General Music - Thibeault
General Music - Thibeault
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DOI: 10.1177/1048371309359614
2010 23: 27 originally published online 3 February 2010 General Music Today
Matthew D. Thibeault
General Music as a Cure for the High-Stakes Concert
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General Music Today
23(3) 27 35
2010 MENC: The National
Association for Music Education
DOI: 10.1177/1048371309359614
http://gmt.sagepub.com
General Music as a Cure for the
High-Stakes Concert
Matthew D. Thibeault
1
Abstract
The author argues that concerts create pressures on the music curriculum similar to those high-stakes tests generate
on the general curriculum. Three similarities are presented and discussed using the example of a concert the author
organized: first, teaching to the test and the narrowing of curricular goals; second, evaluation by a single source of
evidence; and, finally, absence of student voice and choice. A critical difference between concerts and high-stakes tests,
however, is that music teachers design their concerts. The last half of the article presents ideas to take advantage of this
difference in order to confront the commonly found pressures. The ideas focus learning around ensemble experiences
through general music practices. Many of the examples take advantage of technology and multimedia to afford students
opportunities to work with repertoire in new ways.
Keywords
high-stakes tests, concerts, curriculum, technology, music education
The kindergarten and first-grade students voices were
joyously in tune as they enthusiastically sang and danced
through a concert that included a Hebrew round, a Shaker
hymn, a Spanish Puerto Rican carol, and an Orff arrange-
ment. There were solos, selections featuring a single class,
and others featuring all students, as well as dances, ges-
tures, and the playing of percussion instruments. Parents
even joined in for the final sing-along. Following the
standing ovation, the music teacher received several bou-
quets of flowers, and the concert titled Peace Around the
World was considered a success.
The next few days saw the arrival of nearly a dozen
letters from parents and the school superintendent. All
agreed the concert was a crowning educational achieve-
ment to be celebrated and a high point for the schools
music program. However, one person considered the con-
cert to be a low point in these students music education.
That person was me, and I was their music teacher.
Common sense holds that the quality of a music program
is audible: Good concerts signify good music education
programs, and vice versa. If we attend a concert by the
San Francisco Symphony, our ears can tell they are world-
class musicians, and our ears have the same power of
discernment when listening to a local music program.
There is certainly some truth to the notion that a perfor-
mance reveals much about the musicians, but the links
between concerts and education are often tenuous. Alter-
nately, it may be the case that an unintended consequence
of good concerts is the neglect of many music education
goals, as concerts can easily crowd out the aims and goals
for the class. Not only does a good concert not guarantee
good music education, but also it may be a source of
problems.
This article explores some often unexamined aspects
of a performance-based curriculum from the standpoint
of the general music practitioner. I begin by invoking
high-stakes tests, which I argue have many of the same
problems inherent in music programs that focus on
concerts. I then discuss practices and projects that have
emerged from partnerships with ensembles over the past
few years at the University of Illinois. These partnerships
aim to synthesize general music programs with ensemble
programs and may serve as models for general practitio-
ners and ensemble directors.
Are Concerts Music Educations
High-Stakes Tests?
The notion that a concert shares features with high-stakes
tests on the surface may appear far fetched. When we
think of high-stakes tests, most of us imagine students
sitting at individual desks, hunched over their bubble-in
1
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois
Corresponding Author:
Matthew D. Thibeault, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
School of Music, 1114 W. Nevada Street, Urbana, IL 61801
E-mail: mdthib@illinois.edu
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28 General Music Today 23(3)
sheet with a #2 pencil nervously clutched in hand and
dreams of a top-tier college on the line. By contrast,
concerts conjure images of celebration, unforgettable
aesthetic moments, and the cooperation and harmony that
make for transformative experiences.
Beneath surface differences, however, many similarities
exist. I present three commonalities between concerts
and high-stakes tests: first, teaching to the test and the
narrowing of curricular goals; second, evaluation by a
single source of evidence; and, finally, absence of stu-
dent voice and choice. Not all concerts share these
commonalities, but many do, and invoking high-stakes
tests allows for a critical appraisal of some commonly
overlooked problems. I freely admit that Peace Around
the World had all four problems.
