Tanbur Music Education Blogspot

TANBUR MUSIC EDUCATION LINKS Interactive Website Links for Primary and Secondary Music

Posts Tagged ‘Mozart’

Chance Music

Posted by David French on August 16, 2009

Jeff Hall’s recorded realization of  TERRY RILEY IN C  provides an excellent introduction to ‘chance’ or aleatoric music; the accompanying text explains the terminology with reference to MINIMALIST composers of the 20th Century, including Philip Glass and Terry Riley.

So you found the track and clicked play. Did you continue listening for the full 50 minutes and 10 seconds? I must confess that on my first visit to the site I pressed stop after only a minute or so. Perhaps it was the tug on my arm from my two year old boy asking to be taken to ’slide’. We needed to go, be involved and active!

Next day, and the two year old is out with mum. I’ve clicked play again. Now this time it’s different. I’m listening in minute two, and, yes.. that’s definitely an organ holding me in there. The music changes, and changes, and changes again. I’m still here in minute nine, the music slows, repeated sounds, single notes, bassoon, woodwind, repetitive, but changing, slowing, changing to strings…

It’s minute eleven.. twelve.. and I want to take part.. interact with the group, the recording. Something is tugging at me again, but this time it is different. I’m involved.. really listening. Seventeen minutes..

The word ‘interactive’ invites participation and, with this in mind, several interactive versions of CHANCE MUSIC are presented on the Tanbur website. Some of these are specially devised for the Internet, such as those by Robert White at SPNM PLAYGROUND.  Some inventions require you to participate as listener, others demand that you respond.  Tilt the three dimensional cube and thereby control and adjust according to Rob White’s rules of play.  

There is another category that uses sampled sounds on a website to imitate real instruments. What would Gamelan musicians from Bali make of websites that produce the sound of the Gender with the click of a mouse? The Internet computer cannot attempt to replace the ‘hands on’ physical experience of a real instrument played with mallets and having individual bamboo resonators for each bar, but we can interact and control a piece that follows very precise rules using authentic tunings and derived structures: PLAY1.   

Others are modern interactive presentations of historical models. Here are three of them, listed in chronological order: 

MINUET MIXER    An online version of dice games from the 18th century, pioneered by W.A. Mozart and others.

RANDOM ROUND composed 1912, Percy Grainger. As an online participant you will be the conductor, making decisions regarding timbre, the playing of melodies and counter melodies within defined sections of the piece.

MUSIC FOR PIECES OF WOOD composed 1973, Steve Reich.  Complex sounds and phase shifting are created from simple patterns. See LUNANOVA for detailed sound samples and score analysis.

32 minutes.. I hear a new section. . organ.. imitation.. new ideas.. changing. Can you find other categories of chance music on Tanbur Music Education Links, or elsewhere on the Internet? Did you listen for 50 minutes and 10 seconds? Was this a real orchestra with a conductor? Does ’chance art’ exist?

Terry Riley IN C  score download.

Posted in New Ideas, interactive, music, music education, orchestra, world music | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Coldplay and Mozart

Posted by David French on January 13, 2009

Five new pages have been added this month. I hope you all have some fun testing them out. If you’d like to add some ideas or quiz suggestions, simply add a comment here.

MIX MATCH MOZART 1

Try this easy level Mozart Trail quiz challenge

featuring a musical extract from Kids Mozart and Classics for Kids. 

 

MIX MATCH MOZART 2

Follow the Mozart Trail links on Listen 2, then try this quiz!

 

COLDPLAY: CLOCKS

Listen and perform the song that is famous for its repeating piano riff.

 

MOZART’S PIANO SONATA IN C (K.545)

The Mozart Trail gets longer!!

 

MOZART’S OPERA ‘DON GIOVANNI’

Royal Opera House video.

Posted in New Ideas, interactive, music, music education, singing | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Humming along to Mozart

Posted by David French on December 10, 2008

Jennifer Green Mozart, MD – Music for the Mind and Body writes about the power of music to heal the critically ill.  Music teachers play Mozart to their students for many reasons and occcasionally I’ll use some with mine.  I know they love the music and there may even be the faint buzz of humming along.

Watch out for an even longer MOZART TRAIL with new links coming in January 2009.

Posted in music, music education, world music | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Minuet Mixer: Aleatoric and Interactive Music

Posted by David French on November 29, 2008

The Mozart trail gets longer with aleatoric music from the 18th Century!!
MINUET MIXER
With music by Mozart, Kirnberger and Francesco Ricci, New York Philharmonic Kidzone have created this interactive version of dice games from the 18th century.

Cool!!

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Mozart trail

Posted by David French on August 2, 2008

Post updated June 2009.

 

 Have your footprints followed the ‘Mozart trail’?

 

 

The Mozart trail starts with some nice Kid’s Mozart links that are suitable for Primary School children. Further resources are available from the Kid’s Mozart home page

 

Teachers intending to use the links in class will need to check that the school’s Internet filter allows the links. My school’s ‘websense’ filter is a ‘nonsense’ because Kids Mozart and the following Creative Kids Central link to Rimsky-Korsakov’s ‘Scheherezade’ are blocked on the ‘games’ filter. If you find the same problem, don’t despair!! The Local Education Authority or the filter company provider should be able to unblock educational links on request.

 

 

The ‘Secondary’ Mozart trail features ‘Eine Kleine Nachtmusik’ and a fun listening quiz from the BBC. 2009 additions include Mix Match Mozart quizzes. The trail also features an interactive score of Piano Sonata in C (K.545) and ends with the entire opera ‘Don Giovanni’.

 

Do you need some more Mozart links? Try the excellent listening activites available from Classics for Kids – Mozart  with pdf files for download. Anyone with further activity ideas for the ‘Mozart trail’ please add your comments here or submit a link   

 

Posted in New Ideas, music, music education | Tagged: , , , , | 3 Comments »