Listen Up, Canada!

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

Grades
3-6

R. Murray Schafer’s Life and Music

Who is R. Murray Schafer?

Born in Sarnia, Ontario, July 18, 1933; passed away in his home near Peterborough, Ontario, August 14, 2021.

R. Murray Schafer is one of Canada’s pre-eminent composers who has won national and international acclaim not only for his achievements as a composer, but also as an educator, environmentalist, literary scholar, and visual artist. After receiving a Licentiate in piano through the Royal Schools of Music (England), he pursued further studies in Canada at the Royal Conservatory of Music and the University of Toronto, followed by periods of study in Austria and England. It’s notable that he was actually dismissed from the University of Toronto is his first year, and is largely self-taught as a composer.

He chose his rural home in order to work on artistic projects with his community. For example, Schafer founded the Maynooth Community Choir, with whom he wrote and produced the music theatre piece Jonah, and productions of his PATRIA 3: The Greatest Show included the participation of local amateur actors and musicians. Schafer encourages artists to draw on the riches of their local surroundings and culture.

R. Murray Schafer holds seven honorary doctorates from universities in Canada, France, and Argentina, and his music has won numerous national and international awards. Famed violinist and conductor Yehudi Menuhin praised “His strong, benevolent, and highly original imagination and intellect, a dynamic power whose manifold personal expressions and aspirations are in total accord with the urgent needs and dreams of humanity today.”

The composer

There is no such thing as a ‘typical’ work by Schafer. His compositions often result from special explorations into the worlds of sound, language, philosophy, psychology, mythology, theatre, ritual, natural history, or any combination of these things. Even audience participation is a possibility. His compositions range from the modest, four-minute Untitled Composition for Orchestra to Ra, an all-night musical/theatrical ritual involving all five senses. Schafer also composed for unusual and unorthodox combinations, as well as unusual instruments; for example, Theseus is for harp and string quartet, Music for Wilderness Lake is for 12 trombones, and North/White is for full orchestra and snowmobile(!).

One of the most significant aspects of Schafer’s wide-ranging catalogue is the series of string quartets he had been producing since 1970. His love for the female voice also inspired numerous works. Specifically for his partner Eleanor James’s rich mezzo-soprano voice, he wrote demanding chamber music (Tanzlied for voice and harp, Tantrika for voice and percussion) and works for voice and orchestra (Letters from Mignon and Thunder/Perfect Mind).

In addition, there is the monumental PATRIA cycle of 12 related music dramas, many of which are presented in unusual settings or at special times of the day or year. The beauty of Canada’s wilderness is the setting of the PATRIA prologue The Princess of the Stars, which has been performed several times at different outdoor sites across Canada. Other outdoor works include The Enchanted Forest and The Palace of the Cinnabar Phoenix, both performed in Ontario’s Haliburton Forest.

Artist and writer

Schafer’s visual art can be seen in his musical scores that include illustrations and/or graphic notation. Many of these have been exhibited in art galleries.

Schafer also wrote some 20 literary works, of which E.T.A. Hoffmann and Music and The Tuning of the World are especially important and influential. The Tuning of the World describes Schafer’s research into the idea of soundscape, a term which he coined.

Music education

R. Murray Schafer is probably best known for his writings on music education, including The Composer in the Classroom (1965), Ear Cleaning (1967), Creative Music Education (1976), A Sound Education (1992), and HearSing (2005).

His works have been translated into multiple languages, and his innovative methods have been used in classrooms around the world. Schafer’s educational philosophy encourages children to consider how they themselves can create music by thinking outside the box to find interesting sounds from unexpected sources.

Sources consulted: Canadian Music Centre, Arcana Productions, and the Encyclopedia of Music in Canada.

Notes on terminology

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.

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. His definition considers that we are linked to the natural world through its voice, and encourages us to examine what first stirred human communities to form sound into cohesive and expressive patterns such as music, dance, and even speech.

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.