Mohamed Salah

The world has moved towards changing the popular perception that music is a secondary issue in life, and learning music is seen as just as important as learning basic subjects such as language and mathematics.

So, providing children with the opportunity to try musical instruments, taking them to concerts, and participating in watching musical films aimed at children is among the means that encourage them to learn music.

"Heart Music"

After her husband deserted her, violinist Roberta Gaspari (Meryl Streep) chose to invest her 50 violins in teaching Harlem children to play, because she was convinced that teaching music gave happiness. Gaspari begins the path of a thousand miles sunk amid a hill of violins, chaos and clamor of pupils messing with machines and jousting with their arches.

Roberta finds herself facing challenges such as the riots of children, the incompetitions of the bureaucratic music teacher, the lack of understanding of some of the students' mothers, and the complaints of others. To continue to cross the obstacle after another and mobilize parents and the press in order to achieve its ambition, until it succeeded and the number of children taught to play increased from 50 to 1000 children.

Roberta changed the lives of children and formed a violin band, including a party that impressed everyone in America's largest hall, because the music she taught to insist made her believe that all children can learn music.

** "Music of the Heart" is an American musical, drama, about a true story, produced in 1999, starring Merrill Strip, the story of Pamela Gray, and directed by Wes Craven.

The Rock School

Guitar player Dewey Finn (comedian Jack Black) found himself unemployed after being expelled from a rock band, impersonating his co-worker to work as a teacher for a school for the wealthy. There, he discovered the students ’musical talent.

After exciting comic adventures, the unemployed rock singer succeeds in forming the first rock band for the young, applauded and cheered by a large audience led by their parents themselves, in one of the music competitions. Rock music in the movie, absorbed all the kids without exclusion, breathed new energy into them that improved their characters and lifestyle, and changed the ideas of the director and parents.

"School of Rock" is an American music comedy film, produced in 2003, starring Jack Black, written by Mike White, and directed by Richard Linklater.

The choir

After the failure of the Iron Fist policy in running the boarding school to rehabilitate troubled children in a village in the French countryside, and in an atmosphere of chaos, problems and riots, Clement Mathew (Gerard Juggenot) arrives the composer, who was forced by circumstances to leave the composition to teach music to delinquent minors.

After many comic paradoxes and attitudes between him, the children, and the despotic principal of the school, Matthew succeeds in radically changing the behavior of students by teaching them the musical composition he composed, and discovers among them valuable talents such as the angelic voice holder Pierre Morang (Jean-Baptiste Monnet), and forms a school choir that reaches its reputation To the countess ruling that region, and she comes with a retinue of nobles to watch, placing her hand on her heart from the magic of what she heard.

In the movie Clement Matthew made music a human experience that contained miserable children, made scientists and leaders who recorded their memoirs with him, and they met to read it and remember their teacher for 50 years after that.

Chorist (Les Choristes) French / German Swiss movie, musical drama, produced in 2004, starring Gerard Juggenot and the child Jean-Baptiste Monier, screenplay and directed by Christopher Barrater. Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Film in 2005.

August spray


Music collected the lost family, after the boy, Evan Tyler (Freddy Haymore), spent 11 years in an orphanage outside New York City, after which he got involved in the deception of his expectation in the grip of the fraudulent musician "Wizards" (Robin Williams), who discovers the boy's talents and gives him the name "Auguste Rush" It includes talented orphaned children who he uses to play in the streets in order to raise money for him.

However, Evan knows that his musicians' parents are still alive, making him believe that the power of the music they have in common can enable him to find them again. He decides to escape from the hegemony of Wizard, and he turns to a church that discovers his talent and attaches him to a school for teaching music and playing music, and overcomes the odds before the music actually includes his family.

"August Rush" is an American musical, drama, produced in 2007, starring Freddy Haymore, Kerry Russell, Jonathan Reese Myers and Robin Williams. It is directed by Christine Sheridan.