As more and more healthcare providers in Canada prescribe their patients time in nature through BC Parks Foundation’s national nature prescription program PaRx, researchers continue investigating the science behind its healing effects. How exactly does nature help lower our blood pressure, decrease our anxiety, reduce our pain, and boost our energy? Their findings bring good news for those who cannot easily get to nature: simply listening to nature sounds produces beneficial impacts. This offers a powerful and accessible form of therapy for patients in healthcare settings.
For the members of Little Symphony—a Canadian group of musicians and producers who blend nature sounds with their own instrumentation—these findings are incredibly exciting, though not surprising. Over the years, they’ve heard countless anecdotes from healthcare professionals and patients alike about the healing power of nature sounds in therapeutic settings.
Kendra Huculak, a practicing critical care pharmacist and Little Symphony’s media coordinator, shares one such story. During a pre-operative assessment, a physician asked a nervous patient, “If you could be anywhere in nature right now, where would you be, and what would you hear?” Without hesitation, she replied, “On a tropical beach, listening to the waves.” The doctor smiled, saying, “I’ve got you,” and played Little Symphony’s album Coco Beach, recorded in Costa Rica.

Kendra Huculak, media coordinator for Little Symphony.
“He described how he could see her instant physiological relaxation,” says Kendra. “The connection between place and sound, and its effect on us, is such a powerful tool.”
Little Symphony believes this tool extends far beyond soothing an individual’s nerves. The benefits of nature sounds can ripple outward—not only healing people, but inspiring them to care for the land from which these sounds spring.
“Many of our recordings are from protected areas or lands adjacent to them,” says Kendra. “We’re very aware that without conservation, these sounds—and their benefits—would disappear.”

Bryson from Little Symphony records a rainstorm near Shuswap Lake, British Columbia.