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Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Live for Music
Happy Music in Our Schools Month! Enjoy this song by Shaun Canon, featuring Lindsey Stirling and footage from Drum Corps International.
Saturday, March 28, 2015
Music Notes: End of March 2015
End of March 2015
Hello, everyone!
In honor of 30 years of Music
In Our Schools Month, let’s start some conversations at home! Students, here
are some questions you can ask your family, friends, and teachers…see what you
discover!
·
What
did you learn in music class when you were my age?
·
Did
you ever play an instrument? Which one? How long? Why’d you choose that one?
·
Were
you ever in band? Jazz? Choir? Orchestra? Other ensembles?
·
If
you were in any of those groups (or took lessons, etc.), what was your favorite
part?
·
If
you could play any instrument in the world, what would you choose? Why?
·
What’s
your favorite song to belt in the car or the shower?
·
If
you were in a rock band, what would your band’s name be?
·
What
was the first concert you attended?
·
Have
you ever met a famous musician?
·
If
you could meet any musician, dead or alive, who would it be?
·
Fill
in the blank: “Music makes me ______________.”
Did you learn anything you didn’t
know about the people in your life? Share the neat things you learned – I’d
love to hear them!
For more March MIOSM fun and
information (and a musical Pi Day post that the math lovers out there will
enjoy), check out our blog at:
Still
looking for donations: If you’ve got
any empty small tissue boxes (not the long rectangular ones), I’ll take them
from now until the end of the year! I’m planning ahead for a 3rd
grade rhythm activity next winter…
Here’s what we’ve been working on in March:
This month, the kindergarteners,
1st graders, and 2nd graders all learned the song
“Here Comes a Bluebird.” They’ve enjoyed taking turns being the bluebird and
coming up with different ways to show the steady beat with their partners and
neighbors. In honor of Dr. Seuss’s birthday, they all read the book There’s a Wocket in My Pocket and played
egg shakers on all of the rhyming words. They also all learned “Rattlin’ Bog”
to celebrate the springtime and St. Patrick’s Day. Kindergarten and 1st
grade also practiced their steady beat movements (with dancing) to Celtic
Storm’s song “Beggarman.”
In addition to the abovementioned activities, the kindergarteners have continued
practicing their leadership with the echo song and game “Charlie Over the
Ocean.” They also kept practicing pointing to beat symbols in a left-to-right
pattern. They learned the song “Bee, Bee, Bumblebee,” and showed the steady
beat in the game.
The 1st
graders practiced clapping, speaking, reading, and writing the rhythms they
know. Our rhythm dictation activities combine all four of those actions! They
also got to write their own rhythm compositions. They’re currently in the
process of learning their first solfege pitches, so and mi, through the
song “Bee, Bee, Bumblebee.”
The 2nd
graders practiced clapping, speaking, reading, and writing their rhythms,
using rhythm dictation activities and other games to practice their skills.
They also got to write their own rhythm compositions. Now they’re reviewing
their 1st grade solfege pitches (so,
mi, and la) and adding a new pitch to their toolbox (do). We’ve been singing and playing “Apple Tree” to help us
prepare!
The 3rd
graders practiced clapping, speaking, reading, and writing their rhythms,
and put them all together in rhythm compositions. They continued singing 3-part
rounds and partner songs as well. They’re currently reviewing their solfege
knowledge and adding high do to their
pitch vocabulary via “Lil Liza Jane,” a song they used for learning ti-ta-ti
and reviewing call and response.
