Listen Up, Canada!

Teacher's guide inspired by the music and pedagogy of Canadian composer R. Murray Schafer

Grades
3-6

Definitions and vocabulary

Crescendo

Gradually growing louder.

Decrescendo

Gradually growing softer.

Ear cleaning

Ear cleaning describes the process of listening carefully and noting all of the diverse sounds in one’s environment, as opposed to taking background sounds for granted. Many of Schafer’s educational works encourage this kind of careful listening through creative exercises that are ideal for elementary classrooms.

Forte (f)

Loud

Glissandi

Continuous gliding from one note to another.

Graphic notation

Graphic notation refers to music that is written down in non-traditional ways. Instead of notes lined up neatly on a staff, there are swirls, colours, pictures, scattered notes and musical symbols, or other elements of drawing or calligraphy meant to express the sound and character of the music. Schafer’s music oftern incorporates elements of graphic notation.

Metre changes (4/4 to 3/4 to 4/4)

Four beats to a bar, three beats to a bar, four beats to a bar.

Piano (p)

Soft

Ritard (rit.)

Slowing down

Soundscape

A soundscape is a sound or combination of sounds that forms or arises from an immersive environment. Schafer’s definition of soundscape includes all of the sounds from a particular environment that reach the human ear. He considers that we are linked to the natural world through its voice, and he encourages us to examine what first stirred human communities to form sound into cohesive and expressive patterns such as music, dance, and even speech.

Voicings (S, A, T, B)

Soprano, alto, tenor, bass.