





5.1 Top tips from a musician
Throughout these documents we thought it would be good to hear from musicians delivering the work to give you their top 3 tips for working as a Noise Solution musician. Click to watch the video



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In a ďŹrst session Iâm often trying to have as much impact as possible through quick wins. I want that participant to have experienced creating their own track/realised that they can play piano chords and created a video to accompany their ďŹrst track - all captured and mirrored back at them in their feed
âQuick winsâ are a great way of engaging a participant, especially early on. Itâs really important for them to feel good about something theyâve made in session 1, when their expectations are probably at their lowest.

What are the sorts of things we do to achieve that? We often start by oďŹering a bunch of options to them and see what works best. One of the things weâve found especially great for quick wins is:
OďŹering teaching piano chords in half an hour. We do this using our easy shapes based method âWould you like to learn piano chords in half an hour?without having to learn any theory! This can be a huge engagement win. You can see how I teach that using the following link and your participant can learn in their own time learn how to do do this here
Technology is also brilliant for this. For example using loops that they have chosen and arranged to start a great sounding track. Making sure they feel safe as they discover they can create music using loops is often massively impactful for young people (demystify the process). We have access to huge ranges of loops through Loopcloud which we get for free. It links with your daw (Via a VST) temp locks and transposes any of millions of loops into the right key - which you then drag into your DAW - amazing. Link to Loopcloud is
in your community pages - Let us know you want to use it and weâll get that set up. You tell us which email account you want it registered to - we tell them and they remove the ask for credit card details and payments.
YuMu or Bandcamp/Reaper/Ableton? - it doesnât matter what the DAW is, the process of dragging and dropping a beat/bass line and some arpeggiated synth lines together, arranging them to taste adding the odd FXâŚnever fails
to engage people. Especially when theyâve been given the choices about what to use (Autonomy). We are able to give people Ableton intro licences - let us know if your participant wants one?
To have even more impact though once youâve done that, how about easily creating a fantastic music video.
You can then make a really cool music video using some software we have access to Rotor. Upload an MP3. The software analyses the tempo, you then choose from 1000âs of amazing video clips and it adds ďŹlters, and cuts are

placed at appropriate points from itâs analysis of the tempo. Looks amazing. Upload to their feed - and in the post ask other group members what they think about it! (Details of how to access are in your community pages)
All these things are done with half an eye on capturing the reaction of the participant - did they think this bit or that bit was amazing?. How did it make them feel? Ask them and record what they say using video/audio/text, whatever they are comfortable and add it in the session as a post - so parents and key workers see that reaction!
Craft that story in a way that gets engagement from the audience.
From an SDT perspective, youâre creating a portfolio of the participant being engaged and excited and good at something - (promoting and growing a sense of competence, and sharing that through the Noise Solution story to create that sense of relatedness with those viewing and engaging with the story.
In the end reďŹection video, ask how it feels to be able to make what theyâve made? Or How much of that was yours? How many decisions did you make? We value this much more than an abstract idea of the âqualityâ of whatâs produced. Itâs all about making them feel like theyâve achieved something and giving them an insight into their own abilities, but sometimes people need to be guided into learning to reďŹect on that. Youâll often hear from participants that they didnât think that they would be able to learn piano chords, write lyrics or create a beat, but have then realised that they can. They need to have that reďŹected back at them and their group of adults need to see it to recognise it.
But to really have impact those wins need to be quick, at least initially. These wins often pave the way for them believing they are capable of doing even more. Weâve got a section speciďŹcally on how to record reďŹection videoâs later.
There is always a community of musicians to ask for advice as well about whatâs worked for them

5.3 Being the storyteller

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The âDigital Storyâ isâŚ.and we canât say this enoughâŚnot just about what happened. Itâs a big part of how we have impact. Traditionally in mental health and education/ social work everyone works in isolation from everyone else, especially the families who are often left in the dark about whatâs going on. The âDigital Storyâ allows everyone to come together around this fantastic story of the young person being successful - but itâs a story that needs cultivating, curating and creating and thatâs a big part of your role.

What does a good Noise Solution Story look like?
This is perhaps one of the most important questions that you, as a musician, can reďŹect on. And there are no cookie-cutter answers. Every musician delivers a session in a way that reďŹects them, the participant and the particular skills they have. Each session and programme will look diďŹerent. However, every good session will contain similar elements.
A good Digital Story weekly update should include ALL OF the following, in every session where itâs possible:
⢠Three or four photos;
⢠Some video clips of the participant learning a skill (keyboard, guitar, Ableton, etc.)
⢠A video of the track/music they have created in the session; ideally with a rotor video - so it looks super slick to those watching
⢠A video or audio reďŹection on how the session went (Vital). Best done in conversation with you. Ending with âout of 10 how was this weeks session?â
SEE EXAMPLE REFLECTION IN THE VIDEO
⢠You can also use the Digital Story to share any links to helpful websites (tutorials, free VSTs) that may be useful or to YouTube videos which the participant enjoys and ďŹnds inspirational.
We donât intend for you to take photos and video footage only to upload it all when you get home (though sometimes that might have to be the way it works). Ideally, best practice is that we want the capture, uploading and sharing to be driven by the learner and for it to literally be part of the session. If they have ownership of the sharing process, they are more likely to care about the comments and the feedback they receive.
Get them to post some of the footage! In the session.

