The musicians who make a real difference in our communities aren’t household names – they’re the musicians creating meaningful social connections through participatory music-making.
Join Dr Melissa Forbes - singer, researcher, educator, and community music leader - as she explores how these remarkable but unsung music leaders revitalise our social health.
Drawing on insights from positive psychology, social psychology, and leadership research, each episode features conversations with musicians who are building connection through their work.
Whether you’re a musician seeking meaningful work, a music educator training future musicians, or a health professional interested in music’s social impact, discover practical strategies for creating positive change through music.
Let’s make music that matters.
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The musicians who make a real difference in our communities aren’t household names – they’re the musicians creating meaningful social connections through participatory music-making.
Join Dr Melissa Forbes - singer, researcher, educator, and community music leader - as she explores how these remarkable but unsung music leaders revitalise our social health.
Drawing on insights from positive psychology, social psychology, and leadership research, each episode features conversations with musicians who are building connection through their work.
Whether you’re a musician seeking meaningful work, a music educator training future musicians, or a health professional interested in music’s social impact, discover practical strategies for creating positive change through music.
Let’s make music that matters.
8. Singing as collective care: Trauma-informed choral leadership with Joanna Brooke
Leading Notes Podcast
40 minutes
1 month ago
8. Singing as collective care: Trauma-informed choral leadership with Joanna Brooke
Singing as Collective Care: Trauma-Informed Choral Leadership with Joanna Brooke
In this episode, Melissa speaks with choral conductor and soprano Joanna Brooke about her unique approach to music-making that sits at the intersection of musical excellence and trauma-informed care. Joanna shares how she creates spaces where people can reconnect with their birthright to sing, moving beyond Western cultural barriers of musical elitism to foster genuine human connection through voice.
Drawing on her background in social work and over 10 years of choral conducting experience, Joanna discusses her innovative practice of reclaiming improvisation, shifting from production-focused to expression-centered music-making, and developing what she calls "singing as collective care" - the focus of her new PhD at the University of Melbourne.
Key Topics Discussed
Confronting Musical Elitism
How Western contexts create feelings of unworthiness around singing
The concept of singing as a birthright versus attachment to skill and ability
Creating spaces for people to shed learned limitations and reconnect with organic vocal expression
Trauma-Informed Musical Practice
Setting up spaces with trauma-informed principles without pathologizing the experience
The importance of choice, safety, and never requiring solo participation
Viewing disconnection from singing as trauma work requiring restoration
Reclaiming Improvisation
Moving beyond jazz and classical virtuosity concepts to experimental, free-form singing
Using musical motifs and compositional structures as containers for safe exploration
The role of power-sharing and authentic participation by musical leaders
From Production to Expression
Shifting focus from audience-oriented outcomes to present-moment experience
Balancing expression-centered goals with aesthetically pleasing results
The trauma-informed importance of ensuring beautiful collective sound
Feminine Leadership in Music
Challenging masculine conducting stereotypes of control and certainty
Exploring communal, open, fluid, and emotional leadership approaches
The gendered aspects of musical leadership and ethics of care
Arts and Health Integration
Bridging the gap between artistic practice and therapeutic outcomes
The distinction between art-making and therapy while acknowledging therapeutic benefits
Creating dialogue between arts and health practitioners
About Joanna
Joanna Brooke is a choral conductor and soprano based in Melbourne with over 10 years of experience leading choirs. She currently serves as musical director of the Monash University Choral Society and has worked as artistic director of the Jubilate Singers and with Gondwana Choirs.
With training in social work, Joanna's unique practice sits at the intersection of music and trauma-informed care. She leads research into trauma-informed creative arts interventions and presents at arts health conferences and events. In 2025, she commenced a PhD at the University of Melbourne exploring "singing as collective care."
Connect with Joanna
Find Joanna on LinkedIn
Leading Notes Podcast
The musicians who make a real difference in our communities aren’t household names – they’re the musicians creating meaningful social connections through participatory music-making.
Join Dr Melissa Forbes - singer, researcher, educator, and community music leader - as she explores how these remarkable but unsung music leaders revitalise our social health.
Drawing on insights from positive psychology, social psychology, and leadership research, each episode features conversations with musicians who are building connection through their work.
Whether you’re a musician seeking meaningful work, a music educator training future musicians, or a health professional interested in music’s social impact, discover practical strategies for creating positive change through music.
Let’s make music that matters.