Music Together Classes Fiddle Collection - October

We are 6 weeks through our nine week fall session of Music Together and I love watching the kids, and the adults, accomplish new musical goals.

We have been working on singing Apples and Cherries as a round.  We began by each group singing one flavor of ice cream as a repeated vocal ostinato.  When we put all of the groups together it created harmony!  Singing in a round does the same thing.  It gives your children wonderful harmony to hear in a simple song.

We sang a drone on D and A along with the song Bella Boya.  Bella Boya is a complex little mixed meter song.  I am very pleased at how all of the classes  have learned to sing the song, different parts, and play the clapping game while you sing.  It is great for little kids to see adults and bigger kids working together to create music.  

This is also a song that is fun to play on the soprano ukulele.  My kids enjoyed learning how.  You can learn how by clicking

here and joining the Play Soprano Ukulele with the Fiddle

collection group.

For our free dances we danced along with the different parts to Lauren's Waltz, the play along from the Fiddle Collection.  We also did the Monster Mash!

For the play along we explored dynamics and tempo changes with In the Hall of the Mountain King.  We also played instruments to Ghost Busters.

Fall Music Together Week 3

It's always a joy to get to make music with the children and parents in my classes.  Last week and this week we sang a song called Can You Do This?  The song is in Lydian which might make it sound a little different To you.  If you want to play around with the Lydian mode at home you can play from F to F on a piano or keyboard using all white keys.

In one class I had the chance to point out how kids feel the rhythm in their whole bodies, and we can help them match the beat of the song by showing the beat in our whole body as well.  adults often stop feeling and expressing music in their whole body.  If you watch a toddler they feel the music from their head to their toes.  Sometimes the trick is just figuring out how they are experiencing the music and how to help them learn the best for the stage of life they are in.

Last week we sang Apples and Cheries with Ice Cream flavored.  Each part of the room got one flavor to sing over and over again.  If you haven't tried this along with the CD yet you should.  Pick one flavor (one phrase) and see if you can stay on that part during the whole song.  We are building up to singing the song in a round.

This week we moved to Los Fandangos.  There is a clapping part that goes along with the song.  Listen for it on your CD and look for it in the songbook.

This collection also has a lot of call and response songs.  Use these to your advantage during the week.  They can be fun in the car.  Songs like Can You Do This are great for directing you kids to do things.  I can wash my hands, you can wash your hands, I can dry them off, you can dry them off.  I can hold your hand, you can hold my hand, I can keep you safe, you can keep me safe.

The only song from outside the Fiddle collection was the play along.  It was This Little Light of Mine by the Chris Barber Jazz Band.  

Here

 is the link to get it.

Fall Music Together Has Begun

We are off to a fantastic start for this session of Music Together!  Thank you to all of the parents who sang, danced, and played instruments with their kids today.  You all did such a wonderful job right from the start.  When you model musical behavior you help your kids learn to be musical.  It doesn't matter if you always sing on pitch or keep the right beat.  If you are having a good time making music your kids will learn to enjoy music.  By being exposed to a community of music makers in a Music Together class they will learn to sing in tune and keep a steady beat.

Today I shared with you that I am going to play a new song on the ukulele each week in class.  The ukulele is a great instrument to enjoy playing with your child at home.  It's also a fun first instrument for kids who are a little older.  Because it is small it is easy to put your fingers down for the notes and chords.  I have started

basic ukulele tutorials

for you so you can learn to play at home.  You can find the tutorials here 

http://me-and-my-purple-ukulele.thinkific.com/

I played the Hello Song and I've Got the Rhythm In My Head on the ukulele in class today.  I've Got the Rhythm in My Head only has one chord!  It's so easy to play with your little one at home.  You can hold down the two fingers needed for an F chord and let your child strum.  If your child is ready to try putting their fingers on the strings this is an easy place for them to start!

The only song we did that is outside the collection today was the Freeze Dance by the Fresh Beat Band.

It's Time To Make Music!