Each of the three aspects I present is problematic
because it limits what is offered to students as a music
education. Each one makes it less likely that students will
have the kind of music education toward which the pro-
fession aspires, from the National Standards (MENC,
1994), to calls for a reconceptualization of the curriculum
(Hanley & Montgomery, 2005; Regelski & Gates, 2009),
to the series offering approaches to teach music through
performance (Blocher, 1996).
Peace Around the World
as a High-Stakes Test
Peace Around the World was meant to be a wonderful
celebratory concert wrapping up my students first semes-
ter. From the beginning of the school year until early
November the music program and curriculum were similar
to many around the country: an active program that built
on my undergraduate degree as well as certification and
experiences in Orff-Schulwerk, Kodly, and Dalcroze
Eurhythmics approaches and methodologies. Students
learned many songs and games that were structured and
sequenced to promote a deeper understanding of basic
musical concepts and ideas. The curriculum was also rich
in opportunities for play, and students looked forward to
music class. I delighted in seeing the varied growth of my
students, sometimes precocious and other times needing
repetition and assistance to get an idea. The learning was
rich and the journey pleasant.
With the approach of the mid-December concert, all
richness and exploration went out the window. I reviewed
the materials we had learned so far and pulled out a theme:
peace. Of course, many other wonderful songs around
that theme immediately came to mind as I imagined that
first public encounter between my music program and the
community. Soon, the list was long and the goal distant,
and there was so much to accomplish in such a short
time! Almost immediately, playful music making ceased
in my classroom. Structure and sequence were replaced
with constant drilling. Put simply, my classroom became
a sweatshop as I simplistically rehearsed challenging
songs over and over.
For example, I wanted my first grade students to sing
Dona Nobis Pacem as a round in Latin. Usually when
I presented a round, I taught the song in unison with lots
of time to explore the text, talk about the meaning, and
explore shapes or motives through movement. Only
much later would I have the students sing in canon, and
then usually with an approach that began with large
groups before working toward independence and inter-
dependence. There was no time for this now, though.
I taught the song in unison and immediately started them
singing as a round. It quickly became apparent this was
simply too hard, so I decided to enlist the only two stu-
dents who could sing in canon as conductors, standing in
front of each group split on the stage. The students ended
up performing a song in a way that sounded pleasing but
without any understandingI made them fake a round.
Charles Leonhard (1999) would have diagnosed me as
having caught the elitist virus:
An attitude that leads conductors to concentrate
mainly on difficult music or music contests. This
virus is present in too many departments and schools
of music, and it contributes to the development
of students who learn only to perform and rarely
develop the broad understanding of music that con-
stitutes music literacy. (p. 41)
The tune trumped the teaching as I compromised the
quality music education I wanted to cultivate to promote
a musical piece that was too challenging and introduced
too quickly. I wanted us to look good on the high-stakes
test of the students, the program, and myself. Without
meaning to, I had fallen into three negative similarities
between a high-stakes test and my curriculum.
Similarity 1: Teaching to the Test
and Narrowing the Curriculum
There is widespread agreement that tests can function to
limit what is taught and that this has a negative impact
on student learning in the classroom (Giordano, 2005;
Jones, Jones, & Hargrove, 2003; Kohn, 2000; Popham,
1999; Smith, 1991). Because tests cannot measure every-
thing we believe important, teaching to the test leaves
out much of value and often includes things that are
trivial simply because they are easy to measure. In the
words of Elliot Eisner (2002), Not everything that
matters can be measured, and not everything that is
measured matters (p. 178).
What does teaching to the concert look like, and what
are its implications? Just as with teaching to the test, as
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Thibeault 29
I began to prepare my concert I focused on those things
that would be publicly exhibited. Although I would nor-
mally have students explore the meaning of lyrics, now
I focused solely on their memorization. Although before
I believed it to be critical for students to understand a
musical culture, a composer, or a historical period in
some way, the pressure of the concert ended these explo-
rations. There wasnt time to teach everything, so only
those things that would end up on stage mattered.
