Ms. Berar's Kindergarten, Grade 1 & Grade 1/2 Classes

Month: June 2020

Ta Ta For Now……………………….. Music Explorations June 22-24

Ms. Berar:  “Knock Knock…”

Student:  “Who’s there?”

Ms. Berar:  “A little, old lady…”

Student:  “A LITTLE, OLD LADY WHO??”

Ms. Berar:  “Oh WOW!!!  I didn’t know that you knew how to Yodel !?!?”

That’s AWESOME!!!

When saying this line, try singing it and it will sound like you are yodeling:                      “A little, old lady who?” 

Here is one of my favourite scenes from my favourite movie of all time,                       “The Sound of Music,” filmed in 1965.  Based on the real-life story of the vonTrapp family who fled their homeland in Austria from the Nazis during World War II.

The film is based on the Broadway Play written and composed by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.  In this video, the VonTrapp children, along with their governess (nanny), are performing “The Lonely Goatherd” using marionette puppets and singing.

Yodeling is a form of singing which involves repeated and rapid changes of pitch between the low-pitch (chest register or “chest voice”) and the high-pitch (head register or “head voice” aka “falsetto”).  This vocal technique originates from the Austro-Bavarian word “jodeln,” meaning “to utter the syllable jo” (pronounced “yo” in English).  This vocal technique is used when singing in many cultures worldwide.

In this video, the von Trapp children perform a goodnight song to the guests at their father’s party.  It is titled, “So Long Farewell…”

My friends, it has been a wild and yet a wonderful school year, hasn’t it?  I want to wish all of my students and families the very best for the summer break!!!  Enjoy this time as best as you can!  Hopefully, we will meet before too long and we will make music again.  Keep a song in your heart my lovely friends and until then…  TTFN!  (Ta Ta For Now…)

OxoxO

Ms. Ravena Berar

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……. Each of us is a Flower ……. Music Explorations June 15-19

Hello My Lovely Friends!

Can you believe that this is the last full week of our school year?  I hardly can.        Our school year has been a different one too, hasn’t it?  Well, I believe that as information changes, our decisions change.  I take comfort in knowing that this is all part of our learning and growing process.

Have a listen to Bill Richardson read his story, “The Bunny Band.”  He is the same authour of the story/song that we learned earlier this year called, “The Aunts Come Marching.”  Bill is also a poet and former CBC radio host.  Along with Bill, you will hear Rosanne play her flute.  She is one of many talented musicians who perform with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra (VSO).

As this story is about growing vegetables in a garden, I thought what a PERFECT time this would be to listen and learn a song by Charlotte Diamond called,       “Each of Us is a Flower.”  Listed below are the lyrics.  Have a listen to the song.  Can you hear the parts that repeat?  After you listen to the song, play it again and see if you can sing along with Charlotte.

Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.
Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.
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Sun, shine your warmth on me / Moon, cool me with your night
Wind, bring the gentle rain / Earth, take my roots down deep
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Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.
Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.
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Sun, shine your warmth on me / Moon, cool me with your night
Wind, bring the gentle rain / Earth, take my roots down deep
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Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.
Each of us is a flower / Growing in life’s garden
Each of us is a flower / We need the sun and rain.  (Cha Cha Cha!)
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Playful Possibilities…
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Would you like to make your own instrument at home?  Click on the                      MAKE YOUR OWN SHAKER INSTRUMENT to watch a step-by-step, how-to video.  Once you have made your shaker, you can play it while you are singing to “Each of us is a Flower” or to any song.  Have FUN!
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As always friends, please take a photo of you holding your shaker or take a short video of you playing your shaker.  See if you are able to sing and play at the same time!  Emails can be sent to me at:  Ravena.Berar@burnabyschools.ca  and I will post it to the “Student Work” password-protected page on this blog.  OxoxO
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*****Peter and the Wolf***** Music Explorations June 8-12

Happy Monday to you ALL!  I hope this post finds you well!

In addition to working remotely from home on Mondays and Tuesdays, I am back teaching, in-person at Maywood on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays for the month of June.  I teach a cohort of students whose parents are Essential Service Workers on Wednesdays and I am teaching a cohort of Grade 2/3 students on Thursdays and Fridays until the end of the school year.