How do you present whatâs happening in an engaging way that gets engagement from all those busy people? Well the ďŹrst thing is it needs to have good content and that content needs to look good.
⢠Use your phone in portrait mode ! So video looks good in the âDigital Storyâ
⢠Use a small tripod
⢠Try and make sure the audio is well recorded and clear
⢠Think about exciting photoâs that are well framed and composed
What you capture needs to present in a way that tells a story of that weeks session, and what people are most interested in is not how they learned to play something but how it made the participant feel - they need to be front and centre. When you see something hit home, that gets the participant excited or makes them feel they have achieved something - even something really simple, you need to capture that moment, or feeling, or reaction in a way that lets the viewers into what youâve seen.
Itâs ok to take time out of the session to do this - it is part of the whole process.
Sometimes you can do that while itâs happening, sometimes you do that afterwards by asking them questions that are open and hopefully worded in ways to make them realise that they are being successful.
For example âThat was amazing, how did it make you feel doing that? âHow many of the creative decisions around that were yours?â Always trying to get them to reďŹect on themselves being good at something - because thatâs what they need to hear and itâs what will engage their family and key workers to comment when they hear it!
It might be video or it might be quotes that you add of something theyâve said, obviously you ask them if itâs ok to add them to the digital story - d if itâs positive post it as a quote!
Did you know you can use the @ sign, and then the group members names (for the key worker or family members). This brings people in, they get

notiďŹed by email when they are tagged - Good practice is asking those in the group questions so they reply and contribute to the âDigital Storyâ encouraging discussion from others.
5.4 Hereâs what a âDigital Storyâ looks like

Above is an old story, rich in content and posts so you can see what one might look like

5.5 Have fun: Itâs important

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This is why youâre here right - making music is and should be fun. These sessions are an opportunity for you and the participant to enjoy yourselves listening to, talking about and making music. There are no rules about how you do this, we should be reacting to the interests of the person weâre working with and always checking that they are having fun - but sometimes they need a helping hand to get started, so here are some ideaâs.

As a way to start you could for example use YouTube to learn about what they are into and ďŹnd out what they would like to be able to do. So you could start by asking them to paste links to they favourite tracks in their Noise Solution story.
You might end up exploring something youâve never done before, which is great as youâll be learning from them. Always try and be playful and have fun but be led by their interests. Youâre building an environment and a relationship that allows them to be themselves and a space where they can achieve something that they want to achieve. Remember all those fun musical moments youâve had in your life and aim to make these sessions like those moments!
If youâre in a session and what youâre doing isnât fun, stop doing it. You donât have to stick with something youâve started if it doesnât feel right. Remember there are lots of options and diďŹerent ways of making music. It can be solely software based, instrument based, singing, lyric writing, video making and any combination of these. It should feel fun for you as much as it does for them.
Research tells us that that the number one indicator of success in education/ therapy/mentoring is whether the participant feels like the person they work with likes them and is interested in them - achieve that trust by having fun together!
Itâs also really important that we deliver this in a way that we know helps participants to improve their well-being. By that we mean using what we know about SDT to enhance the sessions. (visual of SDT Venn diagram)
So for example, let them feel they have a say in decisions about what they are creating, be led by them, (give them choice/autonomy)
Realistically praise them when they do something well - capture that in their Noise Solution story (capture competence)

Encouraging them to think about reďŹecting on those successes and sharing them with people through their story (help create relatedness)
We love seeing you having fun and what you help them create and more importantly the families and professionals working with the young people like hearing about what you create and how it makes them feel.
5.6 End Session: Celebrate and end questionnaire