Related to the idea of teaching to the test is the
narrowing that can occur when concerts function like high-
stakes tests. With my own concert approaching, I neglected
or jettisoned activities that would normally have a place
in the classroom. If it wouldnt be on the stage, it wasnt
in the classroom. When teaching to the test, I focused only
on the performance aspect of the pieces that I taught.
The curriculum also narrowed by excluding whole kinds
of activities.
This problem has been identified for decades, perhaps
most famously in the MEJ article Is the Curriculum the
Scoreor More? (Mercer, 1972). The author found
himself unable to continue an interview-based study about
the curriculum because so many band directors viewed
rehearsal techniques or the score as the curriculum.
Similarity 2: Evaluation by a Single
Source of Evidence
As Deborah Meier (2000) writes, Important decisions
regarding kids and teachers should always be based on
multiple sources of evidence that seem appropriate and
credible to those most concerned (p. 17). By contrast,
when students take a high-stakes test, they put their brains
on the line for a single moment that is inevitably used to
draw pronouncements about past and future. The students
daily life and achievements are summed up in a single
moment, one that often does not resemble daily life and
that is often viewed as an objective, unbiased measure
despite much evidence to the contrary (McDermott &
Hall, 2007).
This description parallels much of what happens in a
concert. My students were judged by the community
based on how they sounded at a single event, the concert.
The limited perspective leads to two problems. First, in
the test and the concert, problems come from the narrow-
ness of the instrument as well as the problems arising
from normal variations in the rhythms of life. At the con-
cert, students having a bad day, or those who needed a
few more minutes of rehearsal, or who were very shy,
might have an embarrassing moment or negative experi-
ence. Unlike a high-stakes test, this might not follow the
student in the same way or have the same kind of nega-
tive consequences. However, there is little doubt that
many an embarrassing moment follows a performer and
shades his or her experiences, confidence, and disposi-
tion toward music.
A second, unintended consequence of a single measure
concerns the disposable nature of the learning. Todays
students routinely cram for tests and just as quickly forget
what was learned (Pope, 2001). The same can happen at
a concert. Certainly, the repertoire is often shelved after
the concert, usually collected right at the concert. Con-
tinuing to perform a piece after the concert is beyond
uncommon. These practices reveal an inherent problem:
Tests intend to unobtrusively measure ongoing learning,
but they often come to drive the process so that learning
is tailored to the test as a moment in time to be reached
and then abandoned.
Similarity 3: Absence of Student
Voice and Choice
Another hallmark of high-stakes tests is the absence of
voice and choice for students. The external and standard-
ized nature most commonly found in high-stakes tests
prohibits students and teachers from having much input
with regard to how they will be measured.
Similarly, most students in music programs participate
in the preparation of concerts where their own opinions
and desires tend to play second fiddle to the directors
decisions. My own students had no say in the music we
performed, which I rationalized by imagining that they
werent in a position to know what repertoire could suitably
be presented. I was even unwilling to let them choose
among the volume of songs we had already learned in music
class that year. As Patricia OToole (2005) notes, often
those who sing in choir dont have a voice in the learning.
By contrast, there is increasing recognition of the value
and benefit behind pedagogy that honors student voice
and choice. Such media-aware approaches as collegial
pedagogy make room for the interests and desires of
students (Chavez & Soep, 2005).
Despite my aspirations, Peace Around the World
swallowed me whole, completely transforming my ideas
and aspirations. I changed my teaching in a way that I did
not immediately understand; only on reflection would
I see how much I had sacrificed my more holistic approach.
My own thinking at the time was that I went into concert
mode, preparing in a way that felt natural given my own
experiences in performing groups.
Toward a Curriculum Beyond the Score
To move beyond the trap of the high-stakes concert, we
need not only good ideas but also a better understanding
of the problem. Part of the problem is the existence of a
false dichotomy that forces us to choose between bad
options: make music with an ensemble or learn about
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30 General Music Today 23(3)
music in a general music class, be an ensemble director
or be a general music teacher, and so on. We need a way
to move forward so that students and teachers can con-
struct music education where music making and music
learning go hand in hand.
