries about life. It's incredibly
patronising and very boring."
Then she was introduced to
the Bristol-based Drake Music project, an organisation that uses technology
to help people with disabilities participate in music.
There she starting working
with Doug Bott and learned how to use very small head movements to break
a magnetic beam, which triggers the notes.
Using thumb switches, she learned
to control the configuration of notes available, much like a guitarist
changes chord shapes.
Bott said Charlotte stood out
from the beginning: "She was someone who was interested in classical
music, which not many of the young people I was working with at the
time were, somebody who was interested in working on her own and in
her own way."
Eventually Charlotte took part
in a concert at school.
She practised extremely hard
beforehand.
"I wanted to achieve at
it because it made people see me as a person, rather than as a disabled
person they made presumptions about."
Striving for recognition
When Drake Music recorded her
performing a Bach cello suite and posted it on the internet, it generated
a lot of interest across the musical community, challenging the assumptions
about what was possible using assistive technology.
Continue reading the main story
Watch Charlotte's performance
But this raised questions about
whether music made in this way should be entered for the same musical
examinations as mainstream students using conventional instruments.
"I wanted to pursue music
at college," said Charlotte, "but establishments who grade
musicians wouldn't recognise it and therefore I couldn't progress."
The music examining boards
do not accredit music performed electronically, but they are working
with Drake Music to find ways of developing this area.
For Doug Bott, it is early
days. "We're discussing ways of accrediting the quality of the
music performance in a way that it's not linked to the particular instrument
a person is playing," he said.
And although Charlotte was
not able to take the conventional instrumental exams, she did receive
a Bronze Arts Award from Trinity College London.
Her work has also received
some international recognition.
When news of her performing
and composing achievements reached the organisers of a festival in Norway,
they asked her to compose some music for the Northern Lights Music Festival
in Tromso.
Charlotte has chosen to pursue
her academic studies and gained a place at university, studying social
policy and criminology.
This is an incredible feat
of will and determination for someone who had been largely written off
by mainstream society, and music was key to Charlotte's rehabilitation.
She said: "Music inspired
me in the belief that I could achieve anything.
"I became more enthusiastic
and had much more of a drive, and wanted to break the barriers and do
the same things as everyone else, rather than just being bracketed as
a disabled person.
"I started to enjoy life
and experience things that the average teenager does."
Charlotte White's Musical Fight will be broadcast on Sunday 27 March at 1330 BST on BBC Radio 4 and will also be available on the BBC iPlayer.
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