Rhythms of Resilience: Raps, Rhymes, and Improvisations

Celebrating the Music and Culture of Indigenous Peoples

Grades
4-12

Vocal Improvisation

Objectives

Target Grades: 4-12

Objective: Students will use their voices rhythmically and melodically to create and explore natural, environmental, or percussive sounds.

Materials: large cue cards or regular sheets of paper; markers; whiteboard; recording of vocal improvisation sounds

  • General music skills, concepts, and understanding

    Alberta: rhythm, creating, expression

    Saskatchewan: Making Sense of Things (style, organizing sounds); Learning to Hear (the voice, the environment, human-made sounds)

    Manitoba: Music Language and Performance Skills (making music in an ensemble); Creative Expression in Music (generate and use ideas to create music, develop ideas creatively); Valuing Musical Experience (demonstrate engagement while making and experiencing music)

Introduction

We are born with a natural melodic and percussive instrument – the voice. Our voice can make all kinds of interesting and wacky sounds using our lips, mouth, and tongue. By using our lips, mouth, and tongue together, we can mimic other environmental and natural sounds. We can buzz, pop, click, hum, or whatever we want to do. Just check out some videos of people who can beatbox! They can test the limits of their voices!

Our voices can sing, scream, howl, laugh, and make other funny, dark, and interesting sounds. We need to take care of our voices so that they can last a lifetime.

Vocal Exploration Lesson

Environmental, natural, and familial

Step 1. Ask students to create the sound of an animal (a pet, in the wild, or in the zoo).

Step 2. Ask them how that sound would look if drawn. Have them draw it.

Step 3. Ask the students to think about and create the sound of the animal walking. Be imaginative! It can be made up. Draw it.

Step 4. Ask the students to create the sound of metal objects – saw, hammer, drill, or knife – then draw this sound.

Step 5. Ask the students to create the natural sound of water, wind, fire, trees swaying, leaves rustling, etc. and to draw their selected sound.

Step 6. Ask the students to mimic or create the sound of their siblings or family members. What do they sound like? Draw the sound.

Step 7. Ask the students to really think about what silence sounds like. Discuss and come up with a symbol or picture.

Step 8. Observe the drawn sounds, and select some examples to put on the chalk board or white board.

Step 9. Ask a student to be the conductor and point to the drawn shapes on the board while the students make the chosen sound all together.

Vocal Percussion Lesson

Step 1. Have students stand in a circle and divide students into small groups of 2-4 for smaller groups, or 5-6 for larger groups.

Step 2. Assign easy, non-vocal parts by demonstrating and giving the sound away to each group when they can successfully follow your sound and rhythm. Write on cue cards or whiteboard to help remember assigned sounds if needed. If students volunteer percussive sounds, they can lead their group.

Examples could include (refer to the recording of Vocal Improvisation Sounds):

  1. Zzzzzzzzzah! Zzzzzzzzah!
  2. Shhhhhh-oop! Shoo shoo shoo!
  3. Click, pop, click, pop, tsss…(using the tongue and mouth)

Step 3. Perform all sounds together, in rhythm, to create an interesting and unique composition (listen to the recording for inspiration). Percussive sounds can form the foundational ‘backbeat’ for the performance.

Vocal Soundscape Improvisation Lesson

Introduction

The students will create a “wall of sound” together to block out external sounds outside the circle space and room. There needs to be complete trust with each other and absolute focus for this to be successful.

This activity can take anywhere from 5-10 minutes, or more depending on the group’s direction and focus. It is important that individuals avoid disrupting the activity to try to make others laugh as this will cause the group to lose focus and the activity to crumble (this will be challenging!).

Procedure

Step 1. Begin by standing in a circle facing each other. You can choose to focus on a spot on the floor if it allows you to focus and feel comfortable.

Step 2. You will begin by humming together on one note that is not too high or too low but somewhere in the middle. If you run out of breath, softly take a new breath and bring your voice back in as gently as you can.

Step 3. Once the sound is continuous for a few minutes, one or two volunteers can begin to slightly change or bend the notes lower or higher. Try not to follow another’s voice; create your own direction. This adds to the interesting sound.

Step 4. Everyone will then be silently directed to open their mouths and pick a vowel “oo,” “ee,” “oh,” “ay,” or “ah” without changing their note.

Step 5. New volunteers will bend the notes again in any direction they choose and changing their vowels as they choose. The group will be directed to sing louder or softer at any moment but they must do it together.

Step 6. More volunteers will be asked to change their vowels and sounds in any direction they choose. There is no correct or incorrect way to do this – go in any direction. It won’t sound pretty or melodic as it adds to the wall of sound, and that’s not the aim. Just listen to how the voices can blend or contrast.

Step 7. As the group approaches the climatic ending section, students who would like to contribute to more vocal additions can do so one by one. The idea is to explore the sound, create, and improvise.

Step 8. For the ending, the teacher can choose to end the group strongly and abruptly, or to gently fade out.