John Dewey (1901/1976) confronted a similar bad
choice when discussing the elementary school in his book
The Educational Situation. Dewey first laid out the typical
choice between traditional and progressive education.
Instead of arguing for one over the other, Dewey charac-
teristically argued for a larger vantage point from which
both could be incorporated and where both sides, often
seen as oppositional and in conflict, could instead
reinforce each other. In his analysis, The conflict, the
confusion, the compromise, is not intrinsically between
the older group of studies and the newer, but between the
external conditions in which the former were realized, and
the aims and standards represented by the newer (p. 267).
Applying this analysis to the present problem, the conflict
and confusion that warped my curriculum around Peace
Around the World was not an intrinsic conflict between
performing and general music learning but between the
concert conception and newer approaches to music educa-
tion. What we need is a richer conception of the concert.
This analysis has the attraction of pointing a way
forward that enlarges our definition of performance with-
out abandoning those things considered at the core of the
music education tradition. Instead of choosing between
concerts and the classroom, we have an opportunity to
enlarge the concert to include other kinds of learning.
Although it will likely be the case that concerts will retain
some similarity to high-stakes tests, they can be rede-
signed by the teacher or community to reflect the kinds of
learning most valued.
This broader vision of a concert was something that
naturally emerged in my teaching over the years that
followed Peace Around the World. I began to have stu-
dents occasionally conduct pieces and also began to
include more student compositions. Instead of thinking
about what pieces should be performed, I began to
consider which aspects of the curriculum were most
meaningful and then considered how these might be dis-
played. Some of the students written work could be
included in the concert program, and other aspects of the
curriculum could be displayed via the school Web page.
Our concerts began to feature narrated demonstrations of
classroom exercises and games, often inviting audience
members to participate. In this way, the concert became
an opportunity to showcase facets of the music program
in ways that remained entertaining while allowing the
class to prepare for the concert without disrupting the
curriculum. If the concert were to remain a high-stakes
test, it would have been reengineered to be one that
authentically represented the kinds of achievements
deemed valuable.
These hopes for integrating a richer curriculum with
performances surrounding performances stayed with me
as I moved into the university as a professor. For the past
3 years, the students in my undergraduate music education
technology course have been working on ways to enrich
ensemble experiences, using technology to develop expe-
riences similar to those found in general music classes,
hoping to address the situation outlined by Dewey, and
using much of the project method outlined by his student
William Kilpatrick (1918). Each semester, we select a
musical work in the public domain, which allows us to
create items and projects without having to seek permis-
sion from a copyright holder and to fully own what we
create (Boyle, 2008). The works have included Invinci-
ble Eagle by Sousa, Symphony No. 5 in E Minor by
Tchaikovsky, Pictures at an Exhibition by Mussorgsky,
and Eine Kleine Nachtmusik by Mozart.
Working in groups, students propose and then carry
out a project that can be used by students and teachers to
deepen and extend learning in a way that complements
traditional performance preparation. The projects, units,
and modules are then posted to Web sites devoted to each
project, so that ensemble members and the general public
can continue to use the materials.
Each of the following ideas could be used alone or in
combination with others. All of them could be shared as
part of a performance, through description in the program,
through links to student work online, or in presentation
to the audience via a digital projector. To simplify, I have
grouped them into three categories: learning about the
work, learning the work, and sharing the work.
Learning About the Work
The following projects afford opportunities to learn about
a work being prepared for performance while giving
students opportunities to create their own knowledge.
Figure 1 gathers the variety of activities presented and
depicts multiple opportunities for students, teachers,
and the community to deepen experiences with works
presented in concert.
Give Students the Score
One of the simplest and most profound projects is simply
providing a digital copy of the score to each student.
Because we work with music in the public domain, every
student can have a copy of the parts and score. Normally,
of course, the cost of purchasing multiple copies of the
score prohibits this practice, but students take great plea-
sure in having a score for their own use and study. When
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Thibeault 31
using notation software such as Sibelius or Finale, the
score can also be output in multiple formats that might
offer different learning opportunities: a pocket score, a
score at pitch instead of transposed, a piano reduction,
and so on. In my class, students each take a section of the
larger work, assembling a major score from a jigsaw of
individual efforts.
