Chicago Tribune

Music can call back loved ones lost in Alzheimer's darkness: 'So much we can do to improve quality of life'

An audience of patients with Alzheimer's disease listens in rapt attention as a young woman sings the French song "Beau Soir." Despite his failing mind, one of the men in the crowd, Les Dean, translates the words into English for a friend.

"See how the setting sun paints a river with roses," he whispers. "Tremulous vision floats over fields of grain."

And when the audience joins in a singalong on another tune, Dean's voice rumbles in a resonant baritone, "Take my hand, I'm a stranger in paradise. All lost in a wonderland, a stranger in paradise."

Dean, 76, once taught music at Chicago's Senn High School, invented and sold his own music education system and sang with the Chicago Symphony Chorus. Now, like many patients with Alzheimer's, he is to some extent lost in the past, a stranger to the present. He asks a visitor, "How are the children?" Five minutes later, he asks again, and again, unable to recall the question or the

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