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Saturday, January 31, 2015

Music Notes: End of January 2015



Music Notes

End of January 2015

Happy New Year, everyone!

As always, I invite you to check out our music classroom blog at:

It was great to see so many of our students’ families at our holiday musical performance last month! The Lannoye penguins put on a great couple of shows.

Now that our performance is over, we’re delving back into other curricular materials in the music room.

This month the kindergarteners have been practicing their echo songs, including “Purple Light,” “No More Pie,” and “Charlie Over the Ocean.” The students have been focusing on using their singing voices and echoing pitches accurately. They’ve also begun leading the echoes for the game with “Charlie Over the Ocean.” (Ask your kindergartener to teach you the song.) In addition to singing, the kindergarteners have continued to show the steady beat using body percussion, as well as pointing to beat symbols in a left-to-right pattern (preparing for future music reading skills). Finally, they have reviewed fast/slow, loud/soft, and high/low using actions and listening skills.

The 1st graders have been reviewing their ta and ti-ti (quarter note and two 8th notes) rhythm knowledge, and recently added rest (quarter rest). They’ve been clapping, speaking, reading, and writing these three rhythms. They’ve also been singing in large groups and small groups, focusing on using their singing voices and matching pitches.

The 2nd graders also added to their rhythm knowledge – they continued practicing their 1st grade rhythms, reviewed half note and half rest, and learned whole note. “The Water is Wide” is the main whole note song they’ve been singing. They’ve been clapping, speaking, reading, and writing their rhythms. Last month, they learned about The Nutcracker and its composer, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, before taking a field trip to the Meyer Theatre to see highlights from the second act of the ballet. Check out the music blog for videos of the Act II dances, as well as Olympic ice dancing videos to which the students drew connections.

The 3rd graders have continued practicing their body percussion rounds and canons, and they’ve begun to take turns leading their classes. They began taking their knowledge and body percussion experience and applying it to songs. They’ve played rhythm football, practicing tiri-tiri (four 16th notes) and ti-tiri (one 8th note followed by two 16th notes). Most recently, they read Tikki Tikki Tembo and will start to determine how to notate the rhythm of his name.

The 4th and 5th graders have been learning/reviewing their treble clef literacy skills. We’ve practiced using rhymes and acronyms to remember the lines (EGBDF) and spaces (FACE), always building from the bottom to the top. The students worked together to create their own acronyms. Currently, they are playing SMART Board games, doing written practice, and taking timed tests to improve their accuracy and speed. This helps the students build their treble clef literacy for recorder playing. When we start our recorder unit, they can focus on learning recorder fingerings while applying previous music reading knowledge. For at-home practice links and apps, please check the music blog.

The 5th graders have also been learning about the program for the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra concert they will be attending on Tuesday, February 3. They’ve learned about several composers and the pieces they’ll be hearing at the concert, including Aaron Copland (Lincoln Portrait and “Hoe-Down” from Rodeo), Scott Joplin (Treemonisha Overture), George Gershwin (excerpts from An American in Paris), and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Oboe Concerto in C major, movement 1). They’ve also brushed up on singing “The Star-Spangled Banner” and “Yankee Doodle.” It’s been a whirlwind of a month, but they’ve been doing great! After the MSO portion of their field trip, they will eat lunch at Discovery World and then explore the exhibits. We’re all very excited for this trip!

Earning DRUM cards outside of class: If students are able to attend any performances outside of the school day, I ask that they bring in a program with their name on it and tell me (or write on the program) something about it (something new they learned, their favorite part of it, etc.).

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me!

Ms. Corinne Galligan
(920) 822-0433
cmgalligan@pulaskischools.org
lannoyemusic.blogspot.com

5th Grade Field Trip: Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra


On Tuesday, February 3, the 5th graders at Lannoye will be heading to the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra to see a performance in the MSO Youth Concert series (and visit Discovery World in the afternoon). This is a belated culmination to the students' instrument unit from the end of September through the middle of November. They took a break from instruments for our holiday musical (which will be posted in the coming weeks). Since returning to school after Christmas break, the students have been learning about the MSO and the pieces (and their composers) on the program.

