Friday, January 11, 2013

Composer Profile: A Music Project For Grades 4-8




A project that involves the student in reading, researching, organizing information, and sharing the final product with the rest of the class. Works best if done in a group of 2-3 students.

Can be used with any composer of any musical era. 
I have used this successfully with students in grades 4-8. 


Thursday, January 10, 2013

Music Of The World: A Multi-Cultural Music Project

A project that enables students to research and categorize information about different cultures. The following four topics are researched:

• Brief History
• People & Places
• Customs & Traditions
• Music

Using print sources and also internet sources, the students locate information on the subject, classify it, put it together in a presentation form, and then share it with the rest of the class.

I have used this project successfully with students in grades 4-8.

Click Here For An Instant Download Of This Project

Band & Recording Artist Profile




Creative, Student-Led Project On Bands And Recording Artists. 

Students will be engaged in the following activities:

     • research (hard-copy materials and/or internet)
     • organizing research material into different categories
     • preparing finished product (different formats)
     • presenting finished project to class

A fresh, creative way to engage your students in discovering, organizing and sharing information about their favorite bands and recording artists. The project can be completed as individual work or as group work (2-3 students per group).
 

The finished product/presentation will include verbal, visual and auditory elements.

I have used this very successfully with students in grades 5-8. The students love this work because they get to talk about bands/artists they love. Also, there is a great sense of ownership associated with completing this project, since the students get to select their own band/artist.
 

The document is a four-page PDF file: title page, teacher guide, student guide, project chart. The student guide and the chart should be copied back-to-back and handed out to the students.
 

Friday, January 4, 2013

Ferdinando Carulli (1770-1841)


Ferdinando Carulli (1770-1841)

In today's guitar scene, the music of Carulli often goes unnoticed, and even purposely ignored sometimes. With so many available resources online and offline, with so many offers for all musical tastes of each guitarist, some of the music which was once highly regarded, has gradually been moved to the back shelf, while some have placed it in the recycling bin…

It is true that even in Carulli's day there were some guitarists that looked down upon his music. Fernando Sor, a guitarist/composer of the same period, was such an example, and some of his writings indirectly attack the simplicity found in Carulli's and Carcassi's works. This, however, has happened to virtually every composer that ever lived: there have always been critics that surrounded all composers, no matter when they lived and what type of music they wrote. 

The fact that Carulli was very much involved with teaching, and unlike today, there was a great need for creating new didactic materials for the instrument, was clearly part of the motivation for him to write music the way he did. In fact, some of his publishers were known to complain that the music was too complicated - too hard for an amateur to play. 

All criticism aside, it is clear that Carulli's guitar music presents players of his day and ours with great material for learning, developing technique and public performance. His method alone (Opus 27) is a great example. Many self-taught guitarists of the past generation have used this material to learn how to play: it is a great way to study the instrument in an organized, progressive manner. 

There are many great features of the work, but I will mention only two in this article: First, there is a great amount of repertoire for the player, collected in one book. Instead of having to go from publication to publication, the student has easy access to hundreds of pieces, at different playing levels, all in the same publication. Second, the work is very progressive in nature: note reading, techniques, repertoire, position playing, are all presented in a progressive, logical order. 

There are plenty of guitar students today who can make their way through Bach's Boure, but could not read an easy scale in the third position on the instrument. Completing a method like Carulli's presents the student with lots of repertoire, but also with a more complete, a more thorough understanding of how the instrument works. 

Unfortunately, Carulli's reputation for writing 'easy music' is often caused by the fact that many players only look at that: his easy music. When we look at Carulli's entire output, we discover a great variety of works, written for different levels of playing. A great example is his Opus 320, which is a collection of "Six Andantes", dedicated to Matteo Carcassi, one of his contemporaries. While the set is not extremely difficult to play, it clearly could not be classified as 'easy' music. 

So whether you are looking for sight-reading material, some new technical exercises, a fresh look at your fingerboard, or perhaps a new encore piece for your next performance, consider the music of Carruli. There's a little bit for everybody in there!