The 4th
and 5th graders finished their round of speed-reading treble
clef tests. Congratulations are in order for the following students who passed
the 30 second test on the given dates: Madison (5th grade, 2/21),
Jake (5th grade, 2/21), Aaron (5th grade, 3/3), Jack (5th
grade, 3/13), Will (4th grade, 3/13), Austin (3/13)! Also, an extra
congrats goes to Jake for passing the 20 second version on 3/13!! The 4th
and 5th graders all survived their first recorder playing tests (4th
grade on B/A/G, 5th grade on B/A/G/C’/D’) and learned a new note (4th
grade: C’; 5th grade: F#). They’ve all been working on supplemental
material, including the song “B-A-G Lady” by Jim Tinter, and stretching their
brains by improvising over different accompaniment tracks. Please make sure
your students are practicing their recorders – ask for an in-home performance! J
Upcoming
performances in the area:
Thursday,
April 9 7:00 pm PHS
Guest Artist Jazz Concert
PHS Ripley PAC
Sunday, April 12 1:00 pm Pulaski Area Community
Band/Choir Concert
Sunday, April 12 1:00 pm Pulaski Area Community
Band/Choir Concert
St. John’s Lutheran Church
in Morgan
Thursday, April 16 7:00 pm Pulaski Area Community
Band/Choir Concert
in Morgan
Thursday, April 16 7:00 pm Pulaski Area Community
Band/Choir Concert
PHS Ripley PAC
April
17-19, 24-26 7:00 Fri/Sat, PCMS Musical: Joseph and the
2:00 Sun Amazing Technicolored
2:00 Sun Amazing Technicolored
Dreamcoat
PCMS
Auditorium
$8
tickets; $10 for 4/18 show, $15 for 4/18 show with spaghetti
dinner – get your tickets now!
Thursday, April 23 7:00 pm UW-Platteville Guest Concert
Thursday, April 23 7:00 pm UW-Platteville Guest Concert
PHS Ripley PAC
Monday,
April 27 6:30 pm PHS Choir Honors Recital
PHS Ripley PAC
Ms. Corinne Galligan
(920) 822-0433
(920) 822-0433
cmgalligan@pulaskischools.org
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Happy Pi Day!
From biznetis.net |
A
=
π
r
2
From mathisfun.com |
From johnparsons.net |
Now, what if someone were to make a musical composition based on the numbers in pi? That's what happens in this video!
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Music Pun
Composer Eric Whitacre shared this picture on social media last week, and I thought it was hilarious.. I shared it with the 4th and 5th graders.
As a reminder, pizzicato means to pluck the strings with your fingers.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Welcome to Music In Our Schools Month
To begin our month of MIOSM blog posts, I'd like to share excerpts of Karl Paulnack's 2004 welcome speech to the freshman class of the Boston Conservatory. You can find the full text here: https://www.bostonconservatory.edu/music/karl-paulnack-welcome-address.
One of the first cultures to articulate how music really works were the ancient Greeks. And this is going to fascinate you: the Greeks said that music and astronomy were two sides of the same coin. Astronomy was seen as the study of relationships between observable, permanent, external objects, and music was seen as the study of relationships between invisible, internal, hidden objects. Music has a way of finding the big, invisible moving pieces inside our hearts and souls and helping us figure out the position of things inside us.Paulnack goes on to share two examples of music's hidden power. One example is French composer Olivier Messiaen's piece Quartet for the End of Time, which he wrote in 1940 while imprisoned in a prisoner-of-war camp in Nazi Germany.
...in a place where people are only focused on survival, on the bare necessities, the obvious conclusion is that art must be, somehow, essential for life. The camps were without money, without hope, without commerce, without recreation, without basic respect, but they were not without art. Art is part of survival; art is part of the human spirit, an unquenchable expression of who we are. Art is one of the ways in which we say, "I am alive, and my life has meaning."Paulnack's next example is from his personal experience of living in Manhattan in September of 2001. The morning after the terrorist attacks, he sat down at his piano to practice as he normally did, but couldn't bring himself to do it. He wasn't sure if he ever wanted to play again - in the gravity of the situation, it seemed "silly, absurd, irreverent, pointless."