Although I am not teaching my regularly scheduled music classes, I look forward to the day when I can do that again this Autumn when we will all, hopefully, be back at school on a more regular basis.

Take a look at the website of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra to explore what the instruments look like and sound like.  Choose 1 instrument (or more) from each family (group) to look at and listen to their sounds.  Click the link here to access the website:    https://www.mydso.com/dso-kids/learn-and-listen/instruments

After reviewing different instruments from each family, watch and listen to the video below from the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of their former conductor, Maestro Bramwell Tovey.  In the video, he not only conducts the musicians but he is also the narrator of the story.

In 1936, Sergei Prokofiev wrote Peter and the Wolf, a story and musical composition. It was written in two weeks for a children’s theatre in Moscow. He wrote the music as a child’s introduction to the orchestra with each character being represented by an instrument or group of instruments. 

The Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev was one of the giants of 20th-century music. His works ranged from ballets – including Cinderella and Romeo and Juliet – to film music, such as Lieutenant Kije and Alexander Nevsky.  Prokofiev lived from 1891 until 1953. 

In “Peter and the Wolf,” Prokofiev uses instruments to represent animals:

The bird = flute

The duck = oboe

The cat = clarinet

The wolf = French horn

The grandfather = bassoon

The hunters = timpani

Peter = stringed instruments (e.g. violin, violas, cello, bass)

Playful Possibilities…

As always, please feel free to email me your response in writing, by drawing or painting a picture or by making a short video of you responding to the information that you explored in this post.

Choose a way that you would like to respond to these explorations and I will share it on our password-protected Student Gallery page on this blog.  My email is:

Ravena.Berar@burnabyschools.ca

  • Draw, colour, and label a picture of an instrument that you enjoyed hearing the most.
  • Draw, colour, and label a picture of a few of your favourite instruments.
  • If you could play any of these instruments right now, choose your top three.  Which ones would they be?  Tell me why?
  • Tell me about what you observed when you watched the Peter And The Wolf video?  What did you notice about the musicians?  How many were there on stage?  How were they arranged?
  • Could you actually imagine the animals in your mind when listening to the story?  Did the music help you to visualize them?  Yes or No?  Please explain why or why not.
Take great care and have a wonderful week ahead!
Musically Yours,
Ms. Berar

Music Explorations June 1st-5th

Hello My Friends, Hello!

For your music explorations this week, I am sharing a story with you that is very meaningful to me on a deep level.  It is written by Dr. Wayne Dyer and is titled, “Unstoppable Me!  10 Ways to Soar Through Life.”

I wish to express how extremely proud of you I am, as we have been discovering new ways of being and doing while we have been learning from home!  Good for you!!  Remember to dream big, shine bright and sparkle more!!!

Do you know this FUN song by Charlotte Diamond?  It is called, “I Am A Pizza.”  She is the composer of the song,  “May There Always Be Sunshine.” Do you remember listening to that song in my post from a few weeks ago?   Hopefully, you do.

After listening to this song this week, see if you can memorize the words.  You may wish to change the words or add verses with pizza toppings that you like.  Maybe you like to eat anchovies on your pizza?  Or perhaps artichokes?  Or maybe pineapple?  Have fun with this one!

Enjoy listening to “Ketzel the Cat” being read aloud by Cassie, a violinist with the VSO (Vancouver Symphony Orchestra).

 

NEW on the right-hand side of my blog, near the top of each post, you will now find a section titled, “Bookmarks.”  Here you will find the links to the websites that I have directed you to in previous posts.  I have indicated the websites that are musically interactive for students to explore with the designation “(Students)” beside it.  Plus, there are a few other websites for your parents to explore.

Friends, I would LOVE to receive a picture of your response to either one of the stories shared in this post or to “I Am A Pizza.”  Draw me a picture or create something with other objects that you have at home (e.g. like we do with the Loose Parts Cart at school), take a photo of it, and email it to me.  Or if you would like to record a short video of yourself singing any of the songs that we have learned this year, please send it to me and I will post it to the Student Gallery page.  Have a wonderful week!

Click here to email me:   Ravena.Berar@burnabyschools.ca

 

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