Create Visualizations of the Work
In addition to looking at the score, alternative visual-
izations of the work can afford compelling learning
opportunities. In our course, we use software such as the
Music Animation Machine or Logic to create piano roll
scores via MIDI. These scores make many things visible
that are difficult to see when using standard notation.
Alternate visualizations such as an amplitude display or
spectrograph of a recording also contain information
that can allow a student to better understand the piece as
a whole.
In our class, we create visualizations that can be printed
out as a scroll and hung on a wall. They are also laminated
so that students can mark (with dry erase markers) musical
aspects they notice and understand directly on the scroll
and so that those observations can be publicly shared.
Create an Audio Guide to the Work
Although a visualization allows students multiple ways
to flexibly think about a piece, other students in my class
have been interested in helping students to come to a
canonic understanding or interpretation of the piece, such
as sharing ideas regarding common understandings of
form. As Alan Britton (1998) notes, Remember, we dont
All of the projects mentioned in this article have been created
by students who have decided to make them freely
available. To access them for inspiration, or simply to get
a copy to use in your class, first visit the page dedicated
to this article:
https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/mdthib/www/GMT/
For longevitys sake and redundancy, most of these have
also been posted to the Internet Archive:
http://www.archive.org/details/ExamplesOfCreative-
MusicProjectsToComplementAConcert
You can also directly visit the sites dedicated to each
semesters project:
Tchaikovsky (spring 2008): http://digitaltchaik.pbworks.
com/
Sousa (fall 2008): http://sousaie.ning.com/
Dewey project (fall 2008): http://www.archive.org/
details/MyPedagogicCreed
Mussorgsky (spring 2009): http://mussorgskypictures.
ning.com/
Mozart (fall 2009): http://mozarteinekleine.ning.com/
In addition, readers may enjoy a project by Jenina Kenessey
entirely devoted to Klezmer music:
Klezmilieu (summer 2009): http://klezmilieu.ning.com/
As the web is ephemeral by nature, the author welcomes
email for updated links and information about new
projects.
Figure 1. Four aligned visualizations depicting Michael Praetoriuss Viva la Musica: standard music notation, the round as sung in
three parts, a three-voice visualization with each part colored, and a MIDI piano roll with pitches colored by solfege function.
Students receive a paper copy for exploration and analysis.
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32 General Music Today 23(3)
teach a Beethoven sonata in order that our students learn
what sonata form is. We teach something about sonata
form in order that our students may more quickly come to
know a Beethoven sonata (p. 132).
One group of students learned about the march form
and applied the traditional understanding of the strains
and trios of Sousas Invincible Eagle. Using Audacity,
they recorded a description of the form, edited together
with samples of the music from our own synthesized
recording. In the final audio guide they offered a seam-
less explanation of the form that takes the listener on a
guided tour.
Interview Others About the Work
One of the great pleasures for my students is asking
experienced musicians about the pieces they are learning.
With the rise of powerful video editing software, along
with inexpensive video cameras, it has become easy for
students to gather the knowledge of others and bring this
back for the benefit of the class.
With the Sousa project, students interviewed Dr. Joseph
Manfredo, assistant professor of music education at the
University of Illinois, collecting his views on topics such
as what he wished all high school students knew about
Sousa. Other students interviewed Scott Schwartz, director
of the Sousa Archives and Center for American Music, for
a much richer sense of the context, Sousas working habits,
and other fascinating ideas. With the Mozart project, stu-
dents interviewed string faculty, conductors, and other
students about their relationship with the piece over time,
their memories of important performances, and why they
think this work has remained so important for so long.
These were edited and shared with the class.
Learning the Work
Although all music educators likely agree that experi-
ences with the work can be enhanced by learning more
about the work, many of my students have been interested
to explore richer ways to help students learn to perform
the work and to encourage reflection while learning.
Figure 2. From a capella arrangements to video game levels and visualizations, tomorrows concerts can showcase learning
in expansive ways.
