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SANTA ANA : A Hands-On Approach to Music

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Harrison, an excitable 5-year-old with a mischievous smile, held the French horn an inch from his face and peered at its ornate piping. Although an optic nerve disease has gradually robbed his sight, the youngster was still able to study the mysterious, glinting instrument.

“What the heck is it?” he asked with a giggle as his hands explored the cool metal.

Around him Thursday morning, a dozen of his classmates at the Blind Children’s Learning Center were getting similar hands-on introductions to instruments brought by the visiting Orange County Philharmonic Music Mobile.

The music van, loaded with everything from a violin to a trombone to a triangle, makes stops at classes across the county to educate children about orchestras and their music. More than 25,000 Orange County students participated in the program last year.

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The Music Mobile’s volunteers had a different sort of audience Thursday. The children banging on the snare drum and cradling the cello were younger than usual--it’s a preschool class of 5- and 6-year-olds--all but one of them sight-impaired.

“For our kids, this is just a great, great opportunity,” said Patty Salcedo, a teacher at the learning center. “It energizes them, and it motivates them to be interested in music. Music is so important to them.

“You know, we can sit and listen to music all day, but because they can’t see, they don’t know how it’s being produced, how musicians make it,” said Salcedo, who has taught at the center for four years. “But to touch an instrument, to feel it, opens up new things to them.”

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The majority of the center’s 50 students have sight disabilities of varying degrees. More than half have some sight, ranging from being able to discern light to the ability to read large type, school official Linn Morgan said. About 20% are completely blind, she said, while another 20% are fully sighted children.

The students with unimpaired vision are used as class role models of sorts, Morgan said. Their presence encourages the others to interact with sighted children and receive a view of the world from a peer.

The lessons taught Thursday were of a more melodic nature. The students laughed and cheered one another as they took turns plucking strings and pounding out notes on a xylophone. They played conductor to an invisible orchestra, and they rocked in their seats when the presenters turned on a tape of a real one.

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One boy examined a violin and asked where he was supposed to blow to produce a noise.

Another student, a 5-year-old girl named Alex who has partial sight, startled herself with her initial beat of a drum. But by the third blow she was smiling broadly.

“Because they can’t see, music is going to be so important to them,” Salcedo said as she watched one of her students run his fingers along the curves of a cello. “A lot of people think (sightless people) have better hearing, but that’s a misconception. We have to teach them to hear better, though, because they’re going to have to get so much of life through their ears.”

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