MADE POSSIBLE BY
LESSON 6
TEMPO
TEACHER WORKBOOK
1
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY EDUCATION SUPPORTERS
Our Education Concert is created in partnership with the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction and is made possible by a generous grant-in-aid from the State of North Carolina, the Honorable Roy Cooper, Governor; the Honorable Susi H. Hamilton, Secretary for Natural and Cultural Resources. We express our gratitude to our Boards of Trustees: The Symphony’s mission to achieve the highest level of artistic quality and performance standards, and embrace the dual legacies of statewide service and music education, is led by the North Carolina Symphony Society, Inc., and the Symphony’s endowed funds are held by the North Carolina Symphony Foundation, Inc. EDUCATION SUSTAINERS
Anonymous Trust / Simple Gifts Fund EDUCATION BENEFACTORS
The Bastian Family Charitable Foundation
EDUCATION PATRONS
Anonymous; Robert P. Holding Foundation, Inc.; Samuel P. Mandell Foundation; Youths’ Friends Association Inc. EDUCATION PARTNERS
Gipson Family Foundation
Swearingen Foundation
Alamance County Government
Granville County Community Foundation
The Titmus Foundation
Arts Council of Carteret County
Gregory Poole Equipment
Vance County Community Foundation
The Harold H. Bate Foundation
The Hellendall Family Foundation of North Carolina
Yadkin County Community Foundation
Iredell County Community Foundation
MUSIC EDUCATION ENDOWMENT FUNDS
Beane Wright Foundation Bell Family Foundation Bertsch Family Charitable Foundation, Inc. The Borden Fund, Inc. Carteret Community Foundation Cherbec Advancement Foundation The Cole Foundation
Jacksonville-Onslow Council for the Arts Kinston Community Council for the Arts The Landfall Foundation The Noël Foundation Onslow Caring Communities Foundation Outer Banks Community Foundation
The Joseph C. and Diane E. Bastian Fund for Music Education The Ruby and Raymond A. Bryan Foundation Fund The Mary Whiting Ewing Charitable Foundation Fund
Corning Incorporated Foundation
Poole Family Foundation
The Hulka Ensemble and Chamber Music Programs Fund
Edna Williams Curl and Myron R. Curl Charitable Fund
Prescott Family Charitable Trust
The Janirve Foundation Fund
The Florence Rogers Charitable Trust
The Elaine Tayloe Kirkland Fund
Emily Monk Davidson Foundation
E.T. Rollins, Jr. and Frances P. Rollins Foundation
The Dickson Foundation, Inc.
The Norman and Rose S. Shamberg Foundation
The Ina Mae and Rex G. Powell Wake County Music Education Fund
The William C. Ethridge Foundation, Inc.
The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Corbett
The Lundy Fetterman Family Foundation Trust George Foundation, Inc.
Southern Bank Foundation
Authors: Barina Bailey, Zadda Bazzy, Emily Cannady, Laura Martin, Andrea, Perrone, Susan Reynolds Designer: Kimberly Ridge Editors: Sarah Baron, Jason Spencer, Layla Dougani, Erin Lunsford North Carolina Symphony, 3700 Glenwood Ave., Suite 130, Raleigh, NC 27612, 919.733.2750 ncsymphony.org/education North Carolina Symphony Student and Teacher Handbook © 2017, 2020 by North Carolina Symphony Society, Inc. Reproduction of this book in its entirety is strictly prohibited.
2
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY
TEACHER WORKBOOK
3
JOHANNES BRAHMS
BORN May 7, 1833, Hamburg, Germany DIED April 3, 1897, Vienna, Austria
Biography Johannes Brahms was born on May 7, 1833, in Hamburg, Germany. His father was a musician and his mother was a seamstress. He composed during an era of music history called the Romantic period. He respected famous composers who came before him, including Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, and had a particular admiration for Johann Sebastian Bach’s music. Brahms showed his musical talents early on. He began playing piano at age seven and helped to supplement his family’s income by playing in restaurants and theaters. Brahms also learned to play cello when he was young, but had to stop when his cello teacher stole his instrument! As a teenager, young Johannes was already conducting choirs and later became a successful choral and orchestra conductor. By the age of 19, Brahms was well-known as a pianist and played a concert tour of Europe. Brahms met many famous musicians while traveling on his concert tours. While playing piano for Hungarian violinist Eduard Reményi in 1853, he met the famous violinist Joseph Joachim and the composer Franz Liszt. He was also lifelong friends with famed Viennese waltz composer Johann Strauss, Jr. Reményi introduced Brahms to Hungarian folk music and its rhythms and melodies. Brahms later used them in his music, including his 21 Hungarian Dances. They helped him reach a wider audience, compared to his other compositions.
