Ideas for the ClassroomFor use with the Virtual Gramophone website. These are some ideas for using Library and Archives Canada's Virtual Gramophone database of early Canadian recordings in your classroom. Themes in MusicStudents listen to three or four different songs or piece of music on a specific theme from the Virtual Gramophone site. Some suggestions:
Students compare the songs: how are they the same? They should consider:
They should also compare and contrast this music with modern music on the same theme. A Timeline of Twentieth-Century MusicUsing music from the Virtual Gramophone and other sources, conduct a decade-by-decade study of twentieth-century music. How did music change over the century? Consider:
Students could also track major historical events in each decade. They could create a timeline of historical events, and mark the major musical movements and events of the century. Year-by-Year Survey of SongsStudents could search recordings by year to compare and contrast the types of songs released in each year. They could track them on a table by categories and graph the results:
Students could also track musical styles (waltz, foxtrot, ragtime, etc.) and observe when new styles were introduced. Technical DifficultiesRecordings that have survived from the early twentieth century are often damaged and the sound, distorted. Students could visit the Virtual Gramophone Technical Notes page and write a short report on the causes of these problems, and how they can be corrected. URL: www.collectionscanada.ca/gramophone/m2-5001-e.html As an extension activity, students could conduct research into what problems may arise in preserving music created today. Creative WritingAfter listening to an historical piece of music, and discussing the theme and history behind it, students could write a poem or short story dramatizing the events of the song. Images taken from Images Canada could be used to help create mental imagery. URL: www.imagescanada.ca/ Interpretive Drama or DanceStudents could choose a song or piece of music from the Virtual Gramophone database and develop a piece of drama or an interpretive dance relating to the theme. Students could also choose two songs, one modern, one from the Virtual Gramophone database, and create a dance that uses both pieces of music. This could highlight changes in the Canadian society and culture in the past 100 years. Music and MovementThis is an activity for drama students (or others) to be able to use music to heighten a dramatic pantomime. Students learn to adapt the action and activity of their pantomime to changes in the tempo, feeling and mood of the music. Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5 Part 6 Part 7 This initial activity could be followed up with each group receiving a DIFFERENT piece of music so each group will be planning a pantomime scene to different pieces of music. Costumes and props could be added. |