TIPS FOR ACTIVE LISTENING
"To listen is an effort, and just to hear is no merit. A duck hears also." (Igor Stravinsky, composer)
  • Try to pick out specific instrument sounds 
  • Remember facts from class
  • See if you can predict what will happen musically - watch the conductor for hints
  • Listen for melodies and see if you can remember one you can hum later. Can you remember 2? 3? More?
  • If the music were the soundtrack to a movie, what would the setting be? What kind of story line would it have?
  • Pick your favorite moment in the music to tell your family about later (but keep your thoughts to yourself during the concert - let your friends listen in their own ways)

ABOUT THE MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY (from MSO.org)
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, under the dynamic leadership of Music Director Edo de Waart, is among the finest orchestras in the nation. Now in his sixth season with the MSO, Maestro de Waart has led sold-out concerts, elicited critical acclaim, and conducted a celebrated performance at Carnegie Hall on May 11, 2012. The MSO’s full-time professional musicians perform over 135 classics, pops, family, education, and community concerts each season in venues throughout the state. Since its inception in 1959, the MSO has found innovative ways to give music a home in the region, develop music appreciation and talent among area youth, and raise the national reputation of Milwaukee.

The MSO is a pioneer among American orchestras. The orchestra has performed world and American premieres of works by John Adams, Roberto Sierra, Phillip Glass, Geoffrey Gordon, Marc Neikrug, and Matthias Pintscher. In 2005, the MSO gained national recognition as the first American orchestra to offer live recordings on iTunes. This initiative follows a 44-year nationally syndicated radio broadcast series, the longest consecutive-running series of any United States orchestra, which is heard annually by 3.8 million listeners on 183 subscriber stations in 38 of the top 100 markets.

The MSO's standard of excellence extends beyond the concert hall and into the community, reaching more than 40,000 children and their families through its Arts in Community Education (ACE) program, Youth and Teen concerts, Meet the Music pre-concert talks, and Friday Evening Post-Concert Talkbacks. Celebrating its 25th year, the nationally-recognized ACE program integrates arts education into state-required curricula, providing opportunities for students when budget cuts may eliminate arts programming. The program provides lesson plans and supporting materials, classroom visits from MSO musician ensembles and artists from local organizations, and an MSO concert tailored to each grade level. This season, more than 7,600 students and 500 teachers and faculty in 25 Southeastern Wisconsin schools will participate in ACE. - See more at: http://www.mso.org/about_mso/mission_history#sthash.wOotmbTu.dpuf


ABOUT THE CONDUCTOR (from MSO.org)
Lecce-Chong.com
American conductor Francesco Lecce-Chong, currently associate conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, is active with the orchestral and operatic repertories on the international stage. In his role with the MSO, Mr. Lecce-Chong works closely with renowned Music Director Edo de Waart and is directly responsible for leading over forty subscription, tour, education, and community concert performances annually. During the MSO’s 2012.13 season, Mr. Lecce-Chong took the podium for an acclaimed gala concert with Itzhak Perlman, led the orchestra through its statewide tour of Wisconsin, and conducted a special three-week series at Milwaukee’s Basilica of St. Josaphat.

A list of Mr. Lecce-Chong’s international appearances include leading the Hong Kong (China), Pitesti (Romania), and Ruse (Bulgaria) philharmonics and the Sofia Festival Orchestra (Italy). Equally at ease in the opera house, Mr. Lecce-Chong has served as principal conductor for the Brooklyn Repertory Opera and as staff conductor and pianist for the Santa Fe Opera. He has earned a growing reputation and critical acclaim for dynamic, forceful performances that have garnered national distinction. Mr. Lecce-Chong is a 2012 recipient of The Solti Foundation Career Assistance Award and The Presser Foundation Presser Music Award. He is also the recipient of the N.T. Milani Memorial Conducting Fellowship and the George and Elizabeth Gregory Award for Excellence in Performance.
As a trained pianist and composer, Mr. Lecce-Chong embraces innovative programming, champions the work of new composers and, by example, supports arts education. His 2012.13 season presentations included two MSO-commissioned works, two United States premieres, and twelve works by composers actively working worldwide. He brings the excitement of new music to audiences of all ages through special presentations embodying diverse program repertoire and the use of unconventional performance spaces. Mr. Lecce-Chong also provides artistic leadership for the MSO’s nationally-lauded Arts in Community Education (ACE) program – one of the largest arts integration programs in the country.
Mr. Lecce-Chong is a native of Boulder, Colorado, where he began conducting at the age of sixteen. He is a graduate of the Mannes College of Music, where he received his Bachelor of Music degree with honors in piano and orchestral conducting.  Mr. Lecce-Chong also holds a diploma from the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied as a Martin and Sarah Taylor Fellow with renowned pedagogue Otto-Werner Mueller. He currently resides in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Follow his blog, Finding Exhilaration, at www.lecce-chong.com. - See more at: http://www.mso.org/about_mso/meet_the_orchestra/musician_roster/musician_detail?name=FRANCESCO%20LECCE-CHONG&instrument=Directors#sthash.BiVDhePU.dpuf


