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Gregg Hammond served the Washington DC communities volunteering over 5,600 hours. Founder and President of The Global Jam For Peace a DC children’s music charity, and other programs, he provided musical instruments and lessons to foster kids, and children in at-risk communities. He served as a teacher, teacher’s trainer, administrative executive, fundraising team leader, and events coordinator. Gregg trained more than 175 volunteers, providing and creating additional service hours, serving more 1,111 children.
Gregg prepared and coordinated 14 students performances ranging from open Mic nights, Howard Theatre Stage, Washington Post Conference, Live on Sirius XM satellite radio, and a very special performance with Dweezil Zappa (son of legend Frank Zappa). Gregg’s VISION is to bring the entire globe together playing the same song at the same time
using the universal language of music as the catalyst for raising the vibration of communities and uniting in peace and love through recognizing our spiritual connection as one human family. 
For more information visit www.globaljamforpeace.com
Global Jam For Peace

The Global Jam 4 Peace

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Interview with Jack Canfield

Gregg Hammond Interview with Jack Canfield
Jack Canfield interviews Washington DC's Gregg Hammond, founder, and owner of DC Guitars Lessons and The Global Jam 4 Peace (GJ4P) and he resigned as President of Guitars Not Guns Washington DC VA MD Guitars Not Guns of the National Capital Area.  Learn More >>

Rock Your Life Interview

Rock Your Life TV Interview
Are you ready for a modern day hero?  You’ll meet one in this episode of Rock Your Life TV! Find out how a troubled youth, who became the victim of a crime as an adult turned his love of music into a loving project.  Learn More >>

Real Guitar Hero

A Real Guitar Hero's Story
This is Gregg Hammond. I have upgraded my work and now work around the globe getting many types of instruments to children, with lessons and mentoring. I am uniting the world in love and peace using the universal language of music conducting recurring global symphonies with musicians playing The Peace Anthem (Set Me Free). Learn More >>

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How Music Saved My Life and Became My Magic Wand

The early years of my life were filled with experiences that I don’t share except in the case where sharing may be of value for someone else.

The house where I lived was filled with anger, violence, drugs, and alcohol. My young subconscious mind was absorbing conversations and experiences, and my conscious mind was observing my environment and reacting; many times in fight or flight mode. My paradigm was being forged.

I was 11 years old the first time I ran away from home, Unfortunately, it was a cold, crisp night, and my bare feet began to blister, but fear inveigled me to keep running. Hours later, and miles away, the local police spotted me. After attempting to find out why an 11-year-old boy was outside at 11 pm, shivering, bleeding and blistered (I was too frightened to answer), they handcuffed me and put me behind bars.

Patterns like this repeated. I flunked out of classes. I began to live in a way that resembled what I learned through the repetition of influence and environment. I saw other families happy and considered that I must have been unlucky, and undeserving. My self-esteem sank low. Fortunately, music helped my mind shift away from thinking about it. Music calmed me. I loved the sound of the guitar. I would pretend to play using a broom.

At 19 I traveled 3 hours by car to see a Pink Floyd concert but got arrested before making it to the show. During my appearance before the judge, an attorney spoke on my behalf, and to my surprise, I was released to her custody and sentenced to probation and house arrest. She said to me “No kid is a bad kid, just misguided. Follow my instructions, and you can stay out of prison”. I didn’t actually believe that, but I could tell she did.

A few weeks later a friend offered to visit and bring his guitar. He showed me how to play a few chords of a song, “Rock You Like a Hurricane.” My soul ignited, and I felt a burning desire to learn to play. I believed I could learn. I had visions of performing. I got a beautiful electric guitar. I learned songs, joined a band, and played on stage. I began to write my own songs.

In 1998 Hurricane Georges flooded my studio in The Florida Keys. It destroyed my belongings and keepsakes. Feeling devastated, I embarked on a wandering vision quest (traveling thousands of miles) which ultimately took me to the mountains of Santa Cruz California. I studied and trained in wilderness survival, tracking, and developing my awareness. Soon I began teaching these skills. After four years of travel, and teaching across the USA, I arrived in Washington DC.

Two weeks later, on a sunny afternoon, my father and I were carrying groceries when a gang of boys attacked us. My intuition had warned me, but there was no immediate escape. By the time we got away, we were banged up, and my face was bleeding.

During my meditations, I focused on understanding why kids could physically assault defenseless people with grocery bags. I realized those kids had no role models, no mentors, and no initiation process to instill self-worth. I remembered my childhood, the music, the guitar. I remembered the attorney. She said, “No kid is a bad kid, only misguided.” She helped me. Now it was my turn, and my time, to use all this insight and be the change I wanted to see in the streets of Washington DC. I knew music was the universal language and it would help me bridge the cultural divide between inner-city youth and a 40-year-old well-intentioned musician.

