Friday, November 15, 2013

Solfeg: More Reasons to Love It

Let's Play Music posted about the history of solfeg and its usefulness in ear training.  Here are 7 more reasons Let's Play Music teachers use solfeg and LOVE IT!

1. There's a Word for That

 

Can you imagine teaching your child to identify colors without having any color words?  Not easy!  Similarly, as students learn to discern pitches and intervals between pitches, using a system  for putting a name to the pitches (solmization) facilitates the process immensely.  China, Japan, Korea, India, and Indonesia all have solmization schemes for associating pitch to a name.  When talking about fixed pitches, we use the alphabet (C is always C) and when talking about scales and relationships between notes in a scale, we use solfeg!

2. Whole-Body Involvement

Each of our young students (and even many of our toddler Sound Beginnings students) master the  hand signs and use them to experience singing, ear-training, and note-reading with their whole body.  As they hear the pitches moving up and down, their hands move up and down through space accordingly.  As they recognize intervals and relationships between the notes, they can feel the distance of jumps between pitches and grasp them with their hands.

Adding this kinesthetic mode of learning to an auditory and visual skill heightens a child's absorption of the information, accommodates various learning styles, and facilitates integration and long-term learning.  Solfeg is a popular tool for University students majoring in music fields;  it should be shared with young children, too, who adore and quickly internalize having a physical movement to put with their singing.  You already knew wiggly, active children enjoy having actions to accompany their favorite nursery songs, right?  If there's a way to make teaching more physical AND more fun for them, let's do it!


3. Understanding Scales and Key Signatures 

Would you love to be able to quickly and easily sing every major scale?  You can do it today! You don't have to memorize the notes of every single scale, just memorize the 7 solfeg syllables and start singing on whichever pitch you wish to be DO.  That's part of the power of the moveable DO  (read more here): the relationships within each scale will remain the same.

'Do' corresponds with the tonic of whatever key a particular composition or melody is placed. Thus in the Key of C major, C is Do, and in the Key of F major, F is Do.  You can see those two scales already engraved on your Let's Play Music tone bells!  Truly, any bell or piano key could be Do.  Of course you'd have to add some black keys to your scale to get it to sound like a major scale, but now after a few months of Let's Play Music training, your child could pick out (by ear) which black keys were needed.
Do is the note that the music rotates around and pivots back to. Whatever key we sing in, Do really is home!  Most songs end by bringing the melody back to Do.


4. Intervals

I recently wrote about the powerful ways that mastering intervals will help you improve musicianship in your reading, singing, and composing music.

Solfeg is a handy tool for students wishing to master interval training.  The goal is to instantaneously recognize the precise intervals when heard, and having solfeg words to identify them can be very helpful in this process.  "The notes I just heard sounded like...Do-Fa! It's a 4th!"

Here are just a few relationships I think my Let's Play Music students can hear and identify:
Do - Re : major 2nd  
Do - Mi : major 3rd  
Do - Fa: perfect 4th
Do - Sol: perfect 5th 
Mi - Sol: minor 3rd  : In class we sing this as Sol-Mi more often than as Mi-Sol, but they are the same interval of course.

5. Sight Reading Music

Choir class is a very common place to find solfeg at work; students are taught to rely on solfege for sight-singing melodies.  Singers can quickly read and sing the written melody if they interpret it in terms of solfege because they have learned the relationships between each solfege note and don't need to be retaught those relationships for whatever key the music is written in.

Here are some videos of students performing 4-part vocal music they have never rehearsed, using solfeg syllables and hand signs. 

At the piano, sight-reading music in the same way and hearing it with our inner voice helps us to self-correct as we play.  Solfege allows us to be able to play a tune in another key (transpose) by choosing a new DO and playing the same solfeg pattern (see an example here.)  We will practice singing and transposing this way in Purple and Orange semesters!


6. Sharps, Flats and Minor Keys

Now that we know having a way to sing the steps of a scale makes it easier to learn music, some folks have wondered why we don't prefer to sing numbered steps (1,2,3,4,5,6,7) instead of the solfeg syllables.  The word 'seven' is already less-than-popular because it is not a monosyllable, but all of the numbers become problematic if we ever want to introduce sharps or flats.  'Raised-seven' is definitely not an easy-to-sing monosyllable!

With solfeg, for a note that is lowered a half-step, we sing it with an A sound (like in the word "nay") but spell it with an e. Thus mi becomes me (may), la becomes le (lay), ti becomes te(tay), etc. This works for all scale steps except re which is already an e sound, so re lowered a half-step become ra (rah!).

For a note that is raised a half-step, we sing it with an ee sound, but spell it with an i. Thus, fabecomes fi. This works for all steps except mi and ti, but they are almost never raised anyway. 