Also of note: Mr. Lecce-Chong was one of four conductors selected (out of more than 130 applicants from around the world) to participate in a conducting workshop with David Zinman at the end of January. http://ottawacitizen.com/entertainment/music/the-tip-of-the-stick-dos-and-donts-of-conducting

PROGRAM AT A GLANCE
Stafford Smith     Star-Spangled Banner
Copland               "Hoe-Down" from Rodeo
Gershwin             An American in Paris (excerpts)
Mozart                 Concerto in C major for Oboe and Orchestra, K. 314
                             I. Allegro aperto
                             featuring Julia Simpson
Traditional           Yankee Doodle (singalong)
Joplin                   Overture to Treemonisha
Copland               Lincoln Portrait (excerpts)
                            featuring Chief Flynn from the Milwaukee Police Department

STAFFORD SMITH - Star-Spangled Banner
The program will open with "The Star-Spangled Banner." To prepare, we reviewed what we already learned in September and practiced our SSB etiquette.
link to video with lyrics

COPLAND - "Hoe Down" from Rodeo
Wikimedia
Aaron Copland
1900 - 1990

  • Born in Brooklyn, NY
  • His older sister taught him piano; father wasn't musical, mother played piano
  • Went to as many performances as he could
  • At 15 years old, knew he wanted to be a composer
  • At 21, moved to Paris to study composition; returned to America 4 years later
  • Had a distinctive style and became known for modern composition techniques with American folk tunes, cowboy songs, church hymns, etc.
  • Also taught composition students
  • In the mid-1970s, started becoming quite forgetful. Diagnosed with Alzheimer's. By mid-1980s, lived at home with round-the-clock nursing care. Died of pneumonia shortly after his 90th birthday.
  • Although he started late, Copland really liked conducting. "It's fun. It's well-paying. And you get applauded at the end. The orchestra does all the work and you turn around and take a bow. If you want to be nice, you ask the musicians to stand up, too, the poor dears."
Rodeo
1942

"In the 1940s, Agnes de Mille asked Copland to write a cowboy piece for her and the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. The result was the wildly successful ballet, Rodeo. The story takes place on a ranch and follows a cowgirl trying to impress the self-centered head wrangler. To attract his attention, she dresses like a cowboy and shows off her roping and riding skills. He still doesn't notice her. Finally, she catches his eye when she puts on a red dress and goes to the evening square dance, where she falls in love with a sweet and kind-hearted cowboy.

"The final scene is a lively square dance with the famous "Hoe-Down." This piece, one of the best known works by any American composer, has been featured in movies and ads. This movement captures the excitement of spirited country dance and fiddle music. Listen for the strings in the introduction - it sounds like the fiddlers tuning the instruments! Two main themes come from classic square dance tunes. The first is Bonyparte, played by the violins and violas. Next is Miss McLeod's Reel, played by the trumpets" (from the MSO's Teacher Resource Guide).

You might recognize "Hoe-Down" from the American Beef Council's commercials.



GERSHWIN - An American in Paris
MasterworksBroadway.com
George Gershwin
1898 - 1937
  • Famous for writing Rhapsody in Blue (remember that clarinet excerpt?)
  • While growing up in Brooklyn, NY, was very athletic and assumed music was something girls did. At 10, figured out music was awesome.
  • Left school at 15 to work 10 hours/day in music stores, practicing, writing, and trying to get published
  • Became rich and famous at 19 - had a 14-room apartment with a piano in the gym, owned every music book of the time, was a major art collector, drove a Mercedes Benz
  • Big ego, but somehow it charmed people instead of repelling them - "Great, isn't it?"
  • "When I am in my normal mood, music drips from my fingers."
  • Died of a brain tumor
Photo is my own, taken in summer 2008
An American in Paris
1928
  • Inspired by Gershwin's 1928 trip to Europe (he was originally from Brooklyn, NY)
  • Wanted to become a better classical composer, so traveled to Paris
  • Later that year, the NY Philharmonic commissioned a new work from Gershwin
  • An American in Paris is a symphonic poem
  • Copland said, "My purpose here is to portray the impression of an American visitor in Paris as he strolls about the city, listens to various street noises, and absorbs the French atmosphere."
  • Some themes are repeated throughout the piece, depicting different moods
  • “The opening gay section is followed by a rich blues with a strong rhythmic undercurrent. Our American… perhaps after strolling into a café and having a couple of drinks, has succumbed to a spasm of homesickness. The harmony here is both more intense and simpler than in the preceding pages. This blues rises to a climax, followed by a coda in which the spirit of the music returns to the vivacity and bubbling exuberance of the opening part with its impression of Paris. Apparently the homesick American, having left the café and reached the open air, has disowned his spell of the blues and once again is an alert spectator of Parisian life. At the conclusion, the street noises and French atmosphere are triumphant.” (Copland's program notes about the piece, found on the LA Philharmonic's website)
SafeShare link to the following video

