ASME% - Midnight Music · 2015. 4. 27. · KatieWardrobe! Midnight!Music!!!!! !!! ASME%2011!...

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Katie Wardrobe Midnight Music www.midnightmusic.com.au ASME 2011 Teaching Composition With Technology

Transcript of ASME% - Midnight Music · 2015. 4. 27. · KatieWardrobe! Midnight!Music!!!!! !!! ASME%2011!...

Page 1: ASME% - Midnight Music · 2015. 4. 27. · KatieWardrobe! Midnight!Music!!!!! !!! ASME%2011! Teaching!CompositionWithTechnology!!

                                                 

Katie  Wardrobe  Midnight  Music                                          

 www.midnightmusic.com.au  

   

ASME   2011  

Teaching  Composition  With  Technology    

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Recording  and  Sequencing........................................................................................................... 3  

Software  options................................................................................................................................................................3  Arranging  techniques  and  other  musical  concepts ....................................................................... 3  

Using  pre-­‐made  loops......................................................................................................................................................3  Project:  When  Doves  Cry  unit  (James  Humberstone) .......................................................................................3  Using  loops  that  come  packaged  with  your  software  program.....................................................................4  Tips  for  choosing  (or  creating)  loops  for  students  to  use................................................................................4  Project:  12  Bar  Blues........................................................................................................................................................4  

Create  original  material ............................................................................................................... 5  

Starting  small  and  rhythmic .........................................................................................................................................5  Project:  Short  drum  patterns........................................................................................................................................5  Project:  Recording  an  improvised  melody .............................................................................................................5  Project:  making  loops  with  Aviary’s  Roc  Music  Creator...................................................................................6  Project:  notating  and  performing  original  creations .........................................................................................6  

Combining  audio  and  visual......................................................................................................... 7  

Film  composition  and  ad  jingles .................................................................................................................................7  Project:  introducing  film  composition......................................................................................................................7  Project:  film  composition  next  steps.........................................................................................................................7  

Audio/visual  remixing  on  steroids! .............................................................................................. 8  

Pogo .........................................................................................................................................................................................8  DJ  Kutiman............................................................................................................................................................................8  Project:  your  own  Thru-­‐You  remix ............................................................................................................................9  

Using  notation  programs ............................................................................................................. 9  

Don’t  always  start  from  scratch ..................................................................................................................................9  Project:  primary  school  pentatonic  compositions ..............................................................................................9  Project:  teaching  canons  and  rounds.....................................................................................................................10  

Recording  audio .........................................................................................................................10  

Hardware  and  software  options ..............................................................................................................................10  Contact  me  (I’m  happy  to  answer  questions  ) .........................................................................10  

 

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Teaching  Composition  with  Technology    

Recording  and  Sequencing    

Software  options  

• GarageBand  (Mac  only)  

• Acid  Music  Studio  or  Acid  Xpress  (PC  only)  

• Mixcraft  (PC  only)  

• Myna  (online,  free)  

• Roc  (online,  free)  

 

Arranging  techniques  and  other  musical  concepts  

Using  pre-­‐made  loops  

No,  using  pre-­‐made  loops  is  not  composing  from  scratch,  but  allows  students  to  achieve  attainable  results  quickly.    You  can  use  loops  to  teach  arranging  techniques  and  other  musical  concepts  such  as:  

• Structure  

• Texture  

• Timbre  

• Harmony  

• Form  

 Project:  When  Doves  Cry  unit  (James  Humberstone)  

James  Humberstone  of  MLC  School,  Burwood  NSW  generously  shares  his  own  educational  content  on  his  website.    James  spent  a  lot  of  time  preparing  a  unit  of  work  based  on  the  Prince  song  When  Doves  Cry  –  in  which  he  provides  students  with  all  the  parts  of  the  song  broken  down  into  GarageBand  loops  –  small  snippets  of  music.    The  unit  was  originally  designed  for  year  8  students,  but  James  has  since  used  it  with  students  in  years  7  –  11.  