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Thibeault 33
Create and Share Melody Books
Melody books were created for the Mozart and Tchaikovsky
projects to make sure that the best melodies of each piece
were available to every performer in the ensemble. For
example, my students and I share the belief that every
musician involved in playing Tchaikovskys Fifth Sym-
phony should have an opportunity to play the beautiful
horn solo that opens the second movement.
To create a melody book, we cut and pasted all of the
interesting melodies from our Sibelius file into a new
music notation document, keeping track of each melodys
location and which instrument originally played it. We
then used software to transpose the parts. When a melody
was outside the playable range for a different instrument,
the students had a conversation with players of that
instrument to find out how they would modify the
melody. The final melody books were converted to PDF,
posted online, and then e-mailed to the performers and
the ensemble.
Recording and Sharing Rehearsals
Just as giving students a copy of the score provides a
sense of the big picture, recording a rehearsal allows stu-
dents an opportunity to hear the music they are learning
in a very different manner than during their music making
in a rehearsal. These recordings, collected over months,
provide performers an idea of how far they have come
and how much they have learned.
For the Tchaikovsky project, we recorded rehearsals
and then posted MP3 versions to be shared with the per-
formers. Louis Bergonzi, the conductor of the University
Philharmonia, gave his section leaders homework assign-
ments to listen to the rehearsal and come up with comments
for improvements each section could make.
Remixing the Rehearsal
For my own students, the opportunity to make new
music by remixing the rehearsals we recorded was irre-
sistible. To help structure the assignment, I pulled out
several 1-second clips and gave them to students.
Choosing only one of the fragments, each student cre-
ated an original musique concrte piece using Audacitys
built-in audio manipulation effects. The resultant com-
positions were highly successful and deeply satisfying,
with added pleasure in knowing that the new music
directly derived from rehearsals of these classic works.
These remixes allow students in an ensemble to create
and collage as befits the genre of the remix, which is an
increasingly important creative technique across all the
arts (Lessig, 2008).
Using Video to Capture the Learning Experience
In addition to using video for interviews, students also cap-
tured and chronicled the learning in the technology class
and in the ensembles. One student, taking a university
course called Writing With Video, submitted a final project
for that class that represented the learning experiences sur-
rounding the performance of the Tchaikovsky symphony
and our digital projects. He interviewed the horn player
about getting to play the solo she had learned as an excerpt
for years. He talked to the section leader and concert mis-
tress for their viewpoints on playing the piece, and he also
spoke with students in the technology class about their
own work on the project. The resultant video was posted
to YouTube and to the Tchaikovsky project Web site, and
a link to this Web site was included in the program when
the Philharmonia Orchestra performed the symphony.
Sharing the Work
It would be unfortunate if the enriching experiences that
students enjoyed were not extended to the audience. The
students in my technology class have employed many
approaches to help ensembles share their work with audi-
ences by enhancing their understanding and preserving
the performance.
Create and Share Program Notes
For all the projects my class has pursued, we have made
an effort to gather our own knowledge and the knowl-
edge of others in the classic form of a program note to be
shared digitally and in performance. This project allows
students to venture into the world of digital information
and our library to create an essay that helps the audience
experience the piece.
I also require students to read exemplary authors of
program notes and musical essays ranging from George
Bernard Shaw to Michael Steinberg. Many orchestras
routinely post their program notes during the concert
season, so multiple examples from around the world are
often easy to find. My students have also often elected to
publish their own program note.
Remix the Score
All of my students remix a rehearsal in our musique con-
crte project, but some of the students also decide to share
the work in a new way by creating something entirely
new. These derivative works take the original melodic or
harmonic material and use it to create a new work, as
when Jerome Kern used Tchaikovskys horn solo to derive
the jazz song Moon Love.
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34 General Music Today 23(3)
My students have produced a multitude of derivative
works over the past 3 years. These range from creating a
jazz lead sheet, to a cappella arrangements, to turning an
orchestral score into a piece for piccolo and guitar. In every
instance, interesting new musical material has arisen
alongside a new understanding of the original material.
