Vibroacoustic Therapy (VAT) is a music therapy method that uses sound, rhythm, listening, voice, or improvisation to support expression, regulation, relationship, and meaning.
Step-by-step guide
- Clarify the aim and assess sensory tolerance
- Choose active music-making, listening, rhythm, voice, or songwriting
- Track tempo, intensity, synchrony, silence, and affect
- Invite reflection on body, memory, image, and relationship
- Connect the musical experience with the therapy focus
- Close with a simple practice or observation
When to use
- When sound, rhythm, or song can access emotion more safely than direct speech
- For regulation, memory, grief, relationship, and nonverbal communication
- When the client has a meaningful relationship with music
Key phrases
Let us listen for what the music does in you, not for a correct response.
Follow-up questions
What changed in your body as the sound unfolded?
Which moment in the music mattered most?
What memory, image, or feeling appeared?
Alternative phrasings
You do not have to perform.
Sound, silence, and rhythm are all material.
Warnings
- โ ๏ธ Do not assume a piece of music is universally calming
- โ ๏ธ Monitor sensory overload and traumatic associations
- โ ๏ธ Respect culture, taste, silence, and refusal
Source: Skille & Wigram, Vibroacoustic Therapy, 1995; SAGE Journals, 1989; vibroacoustics.org
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.