The Fall Music Together session finally starts here Monday!  Music Classes at Journey Montessori will start with regularity now that we are past Labor Day as well.  I have enjoyed a little break but I'm thrilled to start classes this week.  All of the Music Together teachers in Charlotte get together before each new session to share awesome teaching ideas.  Here's a little video to enjoy before coming to class this week!

A-rhythm-etic

I came across this Ted Talk today and enjoyed it, but it also kind of made my head hurt!  Clayton Crameron talks about how swing is duple but subdivided triple and gives examples.  We broke that down in the Music Together Cert II workshop I just complete.  It has made me really think about how to approach rhythm and rhythm patterns for swing songs in Music Together classes.  While its a lot for me to consider, if I do it right it will just come across as play for the kids in class.

Sweet Potato is the only swing meter song coming up in the Fall Music Together collection.  If you know the song see if you can figure out how it can feel both duple and triple!

Classical Conversations Meets Music Together

I think my presentation went well (you can refer to the previous post if you want a few more details).  At least I had fun giving the presentation.  I think that's my main goal in life, to have fun doing whatever it is I've been given to do.

The purpose of the presentation was to share Music Together's philosophy with a group of my choice.  I choose to share the philosophy with Classical Conversations Foundations tutors.  

Classical Conversations is a homeschool group, click the page at the top for more info on that.

     Foundations is elementary school

     Tutors are the parents who teach a class once a week

I choose that specific group because I actually work with CC Foundations tutors and parents to equip them to teach in the classroom and at home.  And I really believe Music Together's philosophy applies to them and can help them more effectively teach their kids. 

Music Together is an early childhood music and movement program for parents/caregivers/teachers and their                 

      children/students.  Click the page at the top for more information.

To equip these parents we first looked at the classical model of learning in the presentation.  The classical model of learning has three stages, and I like to use the tree analogy to look help understand them.

Next we self assessed where we felt we fit musically in the classical model.

Are you still learning the basics of music?  Do you have the basics and are understanding how they work?  Or can you apply your knowledge of music to create and enhance other learning?

Now we get to how Music Together's philosophy fits in.

Music Together's philosophy is that 

* ALL children are born with the potential (aptitude) to make music!

* If young children have playful/informal musical experiences with the adults they trust (parents, close family members, nanny's, teachers) they will acquire a disposition to be music makers, and these experiences will feed their inborn musical potential.

*  Modeling being musical (singing, dancing, playing instruments) will help children achieve Basic Music Competence which is the ability to sing full songs in tune and move to the beat of the music they are experiencing. 

While looking at Music Together's philosophy we talked about ways we are already enhancing our children's musical aptitude with activities we do in Classical Conversations.  

*Tutors and parents model singing and moving to music every week in class.

*Tutors equip parents and continue modeling musical behavior at home.

*We feed off the kids energy by making the activities we do in class fit the students energy.  We can adapt an activity to be small movement, large movement, singing, maybe even instrument playing.  However we feel the kids will learn it best.

We also talked about ways we can better enhance our children's understanding of music by using the Music Together model in CC.

*Change what you are doing as a parent/tutor to accept and include the children's current behavior.  If a child is experiencing a song in his feet then dance.  If a child is experiencing a song by clapping then clap.  Adapt what you are doing to how the children are learning best in the moment.

*Help students fully understand the musical grammar from the fine arts section by experiencing what note values feel in a song, what a crescendo sounds like, what dynamics sound like.  Don't just give them the word and the visual, let them feel it, hear it, and experience it.

*Sing without recordings!  You don't have to be a wonderful musician.  Even if you sing off key you when you sing it yourself, or move to the music, you are helping the children acquire their own musical dispositions!  CC doesn't want you to rely on the recordings either.

My conclusion was very real for me.  Even though I was a formally trained musician, I did not reach my full musical potential until I could also feel the music, not just understand it.  We can use Music Together's philosophy of experiencing music with trusted adults, through musical play to help our children achieve their fullest musical potential.

Music Together Meets Classical Conversations

Today's did you know.

Today I get to give a presentation on how the Music Together model and philosophy can help equip Classical Conversations parents and tutors to teach their Foundations level students.  I have 10 minutes to present the material to the founders of Music Together.  As I was talking to my kids last night it dawned on me that they are probably way more equipped to give a ten minute presentation than I am, and they are still little.  I give a huge thanks to CC for putting a strong emphasis on public speaking.  I look forward to the ways this will be useful for my children as they grow.  I'll elaborate more on my personal presentation in the next post.  Lets see how this thing goes today!

Time To Get Back At It

Wow, Summer flew by as usual.  It's time to get back into the routine Fall brings.

Our homeschool Summer began with an amazing parent practicum.  I had the privlidge of being the tutor trainer for the Foundations (elementary school) tutors for our county.  I don't know if the tutors had fun, but I sure did.  We learned and refreshed our tutoring skills for new grammar, science experiments, fine arts, and presentations.  We also had fun playing review games together.  I always leave the summer practicum uplifted and energized for the year ahead!

The Music Together Summer session is wrapping up tomorrow and then I am off to Trenton, NJ to work on my Certification level 2 training at the Music Together headquarters!  I am excited about learning how to be a better teacher, and exploring current research on music and young children.

I plan to begin posting fun homeschool and music activities again after I get back from training!  Check back soon.





All Play - Improvisation

Deedle, deedle, dumpling,
My son John
Went to bed
With his blue jeans on--
One shoe off
And one shoe on--
Deedle, deedle, dumpling,
My son John.

Change one line - went to bed with his/her __________.  
Post your improvised line in the comments!

Here's mine
Deedle, deedle, dumpling,
My son John
Went to bed
With his light saber on--
One shoe off
And one shoe on--
Deedle, deedle, dumpling,
My son John.

What's Heard Can't Be Unheard

I had another fun morning teaching music classes this week.  I told one class I wish I could bottle up the amazing musical developments I get to see the kids make in class and share it with the whole world.

We used this version of Lukey's Boat for a play along.

In a Music Together class the lullaby follows the instrument play along.  This particular play along song is fun and upbeat and it can take your body a little bit to make a big switch from Lukey's Boat to Brahms Lullaby.  I enjoyed watching one little girl continue to internalize the beat from Lukey's Boat well into the lullaby, then change gears and sing Brahms Lullaby while still enjoying to spin in the middle of the group.

Another child in one of my classes likes the Music Together recording of Brahms Lullaby.  It has a bell sound at the beginning.  If you know this lullaby, simply reading the name of it may make your brain think of the tune.  But as soon as we begin to sing the song the little by mentioned knows he would like to hear the version on the recording instead.  If he had never heard the recording he wouldn't know any different.  The point being that once we are exposed to something we can never be unexposed to it.  We might forget, but chances are when we hear it again we will quickly remember.  I can enjoy Brahms Lullaby in different ways, but I can't disassociate the music with the title now that I've heard it and know what it is.

If the title doesn't prompt your memory you can listen here.

 As a mom, and a teacher, I think this power is amazing and scary at the same time.  It makes me realize that I really have to watch what I expose my children to.  Once they hear it it can't be unheard.  They can make decisions about how to approach it, but it can't be unheard.  I want to fill their heads with good!

The Classical Conversations curriculum we use for homeschooling puts many of the facts the children need to learn to music.  I am continually amazed at how they can recall a whole history facts with names and dates by me singing a few simple notes to prompt them.

 This is not one of my kids, but she is a perfect example of how singing helps memorization and what kids are capable of.  Start singing all sorts of wonderful things with your kids while they are little.  Chances are they will soak it all up and amaze you!

If you want to see how more about the power of music and memory go to YouTube and search "music therapy nursing home" and see how elderly people remember and react to familiar music.