In  addition  to  the  loops,  James  made  a  series  of  tutorial  videos  that  demonstrate  the  GarageBand  skills  the  students  will  need  to  complete  the  task.    The  unit  of  work  (taught  over  a  number  of  weeks)  follows  these  main  steps:  

• Play  the  piano  ostinato  from  the  song  with  a  drum  beat  

• Listen  to  the  song  in  a  variety  of  styles  and  reflect  on  each  one  

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• Create  your  own  remix  of  the  song  using  provided  loops  (making  musical  choices  about  form,  structure,  timbre  and  so  on  

• Create  drum  loops  from  scratch  

• Extension  activities  for  advanced  students  include  creating  a  remix  of  another  song  of  their  choosing  or  writing  their  own  song  

• Add  your  own  improvised  melody  over  the  top  of  the  backing  you  created  

•  Add  a  chord  pattern  to  accompany  the  song  

Using  loops  that  come  packaged  with  your  software  program  

You  don't  necessarily  have  to  do  as  much  prep  as  James  did  for  his  When  Doves  Cry  unit.    It’s  quite  possible  to  do  a  similar  activity  using  the  use  the  loops  that  came  with  your  software  program,  however,  I  think  it’s  absolutely  necessary  to  create  a  “shortlist”  from  which  students  should  work,  otherwise  they’ll  spend  the  whole  lesson  (or  more)  sifting  through  3000  loops!    Tips  for  choosing  (or  creating)  loops  for  students  to  use  

• Start  well  ahead  of  class  time  –  it  takes  a  while  to  create  a  good  shortlist  

• Put  all  your  chosen  loops  into  a  folder  on  their  own  and  save  them  to  your  school’s  shared  drive  

• It   can  be   a   good   idea   to   rename   the   loops:   add   the   instrument  name  at   the  beginning   and   keep   the  naming  conventions  consistent.    Students  will  find  it  much  easier  to  locate  loops  later  on  

• If   you’re   working   with   GarageBand   on   a  Mac,   students   can   drag   the   folder   of   loops   on   to   the   loop  browser   area.     The   loops  will   be   added   to   the   loop   library   and   you’ll   be   able   to   access   the   folder   by  choosing  it  from  the  drop-­‐down  menu  at  the  top  of  the  browser  

• If  you’re  using  Acid,  students  will  be  able  to  navigate  the  folder  you  set  up  and  save  it  to  the  hard  drive  of  the  computer  they’re  working  on  

Project:  12  Bar  Blues  

Step  1:  Create  a  bassline  

• Students  choose  a  bass  loop    

• Shorten  the  loop  if  necessary  so  that  it  is  one  bar  in  length  

• Copy  the  shortened  loop  into  the  following  11  bars  (so  there  are  12  in  total).    The  loop  needs  to  be  in  one-­‐bar  snippets  (rather  than  one  continuous  loop)  so  that  parts  of  it  can  be  transposed  

• Transpose  the  loops  at  bar  5  and  6  up  5  semitones  

• Transpose  the  loop  at  bar  9  up  7  semitones  

• Transpose  the  loop  at  bar  10  up  5  semitones  

• Play   back   to   check   that   you’ve   created   the   12   bar  blues  correctly  

Step  2:  Create  a  rhythmic  accompaniment  

• Build  a  rhythm  with  existing  drum  loops  

• Create  your  own  drum  pattern  from  scratch  

• Transform  the  loop    -­‐  change  the  sounds,  stretch  the  loop  (Acid)  

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• Use  volume  and  panning  envelopes  to  vary  the  arrangement  

• Use  of  layering;  build  suspense  

Step  3:  The  arrangement  

• Have  students  avoid  a  “wall”  of  sound!  

