Listen Up, Canada!

Teacher's guide inspired by the music and pedagogy of Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer

Grades
3-6

Composerama!

Introduction and materials

The working styles of composers vary greatly and this lesson uses works by three different composers to demonstrate this. The work of Mozart, Beethoven and Schafer took place over a span of 260 years and represents three very distinct yet similar processes.

Educational activity: Students use critical thinking skills to compare three score excerpts from three different composers.

Materials:

Overhead of three score images

Teacher information sheet: Comparing the scores of three composers

Images of each composer (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, and R. Murray Schafer)

Audio for the three composer selections (videos below):

Viewing and questioning

Step 1. Show the overhead of the three scores, being careful not to mention the names of the composers.

Ask: Are the three scores written by the same person? Why or why not?

Step 2. When students agree that it’s likely three different composers, ask: What does each score tell you about the composer? Do you think the score tells us anything about how each composer worked? What’s your evidence?

Refer to the heading “What can you tell about the composer by looking at the music scores he creates” in the Teacher information sheet.

Step 3. Write Schafer, Beethoven, and Mozart on the board. Ask students if any of those three names are familiar and what they might know about each.

Step 4. Reveal that these are the names of the composers associated with the three score images. Can they guess which image belongs to whom? Ask students to support their answers.

If you have used either the Minewanka or Epitaph for Moonlight lessons, the students may identify the Schafer score first. After a few tries, confirm the correct answers.

Score comparison study

Work together as a class to investigate the Challenge questions listed below.

Teacher tip: Guide this conversation using the Teacher information sheet: Comparing the scores of three composers. Your role is to guide the discussion and help students discover the richness of information that the primary source scores present. While the Teacher Information Sheet will be very helpful for confirming details, be careful not to fall into the role of “expert” too quickly. The students have the capacity to unlock much of what is contained in the images.

Challenge questions

  1. Melody: Which score has singers on the main melody?
  2. Rhythm: What different rhythms has the composer used?
  3. Metre: What metre (number of beats in each bar) is the composition in?
  4. Tempo: Is there a tempo marking (speed of the music)? What does it mean?
  5. Dynamics: Which of these markings – piano, forte, fortissimo, crescendo, decrescendo – can you find, for which composer?
  6. Timbre: What different instruments/singers do you see in each score? What quality of sound would they make?

Name that face!

Show the images of Mozart, Beethoven and Schafer. Does how they look correspond in any way to how their scores? (There are no wrong answers!)

Listen to the corresponding audio links provided and invite students to think about whether the music sounds the way it appears for any of these composers.