I began teaching guitar to at-risk and foster kids, as a volunteer. I mentored them and awarded the guitars to those who showed up, practiced, and respected everyone. I realized these youth didn’t have a positive, uplifting song to play and perform. I decided to write a song for them. “The Peace Anthem (Set Me Free)” was first recorded in 2009. By 2015 more than 1,000 kids in the Washington DC area had earned their guitars. During my meditations, I envisioned weaving together many ideas that were developing in my mind, and it blossomed into a Grand Vision of musicians around the globe all playing and singing “The Peace Anthem” at the same time. I saw people dancing, singing, and communities of people all feeling the vibrations of peace and love connecting the world. The name came to me: “The Global Jam For Peace.”

My vision is to bring the world together in recurring global symphonies to raise the vibration of all the people on the planet. In a mastermind session with Jack Canfield at his home in Santa Barbara, we played guitar and talked about my vision. Jack could see it in his mind, too: Musicians around the globe all playing The Peace Anthem. He offered his support and we created a video together.

I am the founder of The Global Jam For Peace and president of Make Music Day DC. There are 800 cities in over 120 countries that will participate in our global live stream music event on Summer Solstice 2019. You can find more information, share on social media, and make a contribution here: www.globaljamforpeace.com

I am grateful to Bob Proctor, Sandy Gallagher and PGI team for the incredible education.

I have worked diligently on shifting my paradigms replacing bad habits with good habits. Using my creative intelligence and my higher mental faculties, I am achieving the goals I set in my coaching, my writing, my music, and my philanthropy. I am a dedicated teacher and forever a student.

My memoir and motion picture film in 2019. Stay Tuned!

Gregg Hammond, Washington DC

Music is The Language of The Soul

Smiles are the echoes of the heart. Music makes the heart smile because it is the language of the soul. Both convey emotions, influencing vibrational energy. Awakened senses come through the part of our perception which is as much intuitive as it is physical. There are many ways to exercise and expand your awareness. A smile is something you can see and feel. Science shows when you smile, it can change the vibration of all of the cells in your body. When you hear music, you also feel it on an emotional level. No matter where you're from, no matter what your background is, no matter what your profession, age, belief system, or destination you have on your horizon, music will move inside your soul and a smile conveys your love and joy. Smiles are contagious and will light up your face and radiate like the sunshine in the blue sky. Smile, and you can share your delight with a stranger from across a room or a city street. Love communicates with the magic of a smile. 
 
I have always loved laughing, smiling, and I have loved music since the first time I heard it. I have always felt love coming through the music. Infants will begin dancing as soon as they stand. They respond to music as newborns. We use songs to soothe them to sleep. Just a few soft notes. 
 
I remember back when I was just ten years old, waking up to the sounds of Baker Street by the Gerry Rafferty Band. I could feel a smile on my face, and the music was making it happen.
My siblings and I had fallen asleep with the clock radio on, and a dimly lit 3:33 AM was the first thing my eyes could make out. We were staying the night in an unused room at the Holiday Inn where my Dad worked. For us, this was just another chapter in our tumultuous childhood. As I lay there motionless, I could feel the music drifting into my ears and easing into my soul. It was mysterious, and it was familiar at the same time, and I felt an urging to sing, but I didn't. The sounds of the guitar and saxophone lifted me up. I knew then I wanted to be able to make that sound. I wanted to do whatever they were doing because of the way it made me feel: Safe. Loved. Empowered. I didn’t have the words to describe it then.
 
Playing the guitar saved my life. I grew up in a broken home full of violence, drugs, and creepy people. I ran away at 11 years old, and the police caught me. I went to juvenile court. I was put on probation and sent home. I ran away again at 16. I hitch-hiked 1,700 miles from Key West Florida to Lake Placid NY.  A police officer negotiated my return, and I finished high school.  Eventually, I ended up in front of a judge who said: “I’m sending you to prison for a long time.” A miracle happened that day. A woman who was a stranger to me stood up in the courtroom and addressed the judge confidently and professionally. She made some brief statements about actions she was taking on my behalf, and to my surprise, I was uncuffed and allowed to take off the orange prison jumpsuit, able to put on my civilian clothes, and walked out of the courthouse that day. I was smiling as we went to her law office. She explained that she felt "No kid is a bad child. We are all just operating as best we can with what we know. Here is your chance to make a change. Your choices will determine your future." She explained that if I focused my awareness on my thoughts and my choices, and paid the fines and fees, I could have house arrest instead of prison. The conditions: stay out of any and all trouble with the police. I didn’t think I could do it. But she did.  She was the one person who believed in me. A swift shift in the course of my journey started with her help and her smiling at me in belief, and me smiling back at her in gratitude. 
 
A few days later my friend Bill brought his electric guitar and professional amplifier over to my house. He showed me how he could play it, and kept smiling as he played. He let me try it and taught me a quick song. That was my first real hands on an electric guitar through an amp, and the experience was identical to what I felt at ten years old. Incredible bliss and a giant smile plastered on my face. I vowed to stay out of trouble. I told my friend "I am getting a guitar as fast as I can." I had a burning desire! I could feel the music inside me calling me to make better choices. I wanted to learn how to play this amazing instrument. Just a couple of days later, I found a mysterious trapezoid shaped box on my front porch. I discovered my little sister Jennifer had ventured to find me. We hadn't talked or seen each other for a long time. She was unknowing of my guitar adventure with Bill. She left a red electric guitar she had owned but never played. I found a note that read "I had a feeling you might want to try playing this- Love, Jennifer." 
 
It wasn’t long before I was in a band playing shows and having great fun playing “rock star.” Night after night of smiles on the dance floor and smiles on the stage. We had a strong fan base, and all tavern and club owners love us. We had the chemistry of musicianship, and creative minds. We had a band meeting and decided to buy a bus, get on the road, tour the USA and release an album of original music. It abruptly ended on a blistering hot Friday afternoon. To my shock and dismay, the other guitar player informed me that a couple of our bandmates were arrested for robbing banks. He said he was taking most of the stage equipment to a pawn shop, selling it, and bailing them out of jail. The next ten days were a whirlwind of police FBI and drama. The short story is that the band was finished and my dream crushed. I began searching for answers for something more in life. I traveled, with my dog, a guitar and as much of a smile as I could manage. I spent time learning and teaching wilderness survival, and search and rescue. I was intrigued by the traditional vision quest of the Native Americans. I had teachers guiding me in preparations to do my own, the right way. On a Mother's Day weekend, I embarked on my first 96-hour Quest in the wilderness... alone. No food. No pen, paper, knife, phone or people. Just drinking water, me and the wild things. I was driven to find a bigger Vision for my life, and willing to bear the pain it would take to find it. It was scary at night. Things moved in the brush around me. My stomach burned with hunger. I cried. I screamed. I slept. I dreamed. Four days later I walked out of the woods a different man. My Life Vision was much clearer now. I knew that I would be using mentoring and music to help change lives. I knew I would be writing and teaching. I knew I would be making people smile with music.
 
My Vision led me to Washington DC, where I founded DC Guitar Lessons and quickly became the #1 rated guitar teacher. I created a specialized guitar method for adults and kids. I put my awareness building skills to work with my coaching approach and rolled it into a new type of guitar program. 
Month after month I helped guitar players from complete beginner to advanced find their inner voice through the guitar, and the smiles on their faces conveyed the success of each session. 
 
On a sunny late afternoon, September 2004 my father and I walked along the sidewalk in Southwest DC neighborhood near the Waterfront. We were planning to attend a house boat-warming party at the marina. A gang of teenagers crossed the four lanes of Maine Avenue, surrounded us, and attacked. My hands were full of grocery bags. I was an easy target. One of the punches landed under my nose and split open my face. My Dad was banged up, and a tooth knocked loose. He had bruises as well. We managed to escape and get medical help. For several days it was physically painful to smile. My face cut and my spiritual vibration lowered. My mind worked over why teenagers would intentionally attack and cause pain to innocent people walking down the street. I wondered if it was because of a gang initiation. I wondered if they felt like no one cared about them. I wondered if they had no love and support and felt like there was nothing to smile about in their life. Just a couple months later, as I walked home from U Street NW, with take-out food in one hand and talking to my friend Mark on my cell phone with the other hand, two teenagers jumped out of a car and pointed a gun in my face. I reacted instead of responding. I screamed profanity, and it scared the young man long enough for me to drop, roll alongside a car and then run. I still had Mark on the phone and a smashed sandwich in a bag. I called DC MPD. I rode with them looking for the car and teenagers. The MPD officers told me I was lucky, "This kind of thing happens all the time in DC"  I decided that these teenagers who were taking a violent approach should be taught a lesson, and I was just the person to do it.... a guitar lesson. 
My Vision became even clearer than it had after the Vision Quest. I founded a chapter of a music program for at-risk and foster care youth and began volunteering to teach those children how to play guitar. I taught many kids all over DC. If the students showed up, behaved with respect, and showed us they practiced, they got to keep their guitars. They earned them. We invited them back for the next semesters, and some returned to help teach. I created a peer mentoring aspect where kids look up to other kids who have learned to play an instrument. 
I witnessed thousands of smiles from kids who felt the music inside them awaken. I watched proud family members, teachers, and friends find joy as they see the magic of the music make smiles come alive. 
 I have also put many of these at-risk youth on stages to perform when they felt comfortable enough to do so. 
 
I’m blessed to have many supporters for my mission including Dweezil Zappa, who has helped fund programs, and share what I do with others. He even brought one young man on stage to perform with him in front of a captive audience of smiling fans impressed with this young man from South East Washington DC.  Dweezil was smiling, and so were the rest of the band. 
 
My Grand Vision is to bring the entire world together in a unified Global Jam 4 Peace through recurring music events featuring a worldwide symphony of musicians playing The Peace Anthem (Set Me Free) in unison through Livestream cameras and platforms on social media. We have created partnerships with music and peace organizations and have our most current event details on our website. 
www.globaljamforpeace.com
 
“Music is my Magic Wand, and I am creating a world full of music and smiles” Washington, D.C. - U.S.A.
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