Fun with Composers Pre K Gr 3, volume i Copyright 2006 Fun with Composers

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Fun with Composers Pre K Gr 3, volume i Copyright 2006 Fun with Composers Fun with Composers 1541-134 a Street Surrey, B.C. Canada v4a 5p7 Fax: 604 541 2928 E-mail: info@funwithcomposers.com www.funwithcomposers.com The classroom teacher may reproduce copies of music maps, composer images, composer biographies and activity pages for classroom use only. NOT FOR RESALE. Reproduction for an entire school or school system is strictly prohibited. No part of this publication may be transmitted, stored, or recorded in any form without permission from the publisher. Printed in Canada Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Ziolkoski, Deborah Lyn, 1968 Fun with composers. Teacher s guide, ages 3 6 / author, Deborah Lyn Ziolkoski ; illustrator, Jim Fee. Cover Page Design Eric Olson, www.gallereo.com Music Maps and Composer Images Jim Fee, www.jimfee.ca Editor Heidi Groschler Design Solo Corps, www.solocorps.com Voice Performance Corina Akeson, cakeson@telus.net Recording Engineer Jeff Tymoschuk, jeff@greenwiremusic.com DVD Jason Fredrickson, www.reelmemories.biz isbn 978-0-9780360-0-3 ismn 0-9001385-0-7 1. School music--instruction and study. 2. Music--Instruction and study-- Outlines, syllabi, etc. i. Title. mt10.z795 2006 372.87 044 c2006-901023-4 second printing: 2008

Download Permission The purchaser is permitted to print copies of this download for personal use only. Reproducible music maps and composer images may be printed and copied for classroom use only. Sharing of this document in any format, or the accompanying audio and video files, is not permitted under international copyright law. Individuals violating this agreement may be charged or fined.

Fun with Composers volume i A Simple, Fun Approach to Classical music Teacher s Guide Pre K Grade 3 by Deborah Ziolkoski

fun with composers The Marriage of Figaro (Figaro the Magical Chef) music: w.a. mozart; music map: d. ziolkoski copyright 2006 d. ziolkoski www.funwithcomposers.com permission to copy this page for classroom use only 4

pre k grade 3 The Marriage of Figaro (Figaro the Magical Chef) music: w.a. mozart; lyrics d. ziolkoski A Nom - a - nom - a - nom, nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom. Nom-a- nom-a- nom-a- nom-a - nom-a- nom-a- nom-a- nom-a - nom-a- nom-a- nom-a- nom-a - nom. B Stir it up, stir it up... C Come taste my soup, it is so good, it is the D best. Nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom - a - nom - nom - a - nom. (Pretend to hand out bowls of soup to customers on asterisked notes) * * Yum Yum * Yum Yum Yum Yum Come and grab your spoon and eat it. and eat it and eat it eat it up eat it up eat it up it's so good, it's so good, eat! Burp...Ahhhh 5

fun with composers The Marriage of Figaro (Figaro the Magical Chef) music: mozart Goal To familiarize students with the opening theme of Marriage of Figaro in three thirty-minute lessons. Students will sing, dance, and play along with the introductory section of the music. Related Concepts Experience contrasting sound and movement qualities (Presto, Legato, Accents, crescendo, dynamics, piano, forté, fortissimo, light and heavy sound qualities). Suggested Themes Health and nutrition, cooking, Thanksgiving harvest. Materials required cd, class-sized music map, non-pitched percussion instruments (if available), conductor s hat and wand (optional). Formation Scattered, seated on the floor. Suggested Props A big soup pot, a wooden spoon, a few spices brought from home, and a clear shaker with a little sparkling glitter (Chef Figaro s Magic Dust). Lesson One Objective Read students the story Figaro the Magical Chef. Suggested Teaching Process Read students the story Figaro the Magical Chef. *Refer to the music, cd or dvd so that you may add singing parts right into your storytelling. This makes the story much more entertaining! Figaro the Magical Chef In a small restaurant high up in the mountains, there lived an amazing chef named Figaro who was always creating new, healthy soup recipes. His recipes were not ordinary recipes, however. They were magical ones! If you ate one of his extraordinary bowls of soup, you would often grow very tall and strong. Sometimes, you would even get amazing powers that no one else had. These were always good powers, as he was a very good, kind chef. One day, while working on a new recipe, Chef Figaro added all sorts of very tasty and healthy garden vegetables along with some very strange spices and seasonings. Broccoli, carrots, red peppers, spinach, and yams were just a few of Chef Figaro s favourite vegetables that he always used. While he worked he sang, nom-a-nom-a-nom, nom-anom-a nom-a-nom-a-nom. (Sing Section A while pretending to move your hands very quickly, adding in all sorts of spices.) He worked incredibly quickly! He then sang, Stir it up! Stir it up! and while he stirred he smelled the delicious aroma of his soup! When he was finished, he was so proud of his new creation that he sang out, Come taste my soup! It is the best! It is so good! Nom-a-nom, nom-a-nom, nom-a-nom, nom-a-nom. So many people started to gather around to taste his new soup that Chef Figaro decided he had better make another batch! As he cooked, he sang, Nom-anom (Repeat song from the beginning.) Everyone was very anxious to try his soup. They all knew of the magical powers they could get from a little taste! Chef Figaro began handing out bowls of soup. People ate and ate as quickly as they could, for they believed that the more they ate, the stronger and more magical they would become. Some people even ate with two spoons! It turned into an eating frenzy! They sang, Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-doo and they ate, and ate, until something disgusting happened. (He burped!) Would you like to taste Chef Figaro s soup? Let s see if we can make some together. 6

