Showing posts with label Mixolydian tonality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mixolydian tonality. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Mrs. Potatohead activity for finding singing voice

 I'm sharing a few activities I haven't posted yet!  This one is a favorite of 1st graders and is excellent for including individual response to help them find singing voice. You can even include a guesser trying to figure out who sang one of the items to make a game out of it!
I've used it on informances in the past, including having student leaders singing the call part at the end. As the kids are still passing pieces of Mrs. Potatohead to someone else who is closing their eyes and moving with flow, after the Mrs. Potatohead song as shown below is done, I pair the song with the Mixolydian song "Tiptoe" from Experimental Songs and Chants without Words.

A clearer version of the notation can be found here.





Friday, July 21, 2017

Day in the Park: Mixolydian song and movement activity


A new Mixolydian song and movement activity!  

Sing the song on a neutral syllable as students walk to macrobeats, then microbeats.

Have students audiate the resting tone of the song.  Then have them breathe, jump, and sing the resting tone when they land (feel free to add some story imagery here related to what they're jumping on at the park!). 

Have the students do the walking activity again, this time giving a high 5 the person they're closest to at the end of each phrase (the second half note in m. 4 and m. 8). 

Then, during the last repetition, have the students sing the resting tone as they high-5 the person they're closest to at the ends of phrases.


In other days with the song, let the kids use their imaginations to create park related movements to do!  Perhaps they can pretend to walk a dog on microbeats, swing their arms as if they're on the swings on macrobeats, alternate beats with their hands in high space as if they're on the monkey bars, perform vocal exploration like they're going down the slide...sky's the limit!



Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Welcome song!

A hello song in Mixolydian for the beginning of the year!

Possible alternate lyrics based on what you need:

~If it's a class's first day of music, you could sing "Welcome, come follow me" instead of "Welcome, come move with me," to help them get to their spots on the circle.

~If your school is a Leader in Me school like mine, you could sing "Using 7 Habits every day" instead of "Making better music every day."

If you want to edit any of the lyrics, the Noteflight notation is here.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

7 Habits songs: Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, then to be Understood





Habit 5 melody notation is here.

Habit 5 arrangement with Orff ostinato and chords is here.

This one is a 2-part round...to help kids practice seeking first to understand, then to be understood. ;)  (Because they have to listen to the other part before coming in, and both parts have to listen to each other for it to sound beautiful.)

You can put the ostinato with the song vocally or with instruments, or even change the ostinato to include different chord tones.


Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Frozen outtakes: Mixolydian round!



"Spring Pageant" from Frozen's outtakes is a GREAT Mixolydian round for kids!  See the first minute of the video above.  In my 2nd grade classes this year, we used just the first stanza (ending at the first "Spring's good and winter's bad"). We also sang it in E major to fit the students' voices better than the original C major.


Here's what my students did with this song:


  • listened to the original recording, imagining the characters from Frozen singing it
  • created macrobeat movements as if we were different Frozen characters (your students will have zillions of ideas for this!)
  • used rhythm sticks on the beat pretending they were Frozen characters: make your rhythm stick Olaf plodding through the snow, Cristoff reining in the reindeer on the beat, Elsa creating snow....
  • sang "Brr" on the resting tone as an ostinato; the kids on the ostinato and me on the melody
  • sang "Ding-dong" on scale degrees 5-1 as an ostinato, as well as other tonic ostinati using the words "ding-dong" or "ding-ding-dong"
  • split the class in half, with half the class singing an ostinato and half the class singing the melody
  • sang the song in a round with them going first and me going second, then reverse
  • sang the song in a round, just the students without me (in 2 parts; for 2nd grade I was very impressed!!)
  • played ostinati on Orff instruments with the song
  • the students composed their own 4-beat ostinati on Orff instruments using tonic pitches




Hiding Eggs: Easter song and game!



Easter Game:

Teacher passes out plastic Easter eggs, one per child.  Students can hide them in one of 4 places:  in their lap, behind their back, in their hands, or in the bottom of their pant leg.  Teacher turns away from the class and sings the song as students hide their eggs (in my classes, we only used verse 1).  The teacher turns back toward the class when the song is over, and guesses where one student's egg is.  Then that student sings the resting tone of the song.

If the teacher gets it right, the teacher gets 1 point.
If the teacher gets it wrong, the class gets 1 point.
If the student uses their best singing voice for the resting tone, the class gets 1 point.
If anyone in the class is talking during the music, the teacher gets 1 point. ;)

Then the students hide their eggs again as the teacher turns away and sings the song.  The teacher guesses another student's egg's hiding place, and that student sings the resting tone. The game continues until either the teacher or the class get to 10 points! Whoever gets there first wins! 


Side note: Kindergarteners love this because they love tricking the teacher and beating the teacher in a game!  And as long as my students aren't talking, giving me points, the class pretty much always wins. :)