Click HERE to practice our Grade Three Song! |
Welcome to the Royal Oak School Music blog where you'll find information about what we're working on in the Music Room, including links to music that we've studied, photos of students at work, symbols and images that we are exploring and assessment information, as well as some general thoughts on Music Education.
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Tuesday, 30 October 2018
Remembrance Song Practice Video
On November 9th, all Grade Three students will be presenting a special song at our Remembrance Day Assembly to honor our Armed Forces and to celebrate peace. Click on the link below to practice the song and the actions. We will want to do our very best for this special occasion!
Monday, 29 October 2018
Musical Learning in October
Click HERE to dance along |
In October, Kindergarten students continued to explore
non-pitched percussion instruments through their farm unit, and then celebrated
with a barnyard dance to Aaron Copland’s Hoe
Down. There were ducks and horses
and cows and sheep moving everywhere! Then we used these instruments to sing
and play a song about the changing colors of autumn. By the end of our song, the wind had blown
through the room, and we were covered with green and yellow and purple
leaves!
Grade One students began the month with popcorn. Students performed the rhythm of our song by
“playing the way the words sound”. They also
began to learn about the form of music, which is the idea that music has
sections that are the repeated through a song, as well as sections that only
happen once. Three different teams with
different instruments represented the form by taking turns to play their own
special section. Students have also
begun to learn the beginnings of melodic notation by representing high and low
sounds through movement, puppetry, singing, notation and playing the
xylophone. It has been exciting to watch
each student become a composer, writing and performing their own unique music!
Grade Two students have finished telling the story of Liza
Briggs, a sleepy girl who forgets to feed her pigs one morning. In addition to using notation to learn the
song, students used the West African djembe drum to play a repeating pattern to
accompany our voices. Performing two
pieces of music at the same time requires intense listening, and it was
wonderful to hear how the singers and drummers worked cooperatively to fit
their music together like snug puzzle pieces! Students have also been deepening
their understanding of rhythms by reading notation as a group, writing and
performing their own pieces, and finally using a short rhythmic phrase to
improvise a melody on the xylophone.
Grade three students learned a version of the old campfire
classic Don’t Throw Your Junk in My
Backyard. This piece gave them the
opportunity not only to sing two complimentary songs at the same time, but to
also learn their first xylophone accompaniment with a changing harmonic
pattern. Classes learned this piece so
very well that I was able to sit down at the piano and play along, changing the
dynamic from teacher and learner into competent musicians just sitting around
making music together! The students have
also spent some time considering several famous pieces of music, Also Sprack Zarathustra, Fur Elise and the Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks. (Click on the titles to listen to the music!)
They listened as musicians, determining the emotion or mood inspired by the music, and what the composer did to make them feel that way. Then they went a step further and visualized an image prompted by this music. Students were very keen to share their work with each other and they immediately noticed a wide variety of responses. How lucky we are to be a part of such a rich and diverse learning community!
They listened as musicians, determining the emotion or mood inspired by the music, and what the composer did to make them feel that way. Then they went a step further and visualized an image prompted by this music. Students were very keen to share their work with each other and they immediately noticed a wide variety of responses. How lucky we are to be a part of such a rich and diverse learning community!
Wednesday, 10 October 2018
Icy Music for These Cold Snowy Days
Click HERE to learn about ice instruments |
As the artist in the video explains, there is an inherent connection between these instruments (which are are made of "solid" water) and the people who enjoy them (who are made primarily of liquid water). Throw that mix into a cave carved out of the ice and you have a magical, wintery, musical extravaganza!
By the way . . .
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