pre k grade 3 Ask students if they would like to join you in Chef Figaro s kitchen. Together, pretend to open up his great spice cupboard where he stores all his best spices. What spices do you see? What spices do the children see? Are there any vegetables you could add that are very healthy? What are they? Remind the children that Chef Figaro was a very busy chef, and that he always did things at a very fast pace. Ask the children if they know what special word means fast in music? (Presto) Ask the children to listen as you sing through Section A using the syllables nom-a-nom-anom While doing so, pretend to get all types of spices, seasonings, and vegetables from your cupboards and add them into your big pot of make-believe soup right in front of you. Since the music is fast, do this in a fast, frenzied way. Ask the children to join you. Sing the section through with them, with everyone acting like crazy, magical chefs in a fluster of activity! Have the children listen as you sing Section B aloud, Stir it up! Stir it up! Pretend to stir while smelling the soup s aroma. Ask the class what they think might be happening here. Does this section sound as fast as the first? (No, slower.) Tell students the term for slow is lento. Does it sound choppy? How does it sound? (Smooth.) Let them know this section is legato, or very smooth. Ask students to try stirring their soup with you as you sing, Stir it up! Stir it up! together. Then try singing both sections together. Chef Figaro was so excited about his amazing tasting soup that he started to sing for joy using his forté voice! Have the students listen as you sing the next section to these words, Come taste my soup! It is so good! It is the best! Noma-nom-nom-a-nom-nom-a-nom-nom-a nom! While you are singing, raise both hands in the air, accentuating the pulse on the words Come, taste, soup, good, and best. Sing as if you are a crazy chef overly excited about his/her soup! On nom-a-nom add in a few extra spices so it tastes to perfection. Discuss what types of sounds those words were. Were they fast, slow, soft, loud? Perhaps a combination loud, heavy, accented sounds, followed by fast descending ones. On the noma-nom part that follows, students can rub their tummies as if anticipating that it will taste very yummy. Practice this together, and then review it from the top. Tell the children that you happened to have a tape recorder in your pocket when you were visiting Chef Figaro s restaurant and managed to tape the real music that just happened to be composed by Chef Figaro s favourite composer, Mozart. Ask students if they would like to hear the real music. Play the cd, asking the children to softly sing along with the music. Play it a second time, asking the children to stand up so they can move freely about the room when singing. Sing and move from the beginning, to the end of the second section C. (Play A B C A B C.) Before playing Section D, mime the chef handing out the bowls of soup, saying, Yum, when placing the bowl down. Move your arms from high to low just like the descending runs of the music (five times). See if the students can guess what you are doing. Explain to the students that Chef Figaro handed out bowls of soup to all his customers, because he wanted to share it with everyone! Ask students to try this with you, just singing the descending little runs on nonsense syllables (doo-doo-doo-doo ). Explain to the children that the customers got so excited that they started to eat as quickly as possible even using two spoons! It was a real eating frenzy! (Keep pretending to eat until the final chord of that section.) Ask the students to try this section with you, first handing out bowls like Chef Figaro, then pretending to eat the soup in a crazy, fast way. Try Section D with the music. Is this section loud or soft? (Loud) Ask the children if they remember what the special word for very loud is in music? (Fortissimo) What is the word for soft? (Piano) Does the music get louder and louder? Tell students we call this a crescendo. The very last exciting part seems to be fortissimo and presto fast! Review from the beginning. 7