And then I observed how we got through the day. At least in my neighborhood, we didn't shoot hoops or play Scrabble. We didn't play cards to pass the time, we didn't watch TV, we didn't shop, we most certainly did not go to the mall. The first organized activity that I saw in New York, on the very evening of September 11th, was singing. People sang. People sang around firehouses, people sang "We Shall Overcome." Lots of people sang America the Beautiful. The first organized public event that I remember was the Brahms Requiem, later that week, at Lincoln Center, with the New York Philharmonic. The first organized public expression of grief, our first communal response to that historic event, was a concert. That was the beginning of a sense that life might go on.From those two experiences, Paulnack shared what they helped him understand.
...music is not part of "arts and entertainment" as the newspaper section would have us believe. It's not a luxury, a lavish thing that we fund from leftovers of our budgets, not a plaything or an amusement or a pastime. Music is a basic need of human survival. Music is one of the ways we make sense of our lives, one of the ways in which we express feelings when we have no words, a way for us to understand things with our hearts when we can't with our minds.Paulnack goes on with a couple more example pieces, including Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings and Aaron Copland's Sonata. He shares beautiful stories of heart-wrenching music. Finally, he tells the parents of the music students what he'll tell their children.
You're not here to become an entertainer, and you don't have to sell yourself. The truth is you don't have anything to sell; being a musician isn't about dispensing a product, like selling used cars. I'm not an entertainer; I'm a lot closer to a paramedic, a firefighter, a rescue worker. You're here to become a sort of therapist for the human soul, a spiritual version of a chiropractor, physical therapist, someone who works with our insides to see if they get things to line up, to see if we can come into harmony with ourselves and be healthy and happy and well.
Frankly, ladies and gentlemen, I expect you not only to master music; I expect you to save the planet. If there is a future wave of wellness on this planet, of harmony, of peace, of an end to war, of mutual understanding, of equality, of fairness, I don't expect it will come from a government, a military force, or a corporation. ... If there is a future of peace for humankind, if there is to be an understanding of how these invisible, internal things should fit together, I expect it will come from the artists, because that's what we do. As in the concentration camp and the evening of 9/11, the artists are the ones who might be able to help us with our internal, invisible lives.As a music educator, my goal for my students is to help them enjoy and appreciate music, no matter where they end up in life. I want them to have something to turn to when they have no words, when they want to express themselves, when they want to make or partake in something beautiful.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Music Notes: End of February 2015
End of February 2015
Hello, everyone!
As always, I invite you to
check out our music classroom blog, which now includes our How the Penguins Saved Christmas videos, at:
Looking for
donations: If you’ve got any empty
small tissue boxes (not the long rectangular ones), I’ll take them from now
until the end of the year! I’m planning ahead for a 3rd grade rhythm
activity next winter…
Here’s what we’ve been working on in February:
This month the kindergarteners
learned a new song, “Oliver Twist.” They’ve enjoyed coming up with different
ways to show the steady beat with this song. They have continued practicing
their leadership with the echo song and game “Charlie Over the Ocean.” The
kindergarteners have continued to practice pointing to beat symbols in a
left-to-right pattern (preparing for future music reading skills). They added
long/short to their opposites listening practice, in addition to their existing
knowledge of fast/slow, loud/soft, and high/low using actions and listening
skills. They also read the book Frog in
Love (Max Velthuijs) and played along on key words with hand drums,
tambourines, and guiros.
The 1st
graders have been practicing quarter note, quarter rest, and two 8th
notes. They’ve been clapping, speaking, reading, and writing these three
rhythms. Our rhythm dictation activities combine all four of those actions! The
1st graders got to use their rhythm skills with a Valentine’s Day
word sort and composition activity. They learned the song “Oliver Twist” as
well, and have been creating different ways to show the steady beat while
singing the song. They also read the book Frog
in Love (Max Velthuijs) and played along on key words with hand drums,
tambourines, and guiros.