MOZART - Oboe Concerto in C major, Op. 314, movement I (Allegro aperto)
Wikimedia
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
1756 - 1791
  • Born in Salzburg, Austria
  • Father was a famous violinist
  • 1 of 7 kids; only he and his sister made it to adulthood
  • While sister was learning harpsichord, Mozart would play the pieces she was learning without practicing
  • Father took the 2 on a concert tour through Europe 1762-1771
  • Worked as a court musician and freelance composer. Very popular, but didn't make a lot of $. Never had a steady job.
  • Got sick and died young, but wrote over 600 works
Oboe Concerto in C major, Op. 314
1777
  • Written in 1777 for an Italian oboist
  • Rewritten one step higher for flute in 1778 for a Dutch flutist
  • The Dutch flutist had commissioned 4 flute quartets and 3 flute concertos. Instead of writing a new 3rd concerto, Mozart just rearranged the oboe concerto...as a result, the flutist didn't pay him for that piece.
  • Fun fact: Mozart didn't like the flute and didn't trust flutists.
  • Some detective work was required to figure out that this solo originated as an oboe piece. 
  • Cadenza at the end
Julia Simpson
Featured soloist
  • Junior at Oconomowoc High School
  • Won the 2014 MSO Stars of Tomorrow competition, so she got to perform the 1st movement of the Vaughan Williams Oboe Concerto with the MSO last spring
  • Won the Waukesha Area Symphonic Band Concerto Competition
  • Will be guest soloist in February with the Wisconsin Philharmonic, performing Mozart's Oboe Concerto
  • Enjoys reading, studying, spending time with friends, and being a marching band drum major
SafeShare link to the following video

TRADITIONAL - Yankee Doodle
  • Originally started during the French and Indian War (1754-1763), when British and American soldiers fought side by side
  • The well-dressed Brits made fun of their rag-tag American counterparts. Dr. Richard Schuckburgh, a British surgeon, wrote verses ridiculing them, and set the words to an old English folk tune.
  • The Americans embraced the song as a proud colonist anthem.
  • Definitions: 
    • Yankee: rash or lacking judgment
    • Doodle: fool or simpleton 
JOPLIN - Overture to Treemonisha
Wikimedia
Scott Joplin
1867 - 1917

  • Believed to have been born in Texas between June 1867 and January 1868; moved to MO
  • Played piano and cornet (like trumpet, but a conical bore instead of a straight bore)
  • Gigged for over a decade before going to college, then focused on composing
  • Considered to be one of the best ragtime composers
    • Ragtime: popular style of music in late 1800s that started in St. Louis (MO) and New Orleans (LA). Known for syncopated or "ragged" rhythm in the melody, steady rhythm in the bass. Predecessor to jazz.
    • People who didn't like ragtime music said it was an addictive poison that caused permanent brain damage and ruined people's morals.
  • You might know two of his famous piano solos, "The Entertainer" and "Maple Leaf Rag."
Treemonisha
1910
  • Opera (all text is sung) - finished in 1910. Joplin wrote the libretto (text) and music. 
  • Similar music to standard European operas (so, not a ragtime opera). Some ragtime style used to show "racial character." Like many French operas, includes a short ballet.
  • Tried to get it professionally published, but ended up having to publish it himself in May 1911. 
  • Tried to have it performed numerous times, but a full production wasn't successfully staged until 1972 (>50 years after death)
  • Story takes place in rural black Arkansas in September 1884
  • Main character is Treemonisha, the only educated person in her community
  • She leads her townspeople away from others who prey on ignorance and superstition. She gets kidnapped and almost thrown into a wasp nest. Her friend rescues her. 
  • The community then realizes the value of education.
  • Joplin believed education was the key to equality for African Americans.
SafeShare link to the following video

COPLAND - Lincoln Portrait
Copland's biographical information is listed towards the beginning of this post.