fun with composers Lesson Two Objective To add in non-pitched percussion instruments to all sections of the Marriage of Figaro. Introduce, and conduct through, the music on a music map. Materials required Non-pitched percussion instruments such as maracas, triangles, and hand drums with mallets (if available). Class-sized music map, cd. Formation In a circle, seated on the floor. Suggested Teaching Process Review what has been learned up to this point. Ask the children if they remember who Chef Figaro s favourite composer is; then take a few moments to review a few highlights of Mozart s life. Together, discuss what happened in the four sections of Marriage of Figaro. Do the students remember the special words that helped describe Sections A, B, C, and D? (A: Presto; B: Legato; C: Forté-Accented; D: crescendo to ff-presto.) Review from the beginning, singing and moving with the cd accompaniment. Suggested Instrumentation If available, a few maracas, triangles, and hand drums may be used to accompany the music. Feel free to adapt, using whatever instruments may be at your disposal. Just remember that you need to match up the instruments with the sound qualities of each section. Place the instruments in the middle of the circle and play each one for the children. Then ask them which instrument best fits each of the sound qualities: presto (quick shakes of the maracas), legato (long, sustained sound of the triangle), and forté, accented/heavy sounds (playing hand drum with the mallet). Demonstrate how the instruments can be played with each part. Depending on how many instruments and students you have, place the corresponding number of students to instruments into three small groups to fit sections A, B, and C. (Section A: maracas, etc.) Do not worry about Section D at this point. Students who are not in an instrument group are the chefs. It works well when they are grouped in the middle of the circle with the other groups surrounding them. Before beginning, remind the students of their tasks, making certain they all understand their parts. For the students who are playing the hand drums on the accented Section C, they can stomp/march to the accents while playing their part, if they like. This will help reinforce the sound qualities. Play, sing, and dance from the beginning. You may like to just sing through it the first time and use the cd the second time. 8

pre k grade 3 On the descending runs of Section D, all instruments can play on accents Yum. For the finale of Section D, when everyone is double spooning in an eating frenzy, have all the instruments play along. This will also reinforce the fuller orchestra sound and the dynamic fortissimo. Take time to listen to that section before playing, and ask the children what they think they could do to create a fuller sound here. Perhaps they would like to move along to this part while they play. Let them create the movement for this special ending on their own. Introduce the music map Ask the children to take a seat on the floor in front of the class-sized music map. Have the children take out their conducting fingers, and ask them to conduct in the air as you conduct through the map. The children can sing along with you as together you conduct through the map. Demonstrate how the map works by just singing the first time through, and using the cd the second time through. When the children are really secure with how the map works, ask volunteers to come up and conduct for the class. Conductor s Top Hat and Wand Use a special black top hat and a special wand for the children to conduct with. This makes conducting very special and fun for everyone! 9

fun with composers Arts & Crafts Marriage of Figaro music: mozart Magical Shakers Required supplies: old greeting cards, permanent markers, film canisters or a variety of containers, rice or beans, glue 1. Cut out pictures from old greeting cards and trim them to the size of a 35- mm plastic film canister. 2. Glue the pictures on the outside of the canisters or decorate the canister with permanent markers. 3. Put either rice or beans into the canister and close the lid. Shake to the beat of the Marriage of Figaro and follow the music map. 10

pre k grade 3 copyright 2006 d. ziolkoski www.funwithcomposers.com permission to copy this page for classroom use only 11

fun with composers Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria, in 1756. The Mozart house was a very musical one. Wolfgang s father, Leopold Mozart, was a composer and a violinist. When Wolfgang s sister, Nannerl, was seven, she began lessons on the clavier (a small keyboard). Wolfgang s father let him listen to her lessons while he played, but always told him that he was too little to take lessons himself. One day, however, Mozart played one of his sister s pieces without ever having taken a single lesson! By the age of four he could play anything his sister played, and also compose music of his own. Wolfgang also became an excellent violinist. Without having taken even one lesson, he picked up the violin and played it like an expert. He was an amazing little boy. Wolfgang s father planned a tour with both his children. Wolfgang and his sister performed together, charming everyone in the land. They were even invited to play for the king and queen! Mozart was especially talented and charming. He had a great sense of humour, and loved making people laugh! One day, while giving a concert for the king, Mozart played so well that the king thought he was tricking him. The king didn t believe it was possible for such a young child to play so well. So, right before Mozart was about to play the clavier, the king pulled out a black cloth and placed it over the keyboard so that Mozart couldn t see the keys. Then he asked Mozart to play. Mozart just laughed, since it didn t make any difference to him whether the keys were covered or not. He started to play, and he played his piece perfectly, without missing a note! The king couldn t believe it! When Mozart grew older, people didn t seem to find him so cute anymore. They got used to him composing such amazing music, so many of them stopped going to his concerts, and he became quite poor. Mozart had great parties and bought many beautiful clothes, but he often forgot to save for important things! When he was just thirty-five years old, Mozart got very sick and died. There was no money for a funeral or a cross for his grave, but many years later the people of Vienna built a great monument in his memory. Today, Mozart is still one of the greatest musicians ever to have lived! People from all over the world listen to and love his music. 12