Here are the syllables for the chromatic scales (play every single key on your piano, both black and white, as you sing):
ascending: do di re ri mi fa fi sol si la li ti do
descendingdo ti te la le sol se fa mi me re ra do

In Let's Play Music class, we won't spend much time teaching the raised and lowered syllables, but it is a beautiful and simple system to grow into as your child takes interest in further musical skills.  Each year I have one or two Orange students wanting to compose in minor keys, and I do help them master me, le, and te so they can be sure to write an appropriately minor melody.


7. Solfeg Works

The final, and perhaps best, reason I want to share about why Let's Play Music teachers love solfeg is simply that it works.  Students wanting to become better musicians (and get passing-grades in their college-level music classes) find that having the right tools will get the job done.  There's no need to wait until college; solfeg can help your very young child improve musicianship right now.  

- Gina Weibel, MS
Let's Play Music Teacher

... Click here to read more!

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Happy Halloween

Here are witches playing Halloween songs...

3rd year class:  
 

2nd year 5:10 class:  

2nd year 6:10 class: 










Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Magical Lamp Costumes

Here are videos of the students performing the Magical Lamp puppet show. (Aragonaise from Carmen by Georges Bizet)

Wednesday Class:


Thursday Class:  


We have a lot of fun with classical music!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Beethoven's Secret

"Don't only practice your art, but force your way into its Secrets, for it and knowledge can raise men to the Divine."  ~Ludwig van Beethoven

(Piano Guys' rendition of OneRepublic's Secrets with parts from Beethoven's 5th symphony)


Friday, September 27, 2013

Vivaldi - Spring Bees


 The 2nd year students will recognize the first 3 1/2 minutes of this video.  In Let's Play Music, we use Spring Bees to tell the story behind Vivaldi's Spring music...see what they used in this video and which instruments are playing which character.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Musical Journey Begins

This is one of my first-year classes.  The first semester in the 3-year program is Red Balloons.  I'm excited for this all-boy class...we are going to have a lot of fun this year as we sing, dance, and play together!  

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Piano Tuner Phone Numbers

It is important to have a tuned instrument when learning piano!  

Joel Weber  970-663-9565  http://www.coloradopianocare.com/

Bob Otterman 970-490-2120

Piano Posture

Click here to go to The Well-Balanced Pianist for some great tips on sitting properly at the piano.
The website has photographs of different set ups for adults and children.
1. Use a phone book or foam gym mats for them to sit on so their forearms are level.
2. Put a footstool on the floor so their weight can be slightly on their feet.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Music and the Brain

How is Music Beneficial?  What age to start?  
Watch this video to learn how music & piano lessons benefit the brain and a child's future.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

NoCo teachers at Centerra

Emily Baldwin, Aimee Latzke, Kim Seyboldt, Robin Flores

It was a wonderful day at Centerra with the other Northern Colorado LPM teachers.  Free cotton candy and hand-on activities to promote "The Arts."  Many kids played our tone bells and watched puppet shows.  Such a fun event!  

Monday, June 10, 2013

Symposium 2013

Cameron Grimm, Emily Baldwin, Aimee Latzke 
I went to Arizona for the Let's Play Music annual convention.  It was a wonderful trip for continuing education!  Ms. Emily even taught a 2-hour workshop for the other teachers.  

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Musical Life at 75 years old


Ms. Emily's mother, Alma Hahn, was interviewed for the local newspaper in Kentucky.  My parents are very musical with singing, dancing, and playing instruments!  They are in their 70s now and still going strong!  They have traveled the world (spending years in other countries, instead of weeks).  In Brazil & Taiwan, they taught piano lessons.

You can read the full story here and watch a video of her playing the piano at the end.  I'm a proud daughter, so I had to give her a "shout out" on my blog:  Way to Go, Mom!!!

http://www.thenewsenterprise.com/content/active-life-keeps-radcliff-septuagenarian-young


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Recital 2013

It has been a wonderful musical year!  I am blessed by sweet & smart students, fantastic families, and a fun curriculum to teach.  We had all 3 years represented in the Recital.  Watch the videos with your kids!

First Years!  Wed class (above)
Thursday class (below) 
First Year Video (7:34 minutes)

Second Year Students
Second Year Video (5:57 minutes)

Fort Collins had its "first-ever" graduates from Let's Play Music on May 3, 2013. 
Third Years:  Tues 4pm Class (above)
Tuesday 5pm Class (below)
Best wishes to these graduates!  Of all the things we've learned in Let's Play Music...I hope "love of music" is the one that you will keep throughout your life.  

with Introductions (17:51 minutes)

Kit Kat Keyboard Cake
Enjoy the summer break!

Friday, April 12, 2013

How to Buy a Digital Piano

1st year students graduating to 2nd year will need a piano at home...or perhaps a DIGITAL PIANO. Here's a free guide to purchasing these marvels, with tests for finding out if your DP sounds as good as the real deal:  http://www.makingmusicmag.com/how-to-buy-a-digital-piano/

You should aim to get a piano that has "fully-weighted" or "heavy-weighted" keys to the touch.  Also to test for string resonance: Without making the notes sound, press and hold down middle C, the E, and G (a C Major chord). While holding down the C chord, play the C to the left of middle C firmly. You should be able to hear the C Major chord quietly, as if you actually played it.





Tuesday, April 2, 2013

2013 New Student Info

Fort Collins Music Lessons for Kids...
Classes begin in August!
Register now to ensure your child's spot in the class!
Call Emily at 970-207-0971 or email: Music@ecBaldwin.net for more information about sample classes and registration.

2013 Red Balloons
Weekly Classes: Wednesday at 4:45 pm OR Thurs at 10:00am
Duration: 45 minutes
Class size: 5-8 children
Age of Child: 4-6 years old
(Pre-K or Kindergarten)
Tuition amount: $50 a month ($400 a year)
Location: South Fort Collins, Colorado



Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Family Night

Research shows that Successful Families spend time together!  Since we have a young family...we are together a lot!  But we still do an "official" weekly Family Night.  Here is the Outline that my parents used when I was in their house and what Carl & I currently do with our kids.  

Lesson:  It ranges from "character building values" (like honesty & sharing) to Scripture Stories to Holidays.
Special Number:  When I was younger, my siblings usually did musical numbers.  Our kids used to do a summersault (and we CLAP!), then headstands or cartwheels, and now it has transitioned to a song on the piano!  (The child LOVES to hear the entire family clap for him/her!!)  
Activity:  This is a game!  Last night we played Sardines (one person hides and everyone seeks and then crawls in to hide with him).  While we were counting, Lydia started playing the piano keys (bottom to top) as a way to "count" or pass the time.   Next turn, we gathered around the piano while the next person hid and Cynthia (my 2nd year student) said all of the letter names of the white keys while we played bottom to top.  LOVED it..that was way more fun than counting to 50.  
Treat:  This is the kids favorite part!  (especially if it is their turn to make the dessert earlier in the day)

The entire Family Night takes about 30 minutes and is something that the kids look forward to!  We rotate each week with a Conductor for our 5th job, who tells everyone when to do their part (since we have 5 in our family).

I love that one of the vision statements for Let's Play Music is to "Bond parent to child."  I feel like Family Night helps us "bond together"...maybe you want to try it in your family.  Or at least gather around your LPM student as a family and CLAP for him/her after a song is performed!  

Monday, March 18, 2013

The Piano Guys

What does the inside of a piano look like?  (I grew up with a dad who tuned pianos...so I've seen inside many pianos.)  These 5 Piano Guys use the inside of the piano to play a song:


In 3rd year of LPM, students write their own composition.  This one was written by Jon Schmidt (the pianist) and co-written by Steven Sharp Nelson (the cellist).  Michael Meets Mozart:


The Piano Guys have many musical videos!  This is my son's favorite...Cello Wars!


Check out The Piano Guys website:  http://thepianoguys.com/ 


Saturday, March 9, 2013

Cadence Blues

Thank you to Phil (Abigail's Dad) and Mat (Zac's Dad) for bring in their guitar and bass guitar to play with the 5pm Class.  The 3rd year students love groovin' to this song!  


Thursday, February 28, 2013

Pirate Ship

The students had a blast with this Puppet Show! "Hungarian Dance No.5" by Johannes Brahms.  Here they are using props to tell the story. 

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Cadence Blues

To get the full effect of playing The Blues, the 3rd Year students are wearing cool shades!  
4pm Class:
 

5pm Class 

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Triumphant March

The 1st year students are performing the Triumphant March (from Aida by Verdi). We had a lot of fun with all of the props.

Wednesday Class:

Thursday Class:


Friday, January 25, 2013

How LPM has grown...

In 1998, Let's Play Music was created!  10 years ago in 2002, there were 4 Teachers and 140 Students. Now there are 197 teachers and 3,500 students!

Here is the LPM Timeline.
You can also read about what the original graduates were doing, 10 years after they started LPM... they were excelling in music and in their academic studies!

I'm so glad to be a part of this amazing program!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Yellow Arrows 2013

Here are all of our Indian Chiefs as we get ready to play piano with BOTH hands.