These student creations, often short, can be shared before
a performance or posted online for the audience to enjoy
after the concert. They also often create space for informal,
peer-directed learning and pedagogy (Green, 2002). Some-
times the compositions stray far from the source and other
times resemble the fan fiction, similar to students who
write new works using the characters from books such as
the Harry Potter series (Jenkins, 2006).
Hold a Digital Dress Rehearsal
Beginning last spring, my students reached out to preser-
vice elementary classroom teachers at the University of
Illinois, inviting them to attend a dress rehearsal where
digital technology aimed to assist in the understanding of
the piece. Starting with our Pictures at an Exhibition
project, students were invited to the dress rehearsal and
encouraged to bring their laptop. At the dress rehearsal, they
had an opportunity to log in to a chat room, where the assis-
tant conductor described the form as the work unfolded. All
members of the audience could ask questions, make com-
ments, or otherwise expand their thinking while listening.
In addition, a student created a PowerPoint presenta-
tion on each of the movements of Pictures. The slides
presented the pictures for a given movement when known,
presented program notes, and generally served to assist in
the listening experience through visual media. The attendees
were invited to return for the concert, where they could
experience the concert again.
Share the Performance
Because we worked with pieces that were in the public
domain, we did not need to secure permission from
anyone but the performers when deciding to post a per-
formance (Althouse, 1997). Often, the ability to share a
concert is hampered primarily by copyright rather than
cost or technical difficulties (Lessig, 2004). Having
cleared the copyright hurdle and with professional tools in
the hands of students and teachers alike, the performance
can live on through recordings made available to the per-
formers, the public, other students, and anyone else who
might benefit from or enjoy our musical offerings.
Tomorrows Concerts
I have outlined ways that teachers and students can
expand the concert conception and the kinds of learning
that can accompany concert preparation. Using approaches
that foster active and constructive learning about the
work, learning to play the work, and sharing the work
learned, a concert can display the rich kinds of learn-
ing called for in contemporary music education. These
approaches might also play a role in practitioner responses
to current criticisms of ensemble programs, including
attention focused on problems with band programs
(Allsup & Benedict, 2008), opening up more democratic
approaches to music education (Woodford, 2005), and
counterbalancing the sense the music education may be
at a tipping point (Kratus, 2007).
The analogy I make between concerts and high-stakes
tests brings attention to some of the common problems
that result when students and teachers let performing get
the best of them, potentially resulting in teaching to the
concert, focusing the assessment too much on the single
measure of the concert, and neglecting student voice and
choice in the learning process. The local control that
teachers can exercise over how a concert can look and
sound gives much room for hope that a larger conception
can be advanced.
My work and the work of my students heavily draw on
technology, which should be seen as an opportunity and a
positive development. Todays students belong to the
generation that often referred to as being born digital
(Palfrey & Gasser, 2008), and finding ways to connect
contemporary means of creating and experiencing music
and media with traditional approaches to performance
can keep music learning relevant and exciting without
compromising core values.
Tomorrows concerts can keep the best of yesterdays
concerts: the connection, the communion, the unique
musical moment, and the community. But they can also
make room for more: digital works that bring the class-
room to the stage, sharing and displays of nonperformance
learning, and new works created by students derived
from rehearsals and the score. Not only can they showcase
wonderful works through performance, but they can also
open a window on the learning about the piece and share
moments from along the way when performers took time
to work with the piece in rich ways. It is a pleasure to
be making music with young people at such a rich moment
in our professions history.
Acknowledgments
The author wishes to acknowledge the anonymous reviewers
from General Music Today for their helpful suggestions as
well as Allen R. Legutki and Channing A. Paluck for extensive
written comments on several drafts.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author declared no potential conflicts of interests with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
at Bobst Library, New York University on July 19, 2010 gmt.sagepub.com Downloaded from
Thibeault 35
Funding
The author received no financial support for the research and/or
authorship of this article.
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Bio
Matthew D. Thibeault is an assistant professor at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches courses in gen-
eral music, music education technology, and research methods.
at Bobst Library, New York University on July 19, 2010 gmt.sagepub.com Downloaded from