Usually, in my consulting room, I have some soft relaxing music playing in the background for the duration of a therapy session - I find it helps to kind of 'set the tone' for the therapy session.
However, during my tests with Zoom it became apparent that it was not possible for me to play such a background music track and have the client receive it, nicely, at the other end - this is probably because Zoom is optimised to process speech, and when presented with music it results in the client just hearing a kind of muffled garbage.
Many clients have said that my voice alone, without backing music, works perfectly well and they choose to have their therapy sessions without any background music, just my voice - so the background music isn't essential by any means.
Nevertheless, I have uploaded the backing music track to the website, as an mp3 audio file, and the music, 'Guitar Music', may be retrieved by clients before their first therapy session.
So the idea is that during a therapy session you will be able to play the backing music, 'Guitar Music', locally, on your own device (instead of me transmitting it to you over Zoom, and having the whole sound experience being horrible for you). And you will be able to adjust the levels of both my voice, and the backing music, before the start of your actual session to achieve a good audio experience for yourself.
I might stress that the music should be just faintly heard in the background whilst we are speaking - my speaking volume should be the predominant channel.
We can have an experiment before you start your session to make sure that you are happy with the audio levels that you are listening to.
Nevertheless I suggest that you might like to download the following backing music as soon as you are able to, and that you familiarise themselves with the various audio mixer/level controls that are available on your device - so that you are confident that you know how to adjust the sound levels on your device before we actually meet up on Zoom for your therapy session:
Peter