Skip to content

Make your practice more inclusive with the Clarion accessible instrument

  • 29th September 2025
  • 3.30pm - 5pm
  • Online (Zoom)

Open Up Music demonstrate why the Clarion has been such a gamechanger for schools and offer practical examples of how it can transform your inclusive practice.

Clarion player in rehearsal. He is a wheelchair user, and has a windows device on his music stand, with his music sheet on the keyboard. He is wearing a Quha Zono headset, with which he controls the notes on his computer screen, which are represented in colour blocks.

Open Up Music demonstrate why the Clarion has been such a gamechanger for schools and offer practical examples of how it can transform your inclusive practice. Expect an overview of the instrument, some group discussion and a live demonstration of the Clarion, before getting a chance to ask questions to the team.


Accessibility

  • Technology: Zoom
  • Captioning: AI-generated
  • Breakout rooms: No (However, there will be group discussion)
  • Recorded? Yes

If you would like to request presentation slides, questions and provocations in advance of the session, please get in touch with us by emailing info@musicmark.org.uk. Speakers may decline sharing this information on the basis of protecting their intellectual property or for other reasons and we cannot therefore guarantee availability for all events.

We are aware some people use AI bots in Zoom meetings to support with note-taking or use this technology to make events more accessible to them. We support this, though ask you to notify us by email if you intent to do this, so we can distinguish between legitimate aids and apps and those which are not.

Attend this event

Book Online

About the Provider

Music Mark

We are a membership organisation, Subject Association, and an Arts Council England Investment Principles Support Organisation (IPSO) advocating for excellent musical learning in and out of school.

Open Up Music

We're a charity that works alongside young disabled musicians to challenge preconceptions and bring about greater diversity in music.

Menu