Lincoln Portrait
1942
  • After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, conductor André Kostelanetz commissioned orchestral works that would present "a musical portrait gallery of great Americans." Copland said, "The choice of Lincoln as my subject seemed inevitable."
  • Copland used quotes from Lincoln, along with themes from folk song "Springfield Mountain" and Stephen Foster's "Camptown Races."
  • 3 sections of Lincoln Portrait
    • Part 1: "I wanted to suggest something of the mysterious sense of fatality that surrounds Lincoln's personality. Also, near the end of that section, something of his gentleness and simplicity of spirit." Main theme ("Springfield Mountain") in the clarinet
    • No break before Part 2. Brighter tone and tempo to depict the place and time in which Lincoln lived. Main theme is "Camptown Races"
    • No break before Part 3, where Copland combines the melodies and moods of the first 2 sections with narration
      • The narration contains quotes from and about Abraham Lincoln. The piece has had many famous narrators throughout its existence, including Neil Armstrong, Bill Clinton, Aaron Copland, Al Gore, Tom Hanks, Katharine Hepburn, Samuel L. Jackson, James Earl Jones, Barack Obama, and Margaret Thatcher.
      • You can find the narration here.
SafeShare link to the following video

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Treble Clef Literacy

The 4th and 5th graders started learning/reviewing their treble clef note names this week in preparation for our recorder unit. We started this process with a parody called "I Knew You Were Treble" by Jeanette Young.
We've also started practicing and creating our own acronyms to help remember the location of the letters. My personal favorite line acronym is "Evil Gummy Bears Destroy Florida."

We've also used a chant to go along with our hand signs (video to come later). "E G B D F - these are the lines of the treble clef. F A C E spells face in the space, uh-huh, face in the space, uh-huh, face in the space - yeah!"

Here are some online games for students to play to continue improving their note-reading skills:
Lines and spaces: this one from netrover.com, this one from musictheory.net, this one from Sound Feelingsmusicracer.com (in the blue box, choose Note names; in the yellow box, choose Recorder)this one from Vic Firth, this one from classicsforkids.com, this one from teoria.com (to start, check Treble clef, lines and/or spaces (up to you - add ledger lines if you want a challenge), answer using note name, and uncheck the maximum time to answer; once you feel ready, start challenging yourself by changing the options!), notationtraining.com

Suggested apps:
Staff Wars ($0.99)
Note Squish ($0.99)
NoteBrainer (free)
Developing Musicianship Speed Reader ($0.99)
Music Tutor Free (free)

2nd grade field trip to the Nutcracker


Last month, the 2nd graders at Lannoye went to see highlights from act II of The Nutcracker at the Meyer Theatre. Before the trip, they learned that a ballet is a dance that tells a story. They also learned about the original story of The Nutcracker by E.T.A. Hoffman. In the story, Clara, a young girl, gets a nutcracker for Christmas. He comes to life and is attacked by the evil Mouse King (or Queen, depending on the version of the story). Clara helps him defeat the Mouse King and finds out that her nutcracker is actually a prince! Her prince takes her to his home in the Land of the Sweets, where she meets several sweets...before she wakes up from her dream.

Photo from TallahasseeGrapevine.com
After the students learned about the author of the story, they learned more about the Russian composer of the music for the ballet, Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Tchaikovsky was a musical child, constantly drumming on windowpanes (to the point that he broke the glass once and cut his hand!). When he was seven, he begged for piano lessons after hearing Mozart's Don Giovanni on a music box. Playing the piano made him too excited to sleep, though. Sadly, his father didn't think music was a "real" career, so Tchaikovsky became a law clerk instead. After his mother died, he started writing music, which became the thing in his life that gave him purpose. While he composed, he often forgot to eat. One of his quirks that the students really enjoyed was his irrational fear that his head would fall off while he was conducting an orchestra. As a result, he would hold onto his head with his left hand while conducting with his right. In addition to The Nutcracker, Tchaikovsky is also widely known for 1812 Overture (you know, the one with the cannons) and the ballet Swan Lake. (Information from Lives of the Musicians: Good Times, Bad Times (and What the Neighbors Thought) by Kathleen Krull)

Photo from Biography.com
After an introduction to what choreographers do as well, the students got to hear the story with some videos of the act II dances they'd see on our field trip.

Spanish Dance

Arabian Dance

Chinese Dance

Russian Dance

Mother Ginger

Waltz of the Flowers

Dance of the Reeds

Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy

As we watched these videos (and after we attended the performance), we talked about the strength, musicality, flexibility, balance, and physical control that ballet requires. One of the students brought up that it's similar to ice dancing. Several students had seen some of the figure skating at last year's Olympic Winter Games, including pairs ice dancing. I showed them a couple of videos of the gold medal winning pair, Charlie White and Meryl Davis, from Michigan.

2014 US Nationals Short Program: I Could Have Danced All Night," "With a Little Bit of Luck," and "Get Me to the Church On Time," all from the musical My Fair Lady

2014 Sochi Winter Olympics Free Dance: Scheherazade by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov