Friday, March 28, 2014

Let It Go-o-rama!!!

Our informances were FANTASTIC last week! So I thought I'd reward the kids with a game day. However, I wanted to sneak a little bit of teaching in, too. As I've mentioned before, I like to find videos of innovative and quality musicianship and show them to the kids to let them see what can be done with the foundation I lay here in music class. With the "Let it Go" craze going on everywhere, a friend of mine (thank you, Sara Lightbody) sent me a video of a very creative mash-up by The Piano Guys of Disney's "Let it Go" and Vivaldi's "Winter." Brilliante! I get to show the kids music they love but also introduce them to Antonio Vivaldi, Baroque "pop" music, and the importance of knowing how to write and read music (how else would we be able to hear a song written 300 years ago?)!

We began with watching the Sing along version of Disney's "Let it Go." We briefly discuss how this song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song this year. Then I mention that the story on which the movie is loosely based is Hans Christian Anderson's The Snow Queen, written in 1844. I told them that people have been fascinated with writing stories and songs about winter for a very long time and that, before Hans Christian Anderson was even born, a man named Antonio Vivaldi wrote a set of four violin concertos called The Four Seasons, one of which was, of course, "Winter." We discuss how it was his most famous work and that, even though he wrote it in 1723, before there were recording devices of any kind, we can still hear it performed today because he learned how to write music down and we know how to read it. We also talk about how his composition was sort of like the "pop music" of its day because there were no movies to go to or CD's to buy so people went to concerts for entertainment and this was the "current" music they listened to. Then we watch Julia Fischer's performance of "Winter, movement #1" at the National Botanical Gardens of Wales. I asked them to give me a thumbs up if they hear anything familiar. It was very interesting to see some classes had the majority of students recognizing it immediately while others only a handful knew the song. We talked about how some knew the music from video games, others from commercials, and one student said it was in one of his sister's Barbie movies.

Finally, I ask them if they remember the Piano Guys video I showed them earlier in the year. I tell them that these guys came up with a brilliant idea: combine the winter themes from Disney and Vivaldi, the popular music of 1724 and of 2014, in an instrumental mash-up of the two songs! I asked them if they remembered last year's ice castle at the Mall of America--many did--and explained that they chose to record their performance in a similar setting. As we watched the video, students were told to hold up their fingers in a sign-language "V" if they heard Vivaldi or  a "D" if they hear Disney's "Let it Go."

What a great way to make classical music relevant to kids! Thanks, Piano Guys!!

Once we were done watching these Videos, I showed them my website where I had not only posted these videos but also a bunch of covers or mash-ups people have done of "Let it Go" and let them choose if they wanted to spend the rest of the class watching how other's got creative with the song or if they wanted to play games. Most classes chose to watch the various videos. One fifth grade boy told me this was his favorite class ever!!

A Winter "Mash-up"
For those of you who are Crazy about Disney's Frozen and remember the Piano Guys, check this out. They took part of Vivaldi's Winter and mashed it with Let it Go from Disney's Frozen. See if you can hear when they go between each song.
More spin-offs from Frozen
Note: All of these videos were found on YouTube then converted into SafeShareTV videos so that students wouldn't follow links to inappropriate videos. It is a free service and I love it!!

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