"Evidence-Based Music Therapy Tools Designed for Substance Abuse Recovery."
"Retraining the brain's dopamine pathways through clinical, audio-guided 12-step reinforcement."
What is in it for us? The treatment facility? The psychologist? The counselor? The person in recovery? The church?
All can benefit from adding music to substance use and abuse rehabilitation support. Know that the Dopamine System (Reward Pathway) plays a key role in recovery; music, especially songs that feel meaningful or pleasurable, activates the same dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and nucleus accumbens of the brain that substance use does. Instead of the “chemical shortcut” from alcohol or narcotics, music provides a natural reward that strengthens healthy pleasure pathways. Over time, listening to music you associate with recovery or peace can retrain the brain to seek reward from music instead of substance use (Menon & Levitin, 2005; Ferreri et al., 2019; Blum et al., 2016).
Our first core product is the Outreach Album. This collection of educational songs focuses on supporting substance abuse, gambling, sexual addiction, and overeating. Each track shares powerful lessons in a simple, relatable way. Your “Outreach Album” raises awareness, opens conversations, and delivers hope to individuals that need it most.”
The second product is the Recovery Assistant Album. Built around the 12-step program, each song connects to a specific step in recovery. The music provides motivation, structure, and encouragement — guiding listeners one day, and one step, at a time. It’s a soundtrack for resilience.
Our third product is “Custom Songs”. Personalization and Identity—Name recognition is deeply tied to self-identity. When someone hears their name in music, it grabs attention more strongly than almost any other word. In recovery, hearing their name within a positive, encouraging lyric reinforces ownership of their recovery journey and affirms: "This message is for me.” It can help shift their self-image from “addict” to “person in recovery,” supporting identity transformation.