The 2nd
graders added whole rest to their rhythm repertoire. They’ve been
practicing half note, half rest, whole note, and whole rest, in addition to the
three 1st grade rhythms in their vocabulary. They’ve been clapping,
speaking, reading, and writing their rhythms, using rhythm dictation activities
and other games to practice their skills. They got to utilize their rhythm
knowledge with a Valentine’s Day word sort and composition activity. The 2nd
graders learned the song “Oliver Twist” as well, and have been creating
different ways to show the steady beat while singing the song. They also read
the book Frog in Love (Max Velthuijs)
and played along on key words with hand drums, tambourines, and guiros. We finished out the month by learning the folk song and dance “Alabama Gal.”
The 3rd
graders reviewed their quarter note, two 8th notes, and four 16th
notes rhythms with a Valentine’s Day word sort and composition activity. They
also learned some new rounds (including “Ho! Every Sleeper Waken”) and partner
songs (including the combination of “One Bottle of Pop,” “Don’t Throw Your Junk
in My Backyard,” and “Fish and Chips”) and have been singing 3-part rounds
regularly. The 3rd graders have also practiced music math while
learning the process of how musical dots work (for example, in the dotted half
note rhythm they just learned), and they prepared to learn a syncopated rhythm
(ti-ta-ti, or 8th note quarter note 8th note). We
finished out the month by learning the folk song and dance “Alabama Gal.”
The 4th
and 5th graders continued to review 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. This month, they played SMART
Board games, did written practice (including a Valentine Poem that used treble
clef reading to fill in missing letters), and continued to take timed tests to
improve their accuracy and speed. They all started out labeling 24 pitches in
90 seconds. Once they got 100% in that time limit, they moved to 60 seconds,
then 30 seconds. Congratulations are in order for 5th graders
Madison and Jake, who have passed the 30 second test as of February 21st!
For at-home practice links and apps, please check the music blog. The 4th
and 5th grade students have also begun their recorder unit, in which
they began combining their treble clef literacy with recorder fingerings. They
also finished February with the folk song and dance “Alabama Gal.”
The 5th
graders took a fantastic field trip to Milwaukee at the beginning of the
month! They attended a Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra youth concert and explored
Discovery World. This field trip has been in the works since last April. The
students were great, with a strong work ethic and drive to learn. They learned
about five orchestral pieces, two songs, and four composers in a month! They
supplemented this knowledge with fun facts, historical and cultural context,
music excerpts, full recordings from Naxos and YouTube, photographs from
Europe, and activities like square dancing and singing. Within that month, they
also reviewed treble clef reading with short activities and timed tests every
class, and they learned about 6th grade music options before our
Google Hangout with the middle school music team.
At the concert, I saw my sweet, hard-working 5th
graders nod and grin with recognition when the conductor gave a brief
background of each piece and composer. I talked to chaperones who shared that
they enjoyed the concert far more than they had expected. I watched the
students fulfill my behavior expectations in the concert hall. I giggled when
one of them turned to me incredulously before the last piece and said, “Wait,
that’s it?!”
I’m so proud of the 5th graders, and I’m
glad we got to experience this trip to the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
together. It was fun watching them explore all sorts of hands-on exhibits at
Discovery World during the afternoon too. What a growth-packed day with a
variety of knowledge and applications! I’d like to extend thanks to the Lannoye
PTO for funding the transportation for our trip, as well as to Mr. Klawiter and
my colleagues for supporting our students’ music education and personal growth
opportunities.
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! Please feel free to stop in the music room during
conferences on March 10th. J
Ms. Corinne Galligan
(920) 822-0433
cmgalligan@pulaskischools.org
lannoyemusic.blogspot.com
(920) 822-0433
cmgalligan@pulaskischools.org
lannoyemusic.blogspot.com
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
How the Penguins Saved Christmas
Here are the concert videos from our 2014 holiday musical, How the Penguins Saved Christmas. (I'm posting both videos because of the double casting in two of the 5th grade roles.) Enjoy!
12:30 performance
2:30 performance
12:30 performance
2:30 performance
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