4
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY
featured work
Hungarian Dance No. 5
Fun Facts In his later years, Brahms’ appearance was very recognizable as he had a long beard and large frame, which was the opposite of his thin figure and smooth cheeks in his youth. Brahms did not grow his beard until he was 45 years old. Brahms was extremely critical of his music and destroyed musical scores and sketches that he thought were not his best work. Although Brahms was quiet and shy, he had many friends, and even though he was not married, he was known as a favorite “uncle” to many of his friends’ children.
brahms’ LIFE • Brahms’ family was very poor and
lived in a house with many other families. His most precious possession was his flute, which he kept under his pillow.
• Brahms’ family learned that he could
hear a tune and play it immediately on his flute, when at age six, he played all the tunes he had heard from an organ grinder.
• Brahms’ father played double bass in cafes and inns, but the family never had enough money.
• Brahms wanted to learn to play the
piano, but his father told him to forget about this idea because he thought pianos were only for rich people.
• When Brahms’ father took him to
see one of his musician friends, they discovered that Brahms had perfect pitch and could name any note that was being played on the piano.
• At age seven, Brahms started taking
piano lessons from Otto Cossel, who did not charge his family for the lessons and let Brahms practice at his house.
• When Brahms was nine, he accidently
discovered a piano factory during the Great Fire of Hamburg, when the fire blocked his path to Mr. Cossel’s house and he couldn’t get to his piano lesson. The owner of the factory
invited him to play, and then offered Brahms the opportunity to practice on the pianos in his factory.
• Brahms played dance music on the piano in taverns as a youth to help support his family.
• At age ten, Brahms won a piano
competition even though he could not practice due to an accident in which a heavy wagon had run over his legs. He did not accept his prize of traveling to America to give concerts, but instead began piano and composition lessons with Mr. Cossel’s teacher, Professor Marxsen.
• Brahms toured through Northern
Germany. He worked as Director of Concerts for a prince and as Director for a singing school in Vienna.
• Although he was a composer of
the Romantic Period, his music seemed closer to the Classical Period compared to his contemporaries.
• He wrote four symphonies, many
lieder (German songs) and choral pieces, various piano pieces, a Requiem, and a famous lullaby.
• He had a friendship with Robert and
Clara Schumann, and he spent two years helping with her children. She advised him in many areas of his life.
• He liked to go on walks in the woods.
TEACHER WORKBOOK
5
FEATURED WORK: Hungarian Dance No. 5
Brahms was an admirer of his predecessors Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart. He often stated how vital it was to preserve the purity in the classical tradition. As such, in a time of Wagnerian romanticism, Brahms provided a more circumspect look on his repertoire, aligning his compositions with that of his idols. Hungarian Dance No. 5 is one of the 21 arrangements of Hungarian dances he wrote for four-hand piano. Numbers five and six are based on folk melodies, but still demonstrate Brahms’ unique style in their harmonic and rhythmic complexity. This work is often compared and studied with Dvořák’s Czech nationalist works, the Slavonic Dances. Classroom activity provided by Susan Reynolds, Abbotts Creek Elementary, Wake County
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY #1: What is Your Music Mood Today? North Carolina Essential Standards in Music:
4.ML.2.3 Interpret standard symbols and traditional terms for dynamics, tempo, and articulation while performing music. 4.MR 1.1 Illustrate perceptual skills by moving to, answering questions about, and describing aural examples of music of various styles and cultures. RED.SE.1.2 Identify ways of controlling emotional states, feelings, and moods.
Objective: Students will use movement to interpret changes in tempos. Students will identify feelings they experience daily and how it relates to tempos. Materials:
• North Carolina Symphony Education video • Wheel of Names or Tempo Cards (Slide 6)
• Drum (one mallet per student) or instrument from home (pencil, wand, pen, etc) • Accompanying slides
Process:
Synchronous or asynchronous 1. Students will need to find an object to conduct with: a pencil, a pointer, a wand 2. Tell students they are going to listen and follow along. They need to be prepared to stand up. 3. Students will respond in the text box how they felt when they were listening and conducting. You can also use Jamboard or Padlet to document responses. 4. Discuss feelings and how music can help or change your mood. Use these cards during the discussion. 5. Extension activity: Mix a pancake activity or Chocolate hand game with Wheel of Names 6. Follow up with Pear Deck questions, google form or exit tickets. What is tempo? How did the music make you feel? Choose a tempo mood card and describe how you are feeling today? Why do you think composers use tempo changes in their music? 7. If you are unable to meet with your students ‘live,’ create your own video so students can follow along. In-Person 1. Place a drum in the center of the room and hand out a mallet to each student. Students can be placed around the drum, 6 feet apart. Mallets can be cleaned after each class. 2. Demonstrate conducting in 2/4 with an 8-beat phrase. 3. Ask students to watch as you, walk, jog, or dance up to the drum and hit the drum on beat 8. Ask students which beat did you hit the drum?
