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ASPartOfMe
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25 Mar 2023, 9:03 am

Musicians on the autism spectrum making dreams come true - Video by Toronto City News

The music directors statements they can write their own songs and are just as good as anybody else is ableist but otherwise a good story.

Here is a couple of songs by them


I like these a lot.


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ASPartOfMe
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15 Aug 2023, 11:37 pm

They appeared on Canada’s Got Talent three months ago.


A couple of other songs by them


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ASPartOfMe
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20 Apr 2024, 3:54 am

ASD BAND: A (MOSTLY) REFRESHING AUTISM ROCK DOCUMENTARY - Thinking Persons Guide to Autism

Quote:
For the majority of its 53 minute runtime, ASD Band: The Movie offers a straightforward, fly on the wall account of a band writing and recording songs while preparing for the first live gig. This might sound like a criticism, or at least faint praise. If the documentary were about another bog standard rock group who has seen this kind of cinematic treatment countless times before, that would probably be my intention. Considering the state of autistic representation in both music and film, though, giving this particular band the classic rock doc treatment is one of the most revolutionary choices that director Mark Bone could have made.

It is immeasurably refreshing to be able to watch talented autistic artists hone their craft and talk about their life and work without the omnipresent weight of having to educate a potentially uninitiated audience and represent the entirety or autism crushing every second of screen time. And the members of ASD Band truly shine in the scenes when they don’t have to be anything but themselves, whether it’s drummer Spenser navigating multiple scenes, keyboardist and piano prodigy Ron working in a genre that doesn’t always demand precise skill, guitarist Jackson integrating his special interest in 1950s rock into his work, or singer Rawan finding her literal and metaphorical voice through her music. It’s a genuine pleasure to be able to watch them write songs, work on arrangements, and juggle the demands of life versus art with relatively few autism cliches clogging up the viewing experience. The lack of patronizing plucky background music dousing any of the moments that could be considered quirky or strange to the uninitiated is particularly welcome.

Which makes the documentary’s brief forays away from the rock doc formula and into more stereotypical Autism Content all the more frustrating. I understand why these moments exist in the film, and I don’t necessarily fault anyone involved in it for the choices they’ve made in terms of what content they filmed, how they filmed it, what made the final cut, and how they scored it. General audiences might love their episodes of The Good Doctor and Young Sheldon, but their understanding of autistic people remains in its infancy, which forces autistic people—and the people who might want to help tell our stories—to dedicate at least some percentage of their efforts to the most basic education and obvious details. These same audiences have also proven themselves incapable of empathizing with autistic people or characters on screen. In these circumstances, anyone who wants to source enough funding to make a feature, secure screening and broadcast opportunities, and potentially find an audience of any size is probably going to have to spend some time drawing attention to what makes autistic people different, addressing our struggles, and highlighting (or prioritizing) what the non-autistic closest to us are thinking and feeling. Often accompanied by a few notes from a melancholy string section.

None of these elements are particularly glaring in of themselves. The camera’s closeups on the musician’s stimming hands are respectful and relatively subtle. Everyone’s reflections on their past and hopes and concerns for the future are completely valid and are treated as such. It doesn’t stop me from longing for a time when these details won’t be quite so compulsory for any piece of media that involves autistic people, though.

Until that day, the silver lining of these growing pains is that they offer useful insights into how the effort to represent what makes autistic people different can sometimes overshadow the ways in which we’re really not that alien. Or how much circumstances and bias can change people’s perception of what counts as symptoms, needs, and other concerns. In ASD Band: The Movie’s case, this issue is reflected in a few small scale details that probably won’t be noticeable to anyone who either isn’t autistic or hasn’t spent a lot of time genuinely listening to and interacting with us. Most glaringly, there’s a moment where a person in the film who, as far as we know, isn’t autistic starts performing a pretty classic stim. While the autistic stars’ stims are documented in detail, this movement happens without any extra attention being drawn to it. I’m not sure anyone on the production end even noticed that it was happening or could have recognized it as stimming. It’s just another movement that a human being makes. Maybe someday that will be how autistic stimming is treated, too.

I also find the lack of greater context for ASD Band and where they fit into music—and how autism in general factors into popular music—intriguing.

But these problems run much deeper than any hour-long documentary and are greater than any film could fix on its own. For all of its minor faults, ASD Band: The Movie takes at least one step forward for every well-meaning stumble back and ASD Band do themselves and their fellow autistic proud with the platform they’ve been given. Here’s hoping they’ll have even more chances to express themselves and be themselves in the future.


For this month you do have to donate $10 to the program that helped them. Next year the documentary will air on PBS.




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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
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nmfarrar
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21 Apr 2024, 5:08 pm

Awesome music!! ! Hope to hear The ASD Band live someday!



ASPartOfMe
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22 Apr 2024, 1:38 pm

NBC did a nice interview with them

Flipping the Script: Autistic musicians speak about performing as part of ASD Band


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ASPartOfMe
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26 Sep 2025, 1:49 pm



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Tamaya
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26 Sep 2025, 2:25 pm

Aren't all musicians autistic? Well, according to autism sites probably almost every celebrity in the music industry has been armchair diagnosed with autism, probably because many autistics struggle to believe that NTs can have talents and gifts too.

Though I'm not dismissing the band in the OP, because it seems more feasible that they're on the spectrum, as it came from themselves, rather than speculation from random people on internet sites who like to fantasise.


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Huckleberry Finn
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26 Sep 2025, 6:37 pm

Indeed, many are and have been.

David Byrne, Syd Barrett was diagnosed according to Roger Waters (Waters himself would say so), probably Mozart (even if the diagnosis is merely hypothetical), Demetrio Stratos (Area)...there are countless examples.
Some, like Barrett, Stratos, it's interesting to note how they diverge in their gaze.
There are scientific studies on this.

And patents.

(Eye Tracking)

According to scientific research, Stratos' voice did not come from the vocal cords (CNR published studies)



Roger Waters

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxPwqPr ... rt_radio=1

(4:12----> Stratos Demetrio)



CockneyRebel
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02 Oct 2025, 11:43 am

That's very cool news.


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ASPartOfMe
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02 Oct 2025, 10:34 pm

Huckleberry Finn wrote:
Indeed, many are and have been.

David Byrne, Syd Barrett was diagnosed according to Roger Waters (Waters himself would say so), probably Mozart (even if the diagnosis is merely hypothetical), Demetrio Stratos (Area)...there are countless examples.
Some, like Barrett, Stratos, it's interesting to note how they diverge in their gaze.
There are scientific studies on this.

And patents.

(Eye Tracking)

According to scientific research, Stratos' voice did not come from the vocal cords (CNR published studies)



Roger Waters

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxPwqPr ... rt_radio=1

(4:12----> Stratos Demetrio)


Roger Waters did not mention autism in the video. The David he was talking about was David Gilmour a fellow member of Pink Floyd.

David Byrne has self-identified as autistic

There is a lot of speculation that Syd Barrett was Autistic

I have found no evidence that Demetrio Stratos was autistic, nor any speculation, but perhaps autism is mentioned in Italian-language posts


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CockneyRebel
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03 Oct 2025, 1:17 pm

I listened to the videos. They're very talented.


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