A COMMUNITY hub is providing free music lessons to young people to help them learn how to create and produce their own music.
Kamlesh Parmar, 42, received lottery funding to create a new music studio on Hemmingwell housing estate in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire.
The studio opened in the summer for children aged 12-16.
Parmar said he wanted to create “a safe space to express thoughts and feelings”.
He also works with a Northamptonshire Police-led project called My Back Yard (MY:BK:YD) that aims to combat gang-related crime and violence and point youngsters towards more positive choices and employment.
The courses run for seven weeks and are taught by Parmar and Reuben Harris, 37, a student from the University of Northampton.
They provide step-by-step tutorials and work to find out what each student’s interests were, “whether song writing or producing”, Parmar said.
Parmar, who runs non-profit organisation The Compound in Wellingborough, received almost £10,000 from the National Lottery Community Fund.
The money was used to build a professional music studio at Hemmingwell Community and Skills Centre in Wellingborough, offering free lessons for young people living on Hemmingwell estate. (BBC)