Bell Ringers Week 6
Monday1. Draw a treble clef
2. Label the spaces and lines with LETTERS. (Remember "Space Face" and "Every Good Boy Does Fine") 3. Draw 1 pair of eighth notes on the staff in the following places: (low) G, (high) D, (high) E 4. Draw a 1 quarter note on (high) D 5. Draw 1 pair of eighth notes on the staff in the following places: C, B, A 6. Draw 1 quarter note in following place: (low) G Tuesday
1. Draw a treble clef
2. Label the spaces and lines with LETTERS. (Remember "Space Face" and "Every Good Boy Does Fine) 3. Next, draw 1 pair of eighth notes on the staff in the following places: (high) D, C, B 4. Next, draw 1 quarter note in following place: A 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 Wednesday
Thursday
Music Listening
Title: _______________________ 1. What type of instruments and/or voices do you hear? 2. Describe the tempo (Slow, Moderate, Fast)? 3. Which instrument(s) is/are playing the ostinato? Listening Example Friday
Taken from: NPR.com
You hear some music you hate. That's fair. We all do on occasion. But can you learn to love — or at least not loathe — that music? Can you intentionally transform the visceral response you have to certain pieces and styles, or does that happen at some more incalculable, subtle level? Researchers at Australia's University of Melbourne say that the more dissonance (which they describe as "perceived roughness, harshness, unpleasantness, or difficulty in listening to the sound") that we hear in music, the less we enjoy said music. Seems obvious enough, right? Also falling into the "no kidding" category is the not-at-all new notion that the more we're exposed to a certain kind of music — either through intentional engagement or simple osmosis in whatever culture we're immersed in — the more we like that music. 1. Use context clues to determine the definition of "loathe". 2. Why does the author use the term "'no kidding' category"? 3. Do you think you can learn to enjoy music you currently dislike? Why or why not? The story |