6
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY
4. Explaining that you will play the Hungarian Dance No. 5 and we will go around the circle and each student will walk, jog, dance up to the drum and hit the drum on beat 8. Remind them they need to listen as the tempo may change! 5. Ask students to turn and chat with a partner and tell them how they felt when they were doing the activity. Take some time to share and talk about how music can influence your feelings. 6. Extension activity: Mix a pancake activity or Chocolate hand game with Wheel of Names 7. Follow up with Pear Deck questions, Google form or exit tickets. I use this activity at the beginning of the year to teach mallet technique, respect for instruments and exercising self-control!
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY #2: Experience Tempo North Carolina Essential Standards in Music:
4.ML.2.3 – Interpret standard symbols and traditional terms for dynamics, tempo, and articulation while performing music. 4.MR.1.1 – Illustrate perceptual skills by moving to, answering questions about, and describing aural examples of music of various styles and cultures.
Objective: Students will use the rhythmic chant “Mix a Pancake” to understand tempo and tempo changes. Materials: “Mix a Pancake” chant (provided below) Process:
1. Tell a story to the students: a story about how one day your Mom was making pancakes for breakfast and she added too much flour. This made the pancake batter very thick and hard to stir. Say the “Mix a Pancake” chant very slowly. Have students repeat it back at the same slow tempo. 2. Next, tell students that the following day your Mom tried making pancakes again. On this day she added too much water to the batter, and when she stirred the batter it was way too thin and went flying everywhere! Say the “Mix a Pancake” chant very fast. Have students repeat it back at the same fast tempo. 3. Finally, tell students that on the third day your Mom made pancakes once more and added just the right amount of flour and just the right amount of water, and when she stirred the batter, it was perfect. Say the “Mix a Pancake” chant at a steady pace. Have students repeat it back at the same steady tempo. 4. Tell students that the word tempo means ”the speed of music: how fast or slow it is.” 5. Next ask the students, how did the tempo of the “Mix a Pancake” chant change each time we said it? Lead students in conversation.
TEACHER WORKBOOK
7
CLASSROOM ACTIVITY #3: Tempo Four Corners North Carolina Essential Standards in Music:
4.ML.2.3 – Interpret standard symbols and traditional terms for dynamics, tempo, and articulation while performing music. 4.MR.1.1 – Illustrate perceptual skills by moving to, answering questions about, and describing aural examples of music of various styles and cultures
Objective: Students will use active listening skills to identify different tempos. Materials: 4 tempo cards (provided on pages 9 & 10: print, cut, and post one tempo card on each corner of the room), YouTube videos of music with varying tempos Game Rules: Students will begin by standing in the middle of a room. When the teacher plays a piece of music
the students must move safely to the tempo corner that they think best describes the piece. If students go to the wrong corner, they are out! Play as many rounds as you see fit.
Process:
1. Review the tempo terms Largo, Andante, Allegro, and Presto with your students. (Largo – Very Slow, Andante – Walking Speed, Allegro – Fast, Presto – Very Fast) 2. Next, point out to students where the terms are located in the four corners of the room, and go over the game rules. 3. Play game!
Find these music examples on YouTube to use during the game, or use any songs or pieces that you would like!
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
Beethoven — Piano Sonata No. 14, 3rd movement, Presto agitato (Presto) Bach — Double Violin Concerto in D Minor 2nd movement, Largo (Largo) Meghan Trainor — “Me Too” (Allegro) Rimsky-Korsakov — Flight of the Bumblebee (Presto) Bach — “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring” (Andante) Mozart — Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Allegro) ACDC — “Thunderstruck” (Presto) Bill Withers — “Lean on Me” (Andante) Beethoven — Moonlight Sonata (Largo)
STATE HEADQUARTERS 3700 GLENWOOD AVE, SUITE 130, RALEIGH, NC 27612 919.733.2750 ncsymphony.org North Carolina Symphony Student Handbook © 2020 by North Carolina Symphony Society, Inc. Reproduction of this book in its entirety is strictly prohibited.
8
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY
TEACHER WORKBOOK
9
10
NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY