TMPB Assignment
TMPB Assignment
Synopsis of:
Teaching Music Through Performance in Band Volume Three
Chapter One - Making Connections by Larry R. Blocher
What do I want my students to know and be able to do as result of their time in band
with me?
Introduction
o Making connections between all of the facets of a well-rounded education
brings deeper meaning to what we are learning.
o No part of music is of itself every part of making music is connected.
o Having the ability to transfer information from one musical concept to the next
equates to true understanding of music making.
Concepts
o Teaching concepts in a logical sequence allows us to add new ideas to the
initially learned concept.
o The concept is reading music the sub-concepts are everything students learn
that relate to reading music.
o Taught in a sequential way, students can make sense of the information being
delivered based on their understanding of what they have previously been
taught.
Silence is equally as important as sound when it comes to our canvas for musical
expression.
The amount of silence necessary is difficult to measure as we become impatient
waiting for the next musical entry.
Training the ensemble to think with timed thinking with the visual of a ruler makes
connections as implied in chapter one.
Teaching the Up or And of a beat is extremely important in terms of learning to play
consistently in time. Inconsistencies in time can occur with students who use the foot
tap method when learning to play in time! The size of a students shoe affects when
the up beat happens causing differences in how and when students are feeling the up
beats meaning that students are feeling time with slight differences.
Artistic considerations of the conductor come from making decisions on the length of
notes and size of space within time.
The beginning of silence (as opposed to the end of the note) is essential when
teaching phrasing and musicianship. This allows students to direct the mind to focus
on the horizontal flow of sound moving to the right side (end) of a notes duration.
This mindset keeps music moving forward.
Instead of using the word release, Lisk gives ideas for how to use the phrase how
silence begins to create a gentle, artistic response to ending the note.
Rests are implied and felt in tempo, but not counted by the beat number.
Lisk is promoting the teaching of natural characteristics of musical sounds (decaying of
notes) through experience and practice.
Concludes with the statement that we are responsible for students becoming active
participants and decision makers in their pursuit for musical excellence
Introduction
o Three ingredients lead to ones success in any work: intelligence, knowledge of
subject matter and personality. 93% of a persons success rate is attributed to
having a dynamic personality, while only 7% is given to both intelligence and
knowledge.
Concert components
o The audience set expectations of the conductor to have the students ready for
performance
o
o
Challenge students
Listen to students
Act as mentors
Practice humility
Chapter Four Teaching Music with an Emphasis on Form and Structure by Richard Miles
The adult life of every student is enriched by the skills, knowledge, and habits
acquired in the study of music.
Introduction
o The structural organization of music is referred to as the form or design of a
piece of music.
Achievement standards exist and it is our job as academics to make sure that
we are teaching to the standards through the performance of music in band.
Outline the length of the work and any additional elements to the
form.
Tempo determined
o
o
o
o
o
There are many different ways to map the different forms of music. This
chapter illustrates many options!
There can also be room to make interpretative decisions about form.
Main sections are labeled using capital letters of the alphabet over large
umbrellas of sections, and lower case letters are used to label inner parts
within the main form.
Introductions, Codas, and transitions can be added before, in-between and
after the main form of the piece.
Other musical elements to add onto the map of your piece of music include
Melody
Bass line & inner parts
Harmony
Style
Orchestration
Texture
Dynamics
Instrumentation
Key
Mode
Chapter Five Fervor, Focus, Flow and Feeling: Making an Emotional Connection by Eugene
Migliaro Corporon
Music is the embodiment and expression of our humanity in sound.
Ultimately, our goal should be to improve the quality of the human experience by
developing lives filled with feeling and purpose through performance in band.
o
o
o
o
o
o
Great musicing can happen any time and anywhere in schools, students
must feel a sense of FERVOR from the teacher! (a great passion and feeling of
being consumed while making music)
Our job is convince the performers/students that we deeply believe in all
aspects of the interaction:
The composer,
The music,
The musicians,
Corporon combines these two great philosophies and creates an outline to adopt the
ideas and use in our band classrooms in order to make emotional connections daily.
To solve a single problem, you must train your attention and focus to be on
that one problem, and ignore many other problems at the same time.
Expressive Elements
o In the absence of expressiveness, music becomes meaningless.
o Expressive Elements are:
This type of leadership does not enforce any sort of responsibility onto the
students; instead, they will live in survival mode and just want to get through
the experience without any issues.
A focus on finding and fixing what is wrong.