The Classroom Composer

Introduction

What is music? This is a very open-ended question because music can be defined in many ways for many different people. Some people say that music to them is cultural, experiential, meaningful, emotional, and expressive. Although people may not agree on the same definition of music, they can agree that music can inspire, affect, move, and unite people.

What elements or “building blocks” are needed to make music? (Examples could include instruments, musicians, singers, rhythm, melody, form, harmony, digital sounds, etc.)

Is music still “music” without using any instruments? Can you be a composer without knowing how to play an instrument or how to write a song? Can you create and perform music without using any instruments? Can you make music with just the voice alone? A paper bag? A hammer?

Skills and Concepts: Composing, ABA (ternary) form, creative musical notation

Objective(s): Students will create a class composition using non-instruments; students will understand and recognize ABA (or ternary) form in music.

Target Grades: 4-6

Materials

Whiteboard and markers

Sound maker items: paper bags, newspaper, scissors, garbage cans, rulers, elastic bands, hardcover books, clunky shoes, pennies, craft beads, jars, pails, tin cans, etc. (any class item that can make a noise when dropped, pushed, rolled, scrunched up, torn, shaken, spun)

Scroll of paper (use white or light coloured bulletin board paper approximately 1 meter across, cut paper in half horizontally, and tape (back of paper, not front) ends together to make 2 meters in total width length)

Three 5 x 7 cards with large written letters A B A using construction paper or manila tag

YouTube video: “Miniwanka” by R. Murray Schafer

Indigenous music

Indigenous people are deeply connected to and inspired by the natural world and the interconnectedness of people, animals, and natural elements such as seasons and weather.

Traditional stories and songs reflect that connection, and you can hear those elements in the music when chants reflect the mood and emotion that nature brings. Songs can be sung with words or without words (chant) to connect people to the spiritual world, for prayer and in ceremonies, to connect each other, and to honour the land.

Instruments accompanying the songs reflect the rhythm of the earth. They are made from natural materials such as animal skins, sinew, and wood for frame drums, small pebbles and sand inside rattles, and vegetable and berry dyes for colour.

Traditional Indigenous music does not use form such as ABA (ternary form) like Western classical music does. Instead, many traditional Indigenous songs are organized in cycles where the song sections are repeated over lengthy chant phrases.

R. Murray Schafer

R. Murray Schafer (1933-2021) was a Canadian composer who lived in Ontario. He had a deep respect for and connection to nature and often stepped outside the lines of what a typical composer is expected to compose. He redefined and stretched the definition of a composition, showing that compositions could consist of natural and unusual sounds.

He was an environmentalist who loved nature and often found his inspiration from natural sounds heard outside. The natural environment was his canvas and the trees, the wind, the birds, and the animals were the instruments (and even the composers).

Music History and Culture

In this lesson, students will learn about some elements of traditional Indigenous music and how the (non-Indigenous) Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer was inspired by Indigenous languages and by the natural world.

His choral composition “Miniwanka” comes from the word “minnewanka,” a Nakota word meaning “water of the spirits.” Lake Minnewanka is a lake in Banff National Park.

You can find many recordings of “Miniwanka” on YouTube, including this one by the Vancouver Chamber Choir:

Activity: Found Sound Compositions

Step 1. Discuss the following: What is music? What building blocks are needed to make music? (Write down student answers for this question). Is music still “music” without using any instruments? Can you be a composer without knowing how to play an instrument or how to write a song? Can you create and perform music without using any instruments?

Step 2. Once ideas are displayed, share R. Murray Shafer’s “Miniwanka.” Students may giggle or disagree that this example fits their description or idea of music. Discuss if any of the elements they listed are heard in the example.

Step 3. Inform the class that they will be creating a class composition using collected “sound makers”. Hand out the items or have students choose from the collection.

Step 4. Have all students individually test out their item for its sound.

Step 5. Discuss other possible ways their sound maker item can make a different sound by playing it in a different way. Ask: Are there sound maker items that can be grouped together because of their similar sounds or qualities?

Step 6. Discuss the following: What is musical form? It is the organization of music into sections; a simple example of ABA, or ternary, form is “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.” Using ABA form and pre-made letter cards, have the students assist in deciding how to organize their composition. Ask:  What will happen in section A? How will section B contrast section A? Ideas can include different sound maker groups, mood, tempo (speed), or dynamics (volume). Have the students decide which “instruments” or sound makers will be in each section. Tape A B A cards on bottom of scroll to indicate where the sections are.

Step 7. Once decided, write out on the board how they want their sound or sound group to look in its written form. What symbols best represent their sound (swirls, squiggly lines, jagged edges, wavy lines, dots, etc.)? Transcribe the chosen symbols onto the scroll.

Step 8. After all sound makers and groups have been notated onto the scroll, begin rehearsing their piece. Each musical composition begins and ends with silence. Will the teacher conduct? Will a student conduct? Is the tempo too fast or too slow? Encourage students to listen to each other and to watch when it is their turn to play and not play. When not playing, encourage students to listen.

Step 9. Perform final piece. Conclude with a discussion about the composition.

Closing questions

Discuss the following: Based on the brainstormed elements of music at the start of this activity, were we able to achieve some of those elements in the sound maker composition? How were form sections A and B different? As an instrument player or sound maker, did the form help to organize the whole group while playing?