• Use  layering  and  gaps/spaces  in  the  arrangement  

• Use   fade   ins/outs   (volume   envelopes)   or   panning   (sound   travels   from   one   speaker   to   the   other)   for  variety    

Reflection  during  and  after  the  project  

• Students  write  about  progress  over  time  and  discuss  what  worked  and  what  didn't  work  

Create  original  material  

Starting  small  and  rhythmic  

A  good  place  to  start  with  creating  original  material  is  by  making  short  rhythmic  loops.    Students  can  record  via  MIDI  straight  into  your  chosen  software  program  by  using  an  external  MIDI  keyboard,  or  by  using  the  on-­‐screen  keyboard.      Project:  Short  drum  patterns  

Students  record  a  simple  drum  pattern  between  1  -­‐  4  bars  long.      

Tips  for  recording  drum  patterns:  

• Practice  the  pattern  first,  testing  out  which  sounds  you  want  to  use  

• Slow  down  the  tempo  for  recording  if  necessary  

• If  you’re  not  happy  with  the  recording,  simply  re-­‐record  the  pattern  

• In  GarageBand,  make  use  of  the  loop-­‐record  function  where  you  can  record  multiple  versions  one  after  the  other  and  choose  the  best  take  

• Once  you’re  happy  with  the  recording,  quantize  the  pattern  to  even-­‐up  the  sounds  

• Lastly,  save  the  loop  into  your  loop  library  so  it  can  be  used  for  future  projects  

   Project:  Recording  an  improvised  melody  

Students  can  record  an  improvised  melody  over  the  top  of  a  backing  they  have  created.    This  works  well  as  an  extension  to  the  12  bar  blues  project  above,  or  James  Humberstone’s  When  Doves  Cry  project.    • Start  a  new  track  for  your  improvised  melody  

• Choose  an  appropriate  instrument  sound  and  then  practice  what  you’re  going  to  play  

• Remember  that  you  can  slow  down  the  tempo  if  necessary  

• Place  the  playback  line  where  you’d  like  to  start  recording  and  when  you’re  ready,  press  record  

• Record  the  improvisation  over  the  top  of  the  backing  

 

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Project:  making  loops  with  Aviary’s  Roc  Music  Creator  

Students  can  also  use  a  separate  application  to  create  original  loops.    One  free  easy-­‐to-­‐use  option  is  Aviary’s  Music  Creator  –  known  as  Roc.    Roc  is  an  online  application  that  allows  you  to  create  short  loops.    There  are  an  amazing  array  of  sounds  to  choose  from  which  include  drum  kits,  world  percussion  kits,  human  beatboxing  sounds  and  body  percussion  sounds.    One  of  the  best  things  about  Roc  is  that  it  also  includes  melodic  sound  sets  including  piano,  guitar,  metallophone,  glockenspiel  and  more.    Using  Roc  

• Go  to  http://www.aviary.com/online/music-­‐creator    

• Choose  an  instrument  from  the  drop-­‐down  menu  (you  can  change  it  later)  and  click  Open  

• After  the  sound  set  loads,  your  empty  project  will  appear  

• Choose  a  tempo  and  the  number  of  beats  per  bar  at  the  top  

• Press  Play  and  start  adding  sounds  by  clicking  on  an  empty  circle.    You  can  delete  a  sound  by  clicking  on  it  again  

 When  you’ve  finished  creating  your  loop:  • Click  on  the  Save  button  at  the  top  

• Title  your  piece  and  then  Roc  will  create  a  mixdown  of  your  project  

• Once  it  has  been  saved,  you  can  download  an  mp3  or  WAV  version  of  the  loop  

 Import  the  loop  into  GarageBand,  Acid  or  Mixcraft  

• GarageBand:  drag  the  loop  from  the  Finder  on  to  the  loop  browser  

• Acid  and  Mixcraft:  access  the  loop  from  the  location  you  downloaded  it  to  

 Project:  notating  and  performing  original  creations  

Students  can  take  their  Roc  creations  and  translate  them  into  notation  either  using  paper  and  pencil,  or  by  using  a  notation  program  such  as  Sibelius,  Finale  or  MuseScore.      I  created  a  body  percussion  loop  in  Roc  with  the  setting  of  4  beats  per  bar  (total  of  2  bars).                    

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       Treating  each  blue  dot  as  a  semiquaver,  I  notated  the  two  bars  in  Sibelius  (here’s  an  excerpt):                        Students  can  then  perform  the  pieces  using  body  percussion  or  untuned  percussion.    

Combining  audio  and  visual  

Film  composition  and  ad  jingles  

One  of  the  great  things  about  technology  is  that  it  makes  it  easy  to  show  students  how  “real-­‐life”  composers  might  work.    You  can  take  advantage  of  the  ability  to  import  video  into  your  software  program  and  use  short  films  or  adverts  as  compositional  inspiration.    Project:  introducing  film  composition    

Start  by  simply  matching  sound  with  visuals.    This  allows  students  to  become  familiar  with  the  technology  and  build  the  skills  for  use  in  more  advanced  projects.    Steps:  • Find  a  VERY  short  video  (30  seconds  or  less  is  ideal)  

• Ask  students  to  find  or  create  sound  effects  to  go  with  the  video  

• When  lining  the  sound  effects  up,  zoom  in  a  lot  so  you  can  fine-­‐tune  the  position  of  the  effect      

• Use  “markers”  or  “hit  points”  to  help  with  the  placement  of  effects  

• Ask   students   to   drag   in   3   contrasting   existing   music   loops   to   add   to   the   video   and   mute   them   all  momentarily.    They  can  un-­‐mute  one  of  them  and  test  the  effect  of  that  loop  on  the  video.    Then  switch  over  and  try  the  other  two  

• Advanced  students  might  like  to  try  recording  an  improvised  soundtrack  to  accompany  the  movie  

• Students   can   choose   their   favourite  music   loop   for   the  project   and   give   reasons  why   they   thought   it  worked  well      

 Project:  film  composition  next  steps  

Choose  a  short  film  that  might  lend  itself  well  to  a  suspense  soundtrack.      

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Listen  to  a  range  of  examples  of  suspense  music  with  the  students.    What  are  the  attributes  of  music  that  creates  suspense?    Talk  about  drones,  music  that  rises  in  pitch,  music  in  extreme  registers  (either  high  or  low),  rhythms  that  increase  in  speed  and  intensity.    Steps:  • Start  as  before  –  by  adding  sound  effects  to  the  project  

• Build  layers  of  suspense  music:  add  a  drone  that  moves  up  by  semitone  

• Add  a  rhythmic  element  –  start  with  a  slow  drawn-­‐out  rhythm,  then  add  one  that  gets  faster  or  more  busy  

• Record  an  improvised  high  eerie  melody    

   

Audio/visual  remixing  on  steroids!  

You  might  like  to  consider  an  extension  of  the  film  scoring  idea:  the  art  of  audio/visual  remixing.    There  are  some  excellent  examples  on  Youtube.    These  types  of  projects  are  much  more  involved!    Pogo    

DJ  Pogo  –  otherwise  known  as  Nick  Bertke  –  is  a  21-­‐year-­‐old  music  producer  living  in  Perth,  WA.    Pogo  remixes  sounds  (and  video)  from  well-­‐known  movies  by  sampling  dialogue,  sound  effects  and  music.    The  end  result  is  a  completely  new  musical  work.    Pogo  has  remixed  a  number  of  Disney  Pixar  and  Showtime  movies  (he  has  worked  for  both  companies  in  the  past)  including  Alice  in  Wonderland,  Mary  Poppins,  Toy  Story,  Harry  Potter,  Hook  and  many  more.    His  Youtube  videos  have  had  millions  of  views  and  you  can  purchase  downloads  of  the  songs  via  his  own  website,  or  the  iTunes  store.    Website:  http://www.pogomix.net/        DJ  Kutiman  

In  March  2009,  DJ  Kutiman  launched  a  video  titled  The  Mother  Of  All  Funk  Chords  on  Youtube.    It  was  a  collection  of  unrelated  Youtube  videos  edited  together  to  make  a  new  piece  of  music.    The  public  reaction  was  astounding  and  today  the  video  has  been  viewed  more  than  10  million  times.    Kutiman  used  snippets  of  a  whole  range  of  videos  including  these  ones:  

• Drums:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FX_84iWPLU&feature    

• Funk  chord  guitar:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvw2UuofYyQ  

• Guitar  single  notes  lick  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgwHtfFt70w&feature    

• Trumpet  scale  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1Ke39KV5AQ  

Here  is  the  final  product:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tprMEs-­‐zfQA    

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Music  technology  training  Free  monthly  email  newsletter  www.midnightmusic.com.au  

 

  9  

 Project:  your  own  Thru-­‐You  remix  

If  you’d  like  to  attempt  something  like  Kutiman’s  Youtube  remix,  James  Humberstone  has  designed  a  website  that  will  take  you  through  the  process.    The  site  includes  instructions,  download  links  and  tutorial  videos  and  whilst  the  tools  used  are  Mac-­‐related,  you  could  easily  transfer  the  steps  to  PC.        http://tuberemix.com/            

Using  notation  programs  

When  using  a  notation  program  such  as  Sibelius,  Finale  or  MuseScore  with  students,  you  might  like  to  consider  these  tips:  

Don’t  always  start  from  scratch  

It  can  be  a  good  idea  –  particularly  when  working  with  young  students  –  to  provide  a  partially  done  score,  rather  than  have  the  students  set  up  a  score  from  scratch.    Score  set-­‐up  can  take  a  substantial  amount  of  time  when  done  with  a  whole  class  and  it’s  something  that  students  are  able  to  work  out  on  their  own  anyway.    Providing  a  partially-­‐done  score  means  that  you  can  focus  on  the  specific  activity  you  wanted  to  cover  in  your  lesson.    Project:  primary  school  pentatonic  compositions  

If  working  on  a  composition  with  ABA  form,  you  could  provide  a  4-­‐bar  A  section  for  students  which  repeats  at  the  end.    Leave  4  blank  bars  in  the  middle  for  the  students  to  compose  a  B  section,  using  the  notes  of  the  pentatonic  scale.    

   Idea  courtesy  of  elementary  music  educator  Amy  Burns:  http://www.amymburns.com/      

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Music  technology  training  Free  monthly  email  newsletter  www.midnightmusic.com.au  

 

  10  

Project:  teaching  canons  and  rounds  

• You  can  provide  one  instance  of  the  round  written  in  a  score  

• Students  can  play  it  back  and  work  out  where  the  next  voice/s  will  begin  

• Next,  they  can  add  two  more  staves  and  copy  the  original  part  into  the  other  parts  

 

Recording  audio  

Take  advantage  of  the  recording  technology  you  have  at-­‐hand.      Students  can  record  ideas,  or  full-­‐blown  compositions  and  use  the  recording  for  archive  purposes  or  as  a  means  of  self-­‐assessment.    Recording  compositional  ideas  in  this  way  means  that  students  are  hearing  the  piece  in  their  head  first,  rather  than  relying  on  a  notation  or  sequencing  program  to  provide  instant  feedback.    Hardware  and  software  options  

• Mobile  phone  

• iPod/iPod  Touch  

• Handheld  recording  device  (Zoom  H4,  R09)  

• Laptop  +  Audacity  +  built  in  mic  

• USB  mic  

• Audacity,  GarageBand,  Acid,  Mixcraft,  Logic,  Pro  Tools    

 

Contact  me  (I’m  happy  to  answer  questions  )  

Contact  me  regarding    

• training  enquiries  or  presentations  for  your  school/network/event    

• music  technology-­‐related  questions  

 

Email:     [email protected]  

Mobile:     0412  403  704  

Website:   www.midnightmusic.com.au      

Facebook:   www.facebook.com/midnightmusic    

Twitter:     www.twitter.com/katiesw1