Social Music as a Prescription for Maintaining Wellness

Authors

  • Joanne Loewy The Louis Armstrong Center for Music & Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, NY, USA
  • Jon Batiste Multi-Grammy- and Academy Award-winning Singer, Composer, Musician, Educator and Bandleader, Kenner, Louisiana, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v26i1.4497

Keywords:

social music, music therapy, music wellness

Abstract

Growing attention highlights the potential of music as a social prescription to enhance wellness. Explicating music’s function in communities can lead to healthy outcomes. During the COVID pandemic, communities tended to isolate, increasingly avoiding in-person interactions. Progress in music-based interventions highlights the potential of live music to improve our sense of community. The need for social prescribing to develop and maintain community brings us together. We propose a model that highlights how music serves as a social modality for maintaining wellness. As a musician and a music therapist, our focus includes analyses of historical contexts through time, and how through humanity’s struggles we’ve relied on music’s integrative elements to unite us, moving toward resilience as a quest to survive. Integrating these trajectories and expanding upon them, we elucidate ways that live engagement in music can strengthen performance and health and wellness. Music’s capacity to treat social aspects of humanity changes the way humanity works within community. This includes our sense of feeling connection and togetherness that feeds social willingness to perceive intimate relationships. In contexts where healthcare systems prioritize symptom management, we must realize that the larger picture includes how we socialize, thus Social Music is supported herein as an inclusive model of care.

Author Biographies

Joanne Loewy, The Louis Armstrong Center for Music & Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, NY, USA

Joanne Loewy DA, LCAT, MT-BC is the Director of the Department of Music Therapy, and a Professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. A Founding Member of the International Association for Music and Medicine, she initiated the Department of Music Therapy, in 1994, which among many populations is serving musicians and their unique ailments including chronic fatigue, chemical dependency, performance anxiety and overuse; children with developmental delays, teens with emotional issues, adults with neurological disorders and all ages of patients with asthma and COPD. Her research lab AMEND (Assessment of Music Experiences in Navigating Depression) is funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. She is an MPI on two NIH studies: a U24 ENSEMBLE network on pain, and a study addressing how music therapy can impact metabolites of stress in Black pregnant women. She serves on several editorial boards and is a Cochrane NICU and Palliative Care reviewer. She received her doctorate from NYU and has edited several books including Music Therapy in Pediatric Pain, Music Therapy in the NICU, and she co-edited Music Therapy at End of Life and Caring for the Caregiver: Music Therapy in Grief and Trauma and the Integrative Advances in Music and Medicine: Music, the Breath and Health.

Jon Batiste, Multi-Grammy- and Academy Award-winning Singer, Composer, Musician, Educator and Bandleader, Kenner, Louisiana, USA

Jon Batiste is an American singer, composer, musician, educator and bandleader. He is an 8x Grammy award winning artist and a devoted musician and leader, developing new idioms in the use of music for populations of all kinds. He has channeled his transformative musical gifts into nine studio albums, an original symphony, and countless musical projects and collaborations, including his Oscar nominated Documentary “American Symphony” on Netflix. Jon is also known for his work as bandleader and musical director for The Late Show with Stephen Colbert from 2015-2022 and his 2020 Pixar film Soul composing won him an Academy Award. Social Music is a model he is developing along with Loewy with support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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2026-03-03

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Loewy, J., & Batiste, J. (2026). Social Music as a Prescription for Maintaining Wellness. Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy, 26(1). https://doi.org/10.15845/voices.v26i1.4497

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