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The last session is an opportunity for you and the participant to celebrate their journey. Itâs often very eye-opening for them to look back at their time with you and to see what theyâve achieved in that time. Session 1 will feel like a long long time ago and celebrating with a guest or two can be very powerful.
Invite a parent or key worker into the end bit of the last session, someone who has followed the story and who your participant knows and trusts. We want to help participants shed negative opinions they have of themselveshaving them watch themselves be good at and enjoying something around people they trust is a great way to do this. We also like to acknowledge that this isnât the end of their journey, just the end of their time with us. Hopefully youâll have ben discussing in reports with their professional about what a suitable progression will be for them, since session 5 or 6.
Itâs great to do a ďŹnal reďŹection video that includes the guest, or guests, to get feedback on how the programme has been for them, getting an insight into what theyâve seen and how they think itâs impacted on their young person.
The other important thing to capture in the ďŹnal session is the end questionnaire. Just like the start questionnaire, the end questions are available on the participantâs page . Theyâre the same questions and give us data that shows us if and by how much the participantâs well-being is improved (This is vital for us).
We can start trying to collect this from session 8 rather than wait till the end, so we improve the chances of collecting the data
IF WE DONâT GET THE END QUESTIONNAIRE DATA THEN THE START DATA IS OF NO USE TO US _ WE HAVE TO HAVE BOTH START AND END DATA TO BE ABE TO DO THE COOL STUFF THAT GETS US ALL THE WORK WE GIVE MUSICIANS

If you miss it youâll have to chase them after sessions and in our experience that can be really tricky, much much easier to catch them when you have them.
5.7 Creative software available in the community
Rotor

Rotor is an amazing website that allows you to upload the MP3 track youâve created with your participant and helps them to create a music video. It analyses the track looking for tempo and presents you with
masses of professionally shot clips that your participant can click on to choose. When you have enough clips it renders them, adds cuts and ďŹlters and creates a stunningly professional video that you can then publish on the participants timeline.
It is a brilliant tool for helping to project that sense of competence for the participant - âI made this and it looks, and sounds, amazingâ. It takes a little time to render so build in about 30 minutes at the end of a session to have enough time to choose clips, render, download and still have time to do the video reďŹection with your participant.
Itâs brilliant!
To get a log in we just need to give them your details (email address) and theyâll set you up and give you free credits


Loopcloud
We do a lot of loop production, so access to the latest sounds is crucial. Loopcloud are one of the worlds biggest sample content providers and they have their own platform that they are happy for us to use. This is perfect for when you have a participant who says âI only wanna make dark psych core dub metal folkâ. You can ďŹnd the genre and have authentic sounding samples in that genre at your ďŹngertips.
The details for setting up an account are within your community but it might be easier to just speak with us - essentially we need an email from you that youâll use to set up the account.
You can lock samples to a key and or tempo and you can add a VST/AU to your DAW and itâll sync with Loop cloud so you can audition in place/key etc. Once youâve selected a bunch of loops you like with a participant you can simply drag them in. Ready to create!
Noise Solution 2023

Loopcloud 5 Introduction - https://youtu.be/bfZ6Cs3Nx9U
YuStudio

https://charanga.com/site/secondary/yustudio/
Online Browser DAW that works even on phones, really accessible - musicians sometimes also use Bandcamp which is free and easy to use


Weâve also been in talks with Ableton. If you want something more sophisticated for a participant then we do have access to licences for the intro version (but very capable) of Ableton - you need to request a licence for this and weâll provide one for you. If you donât have Ableton weâre happy to give you one of these licences to learn with as well. Talk to us.
Other tools
Reaper
Reaper is an amazing DAW that works on both Mac and PC, weâve used it really successfully for years. The fact that participants can carry on using it, as they can download it for free, has been really important for progression for lots of participants.
You can access it here: https://www.reaper.fm/
There is a fantastic Reaper tutorials repository here: https://www.reaper.fm/ videos.php
Sample Radar
We may be able to access loop cloud but participants canât. If you want to point them in the right direction to access for legal samples then you canât really do better than https://www.musicradar.com/news/tech/free-musicsamples-royalty-free-loops-hits-and-multis-to-download
You should be able to go here to access all of that training in one place. Book mark it and go back to it when something comes up that you want a refresher for.
If youâve got any questions after all of that then go to the WhatsApp group and ask. There is no such t hing as a silly question.

Weâll be in touch almost weekly anyway, weâll see your reports and see your âDigital Storiesâ

Notes:

Appendix
It might feel daunting but remember weâve got loads of musicians brilliantly doing this and they were felt as daunted as you when they started! Even Jimi Hendrix was rubbish at guitar the ďŹrst time he picked one up - this takes practice and we are here to help.
Hopefully weâve broken down everything in detail in this training aid above and itâs other parts 1 through to 5. Our intention was to deliver it in manageable chunks.
You are also going to shadow someone else for the ďŹrst couple of sessions; youâll have a Noise Solution âbuddyâ too ask questions of and weâll be on hand to answer questions as well. You are not alone! but we thought a complete quick overview of the ten weeks might be a useful as well. So there is a link to one below.
Click here to see a handy PDF reference you can download that is an overview of a set of sessions. It details what it looks like for you when we break down what needs to happen each week?

Notes: