Leading Notes Podcast
Dr Belinda Densley has spent more than 30 years facilitating community singing groups in Geelong, Victoria, and over that time she came to understand that the work was never really about the voice. It was about the mechanics of heart, soul, and mind. That realisation led her through a Masters in Counselling and Psychotherapy and ultimately to a recently completed PhD, in which she developed a grounded theory of group singing facilitation she calls Creating Song Magic. In this episode, Belinda unpacks that theory, exploring the four core dimensions of the facilitator's role: advocating for people's right to sing, curating repertoire that creates meaningful experiences, welcoming and sustaining harmonious expression in the room, and contributing to the transformation of communities. She also speaks candidly about the "hidden work" that singing facilitators do — work that has remained largely invisible, under-resourced, and poorly defined, even within music and community health sectors. We talk about what it means to reframe the singing facilitator as a community health resource, the importance of boundary-setting and reflective practice, and why Belinda believes trauma-informed relational skills should be foundational to any future training for facilitators. She also shares a deeply moving story about a love-and-loss singing session that rippled far beyond the room. Key Topics Discussed * The burning question behind Belinda's PhD * Why the singing facilitator role has remained hidden * The four categories of Creating Song Magic: advocating, curating, welcoming and sustaining harmonious expression, and transforming communities * The difference between participatory, circle-based singing and performance-oriented models like pub choir * The facilitator as a community health resource and the consequences of that role remaining unrecognised and underfunded * Boundary-setting in facilitation, and how clarity within the facilitator translates to clarity for participants * The case for trauma-informed, relational training for singing facilitators * Sharing research findings through a five-part podcast series as an accessible alternative to academic publishing * The systemic barriers community singing groups face in accessing physical spaces * The role of autonomous health-seeking behaviour in group singing participation Notable Quotes "The work was never really about the mechanics of the voice — it was about the mechanics of heart, soul, and mind." "You have the fundamental human right to sing. You can sing." "We're not asking, are we trying to get the notes to be accurate? We're trying to create the harmony that's beyond musical — a harmony of beingness, a harmony within community." "People fell in love with the singing group and sometimes misplace that love for the facilitator. Getting clear on what your role is does so much of the work. The confusion really stops existing if you're not confused yourself." "I don't advertise — people that come to me come via someone already in the group. There's already an expectation that there's going to be a wellbeing effect from coming." "This thing that just happened today has caused so much therapeutic growth that is beyond the capacity of me as one individual." "Singing with another allows so much possibility in — for love, actually, for love." "There's no reason everyone in Australia can't be in a singing group once a week." Resources * Creating Song Magic — Belinda Densley's grounded theory of group singing facilitation (PhD research [https://scholars.latrobe.edu.au/bdensley/publications], Federation University Australia) * Belinda's podcast [https://acabellas.com.au/facilitation-of-singing-groups/] documenting participant experiences of her singing groups * Acabellas [https://acabellas.com.au/] About Guest Dr Belinda Densley is a singing facilitator, counsellor, and researcher based in Geelong, Victoria, Australia. For more than 30 years, she has facilitated community singing groups grounded in the belief that singing is a fundamental human right and a powerful vehicle for wellbeing, connection, and community transformation. Belinda holds a Masters in Counselling and Psychotherapy and a PhD from Federation University Australia, where her research focused on the process of group singing facilitation itself. Her grounded theory, Creating Song Magic, is the first study of its kind to illuminate the complex, relational, and largely invisible work that skilled singing facilitators perform. She also teaches postgraduate counselling students and mentors emerging facilitators. Alongside her research, Belinda has disseminated her PhD findings through an accessible five-part podcast series, reflecting her commitment to making practitioner knowledge available beyond academic audiences. Connect with Belinda * https://acabellas.com.au/contact/ Episode Highlights 02:00 — The burning question: what mechanisms beneath the wellbeing effects of group singing led Belinda to pursue a PhD? 03:00 — Why the singing facilitator role sits "in the middle of a lot of different areas" and has remained underexplored 05:30 — Singing as a "with" activity— participatory, relational, and whole-body expression 08:50 — Unpacking Creating Song Magic: advocating, curating, welcoming and sustaining harmonious expression, and transforming communities 13:00 — The role of community singing in a hyper-individualistic world: a radical reimagining of what community can be 19:40 — Autonomous health-seeking behaviour: why people come to Belinda's groups already expecting a wellbeing effect 22:00 — Grassroots growth versus scaled investment: how VicHealth and Community Music Victoria once blazed singing groups across Victoria 26:20 — A love-and-loss singing session: 70 people, no words — just song — and a ripple effect that extended far beyond the room 29:00 — The counselling background: why relational work, not musical training alone, is what takes facilitation to the next level 31:00 — Boundary-setting in practice: when participants misplace their love of the group onto the facilitator 34:00 — What Belinda would change: funded training programs, and council recognition of community singing groups in space allocation 39:00 — The closing questions: the lesson music has taught her about human connection, her song of choice for strangers, and her magic wand wish
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