First Nations Music for Land, Love, and Laughter

Celebrating the Music and Culture of Indigenous Peoples

Grades
K-12

“Heart of the Water” Chant Song

Overview

Target grade(s): 6-12

Objective(s): Students will experience and learn a First Nations chant song and play along to the slow beat. Students will also experience movement as they sing. 

Materials: frame drums with mallets, rattles, maracas, congas, bongos, or other percussion instruments of your choice; “Heart of the Water Song” sheet music

  • General music skills, concepts, and understanding

    Alberta: singing, rhythm, playing instruments, moving

    Saskatchewan: Learning to Hear (voice); Making Sense of Things (beat, cultural style)

    Manitoba: Understanding Music in Context (music from various cultures); Valuing Musical Experience (construct meaning from others’ music)

Introduction

First Nations songs can be about emotions and nature. These songs are meant to provide a space for self-reflection and for looking within yourself to figure out how you are feeling at that moment. Songs can uplift the spirit and can be healing for the soul. Songs can also remind people of being outside in a natural environment. This song has a feeling of softly drifting on a boat or padding with oars.

Lesson plan

Step 1. Teach the song a cappella. As this song reflects being outside in nature and the feeling of drifting, it can also be about experiencing the feeling of paddling a boat.

Emphasize the 1-2-3, 4-5-6 rhythm, but play on beats 1 and 4. The paddling feeling is two paddles on each side of the body on the beat. This will emphasize the downbeat.

Step 2. Select a few students to play the frame drums as you sing again.

Step 3. The song can be sung repeatedly as many times as you like, and can be instrumentally arranged to your liking. Try adding the rattles in during the second section of the song or making other instrumental variations.

Step 4 (optional). Create a fluid movement or dance sequence with the body or by using props (such as scarves) to accompany the song.

Step 5. Close this activity with a group discussion.

  • Has a song ever uplifted your spirits or mood?
  • Did the visual image of paddling the oars or drifting come to mind when singing the song? Describe what you saw.
  • Did the action of paddling the oars help you to feel the slow beat in the song?

About “Heart of the Water Song”

“This drum song was created to share with the youth. It is meant to honour the water and to capture the feeling of paddling on a canoe or drifting on a boat on the water while watching the trees and clouds pass by with the lull of the waves underneath you. More importantly, this song was meant to capture the feeling of being safe, calm, and at harmony with oneself. This song is dedicated to Jacoby, who helped in the naming of this song based on the mood it created for her. This song can also be played with the soprano recorder or other wind instrument.”

—Sherryl Sewepagaham