Music Together - Beginning of the Winter Session

I was excited to see both familiar faces and new families this week in my Music Together classes.  I am blessed to have involved and loving adults in all of my classes.  There are times when it can takes weeks to convince adults in a class to participate.  It can be especially hard to participate when you have a toddler who just wants to enjoy toddling, or a baby who is too little to stand and dance on their own.  Thank you to everyone for singing, playing, and dancing no matter what stage your child is in!  Children reap the benefits of class when they see the adults they love enjoying the activities themselves.  



Music Together has nine collections of music.  This nine week session we are using the Bells collection of songs.  The nine collections of music are designed to take you and your child through three full years of Music Together classes.  I can see a lot of musical growth in children who take multiple sessions in a row.  They know the routine of class, clap to the beat with the Hello and Goodbye song (which is important because just in those two songs they now can feel both duple and triple meters), and interact quicker with other songs.  Being in a class with families who have taken classes before helps new parents and children feel the routine of class and participate.  If you are new this session this is something you can look forward to blessing other new families with in the future!

The bells collection is the first collection of song I ever taught.  I have taught it several times now and my children still love to sing the songs from this collection with me.  Now that my children are school aged we can improvise by changing parts of speech in a song (change the verb trotting to jumping, change the noun kitty cats to bugs)!  

I can't believe I started this blog 5 years ago.  It really feels like I just started it last year!  But since it is five years old I have blog entries from each of the Music Together collections hidden on here.  In 2012, the last time I taught this collection, I had just started teaching again after having our son.  If you venture back that in the blog that far you can get a small glimpse of some of the fun musical concepts we will be working on this session.  


We tiptoed and glided along with the song Hopping and Sliding and worked on feeling contrast between staccato and legato.  We will use this song to feel other musical contrasts this session!
"Children learn by noticing differences - they are especially alert to contrast.  By juxtaposing duple and triple meter as well as staccato and legato within one activity, we're giving children the opportunity to hear and experience these qualities.  For children, putting these meters and articulations into their bodies is a powerful and direct way to learn about them."

Play around with musical contrasts this week.  
Fast/Slow
High voice/Low voice
Staccato (bouncy, detached, separated)/Legato (smooth, connected)


We also explored mixed meter by enjoying the rhythmic piece Snowflakes.  It has a 5/8 time signature.  If you didn't fully embrace your inner Elsa with this piece yet hopefully you will soon!  The temperature outside this week was perfect to go along with snow, now all we need is the snow!

Music Together

Our dance this week was "Bounce Me Brother With A Solid Four." Check out this version by the Andrew's Sisters and dance along at home!

March and play along with Mickey Mouse!

Did you know that there are guitar chords in the back of your Music Together book?  If you have a guitar at home try playing Me, You, We, Trot Old Joe, and French Folk Song.  They are fun, easy songs to learn and your kids will love playing along with you!

The lullaby we sang this week was to the tune of "My Lady Wind."  You can find the lyrics we sang in your songbook at the bottom of the page.
My Lady Wind seems to be a very calming song.  It's slow tempo gives the singer plenty of time to take a big breath before each phrase.  When you pause to breathe before singing it it also gives you time to audiate (or hear in your head) what you are about to sing.  Taking this purposeful breath helps your child learn to audiate, which is an important step in their musical development, while helping clam them at the same time.




Music Together, September 19 and 20

Everyone did a fantastic job singing, dancing, and playing instruments this week!  Thank you parents for continuing to do all these things with your children in class.  It is apparent that you have been listening to the CD at home and are getting to know some of the songs.

Below is a copy of the coloring page I handed out in class.  When we played sticks along with the song "Palo, Palo" this week I just dumped them all out on the floor!  I find this to be a fun way to let the children explore all the different ways they can be played.  Some children will play just like you or I do, many will come up with their own ways, some will build with them, and some will just choose to observe.  Most of the parents choose to play the stick the way I was playing them.  If you did that then you were changing the size of the beat you played with each verse.  We played the steady beat, the microbeat (smaller/faster), and the macrobeat (larger/slower).  We will work on finding all of these beats in many of the songs we play along with.  The quote at the top of your coloring page was about finding and playing these different beats.  Most children find the faster microbeat easiest.


We also did some simple improvising with the songs "See How I'm Jumping," and "Hey Diddle Diddle."  When you or your child comes up with a new way of moving on the spot to the song "See How I'm Jumping," that is simple improvisation.  In the middle of the song "Hey Diddle Diddle" we did some jazzy tonal patterns.  Did you recognize any of the tonal patterns recognizable as other songs?  See if you can add your own jazzy scat singing or tonal patterns to this song at home.
I also encourage you to adapt songs to use in other ways at home.  I changed Little Johnny Brown to "Little Johnny Brown, are there any scarves layin' around?  Put them in the bag, Johnny Brown." to use it as a clean up song.  Change Johnny Brown to your own child's name and adapt the verse to something you would like them to get done.  Singing about it may make the task easier for you and for them!

The book we read along with "Hey Diddle Diddle" was
"Hey Diddle Diddle" By: Eve Bunting

The book keeps the same rhythm as the poem/chant, but adds other animals and instruments.  I checked it out at the Lake Wylie Library and it will be back there in a few days for you to get it next!

http://www.amazon.com/Hey-Diddle-Eve-Bunting/dp/1590787684









Our dance this week was the "Can-Can," and our play along was "Rocky Top." Click below to enjoy them at home!


Music Together September 12, 13

Fall Music Together classes are off to a great start!  I'm so excited that we have three fantastic classes in Lake Wylie this session!  It's wonderful to have some local make-up options.  There are classes at 9:30 on Mondays and 9:30 and 10:30 on Tuesdays in Lake Wylie.  Each class has only a few spots open.  If you want to invite a friend to try a class with you I would love for you to bring them along.

Thank you to all the mommies, daddies, grandparents, aunts!  You were amazing singers and dancers in class.  Your children will learn best by hearing you sing and seeing you dance and play instruments.

This week we danced to Jump In The Line by Harry Belafonte.  This is a fantastic song to dance to or play instruments with at home.  Click the link below to enjoy it at home.


If anyone missed out on the information from the coloring page handed out in class here it is!


"Audiation is defined as the ability to hear and understand music in the mind, when the physical sound of that music is not present.  Aduiation is not a skill that is immediately or quickly learned.  It is a skill that children develop slowly, through an ordered process over a period of time.  And it is best for children to develop this skill as soon as possible.  They can learn to audiate shortly after birth."  
Guiding Your Child's Musical Development 
by Edwin Gordon

You Audiate when singing a song like "Head, Shoulders, Knees, and Toes and leave out (don't verbalize/sing) one part each time you repeat the verse.  We worked on audiation today when we did a drum break and continued playing to the beat of the song with no music (singing) present.  The songs we added the drum break to were Little Liza Jane and Funga Alafia.  They are paired together on your CD, but on separate pages in your song book.  I encourage you to get out drums or pots and pans at home and play along with this song this week.  It is a great recording to play along with!

Music Together of Charlotte Facebook Sweepstakes!

If you missed out on being one of the first 150 to like the Music Together Facebook page don't worry, there will be another drawing once the page reaches 300 fans!!

Music Together of Charlotte has a new Facebook page.  If you "liked" the old page it is gone now and you need to "like" the new one!  The first 150 to "like" the new page will be entered into a drawing to win a free session of Music Together at the Music Together of Charlotte location of your choice!  Hurry almost 100 people already like the page!

