Mamamia’s Rachel Curtis took her son to the Opera House for his first experience of live classical music.
Even before my baby was born I shared my musical hopes for him with a room full of strangers at a prenatal class.
The room nodded in agreement, we all wanted our unborn children to be musical. The Portuguese couple Pedro and Fatima agreed, so did the Spanish pair, Salvador and Alicia. It seemed to cross cultures – we all wanted our babies to speak a musical language.
So now that my baby boy is a toddler, I thought it was time to show some commitment to the idea.
On Saturday morning I took him to Sydney’s famous Opera House to start his musical journey at the Babies Proms.
The children got a chance to meet the musicians. Image courtesy Daniel Boud.
Sensory language.
In a place where I had assumed babies wouldn’t quite belong, a room filled up with excited crawling, walking, bouncing, babies, toddlers and children. They owned the space, until the music began.
Arts and education expert, Professor Judith McLean, says children use sensory language predominantly until the age of two. She says exposing babies to music can help deepen their sensory language and expand and develop their “feelings state” - and she believes it's never to early to start.
"When you gurgle with your child, when your child gurgles with you and you extend that range, so you might make a noise and a child might repeat that back. It’s called matching. That is the beginning of music," she said.