Rhythms of Resilience: Raps, Rhymes, and Improvisations

Celebrating the Music and Culture of Indigenous Peoples

Grades
4-12

Music Alive Song Activity

Objectives

Objective(s): Students will learn an 8-beat ostinato pattern and transfer it to speech, body percussion, and non-pitched percussion to perform and sing together in a class-decided form. 

Materials: “Music Alive” score; speech and body percussion score; non-pitched percussion instruments: triangles/jingle bells, rhythm sticks/claves, hand drums, large drum/timpani with mallets, etc.

  • General music skills, concepts, and understanding

    Alberta: Rhythm; Playing Instruments; Singing

    Saskatchewan: Making Sense of Things (beat, form); Learning to Hear (the voice)

    Manitoba: Music Language and Performance Skills (making music in an ensemble, understanding timbre and form)

Procedure

Step 1. Introduce the song “Music Alive” in preparation for the following music activities.

Step 2. Divide students into four groups.

A. Speech Ostinato

  • Teach the speech ostinato.
  • Assign each group an ostinato line and teach until each group is independent and can perform simultaneously with other group lines.

B. Body Percussion Ostinato

  • Introduce each group’s body percussion line.
  • Follow the same teaching pattern as the speech ostinato.

Step 3 (optional). Select one or two students from each group who demonstrated strong rhythmic accuracy in their group. Hand them each a percussion instrument assigned to their scored line and have them play the rhythms with their instrument.

Assign each student or pair of students an ostinato line and teach until each of them is independent and can perform simultaneously with other lines. 

Step 4. As a class, decide and determine the form of the finale performance, which includes the song. Write on the board for reference. An example: Body percussion – speech – non-pitched – song – simultaneous.