Babies Hear Songs Before Birth

Infant Learning and Music
By Lyn Ransom, D.M.A. on January 25, 2011
Lyn Ransom, D.M.A., is the recently-retired Director of Program Development at Music Together LLC and coauthor of Music Together Preschool. She helped to develop Music Together’s Babies Program in 1999 and was a curriculum writer for all of the Music Together song collections. In addition to 25 years’ experience teaching adults and young people to sing, Dr. Ransom developed the music program for High/Scope Foundation and served as a teacher trainer for Head Start and Follow Through. Author of Children as Music-makers, she has served on the music faculties at several universities, including Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, Iowa State University, and Westminster Conservatory of Music at Rider University.
As a new faculty member at Iowa State University in the ‘80s, Sister Lorna Zemke was an important influence for me. Sister taught at Silver Lake College and was a pioneer in prenatal music development. I was fascinated by her program, which involved singing to babies in utero. She observed that newborns recognized their parents’ voices, as well as the lullabies that had been sung to them prior to birth. I was fascinated but doubtful. How could babies hear or remember anything from before they were born?
Yet, three years later, as an expectant mother myself, I was sure my six-month embryo kicked more around cello and bass guitar than anything else. We went to a jazz concert where the speakers were turned up and the baby kicked hard—and it seemed as if he kicked when they were playing and stopped between songs. I went to my OB/GYN the next week and said, “Dr. B., I am sure he kicks more when there are low sounds than when there are not. Would you be interested in doing some research with me? We could watch the baby on ultrasound while different musicians play. We could see if he responds to music and we could see if he responds more to low sounds.” He told me that the kicking was probably random and that I perhaps had a vivid imagination.
Now, of course, we know prenatal babies hear from the fourth month in utero, and we know they tend to respond more to low-pitched sounds than to high ones. We are rapidly finding out the level of discernment and memory that babies posses when they’re born, and we’re beginning to understand more about the stimulation they need for development.
One recent study by Nakata and Trehub (2003) compared babies’ responsiveness to their mothers’ singing and mothers’ speech. Babies six months old showed greater interest when mothers sang to them than when they spoke to them, as indicated by increased visual focus and reduced movement. We see this at home and in Music Together classes as babies “stare and study” when people sing to them. The researchers also noted that the regular pulse of music may also enhance emotional coordination between mother and infant.
Another study by O’Neill, Trainor, and Trehub (2001) documents infants’ greater visual attention when being sung to by fathers than by mothers. It also articulates the differences in the ways fathers and mothers sing lullabies and play songs when the baby is present and when the baby is absent. Both fathers and mothers were more animated and playful when the babies were present, but fathers didn’t raise the pitch of the songs with baby present as did the mothers. I think this study points out the importance of fathers and mothers both singing to babies: In addition to aiding emotional bonding and musical play, this may help babies develop their focusing skills and memory.
One-year-olds remember and prefer music they heard before they were born, according to a study by Alexandra Lamont from the University of Leicester. The “Child of Our Time” study involved mothers playing a self-chosen piece of music to their babies for the last three months before birth, then not again until the children were twelve months old. Eleven babies tested all showed a significant preference for these pieces compared to very similar pieces of music they had not heard before. The babies’ preferences were based on the amount of time they spent looking towards the source of the music. When they stopped looking at the speaker which played the music, the music stopped. The babies quickly learned the association between their looks toward the speaker and the amount of music they could hear.
Many more studies on early learning and music have been conducted recently, but even just these three indicate how much and how fast babies learn, how strong their differentiation skills are, and how important caregivers’ singing is to the infants. It is also an indication of how complex music-learning is and how much researchers have to study!
Did you sing or play music for your baby in utero? Have you observed your baby’s preferences for different kinds of music?
Lamont, A. (2001.) Birth of musical protégés. University of Leicester Bulletin, 3. For more information on the Child of Our Time study:http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0072bk8
Nakata, T., & Trehub, S. E. (2003.) Infants’ responsiveness to maternal speech and singing. Infant Behavior and Development, 27, 455-464.
O’Neill, C., Trainor, L. J., & Trehub, S. E. (2001.) Infants' responsiveness to fathers' singing. Music Perception, 18, 409-425. 

Great Big Stars

We did sign language with the lullaby Great Big Stars this week.  If you would like to add sign language to the song at home follow along below.
A wonderful bedtime story to go along with this lullaby is "How Many Stars in the Sky" by Lenny Hort.  In this story a little boy and his dad go from the city to the county to count the stars they see.  They compare how many stars you can see in the city to how many you can see in the country.