Listen Up, Canada!

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

Grades
3-6

Ears Open!

Introduction

Murray Schafer was interested in the sounds of the world around us as a source of ideas for creating. He coined the term soundscape to describe music that captures or imitates the sounds from any environment. He has led countless classrooms of children and adults in composing soundscapes, first through deep listening and moving on to creative improvisation.

Many wonderfully interactive exercises are available in his publications for teachers. A few are generously shared here. Use them with your students to clean out those ears and awaken the next generation of Canadian Composers!

Sound exploration exercises

Time to clean your ears

Step 1. Close your eyes for 30 seconds and listen to the sounds all around you. What different things can you hear? How many can you write down?

Step 2. Share your list with a partner. Did they hear the same sounds as you, or different ones?

Step 3. Try and group your sounds into different categories, such as sounds made by humans, technological sounds, or sounds from nature.

Step 4. Make a picture of each sound and use these to make a graphic score of your soundscape experience.

Interesting sound

Ask your students to bring an interesting sound to school. Have students share their sounds and explain why they found them interesting. What can you create together now? Consider the next exercise, Imitating Sounds, as a follow-up activity if desired. As Schafer says, “Then you have a repertoire of 30 sounds to create from. A homemade orchestra that didn’t cost anything.”

Imitating sounds

Sometimes composers write music to imitate sounds or feelings.

Step 1. Use your orchestra of interesting sounds or classroom instruments (recorders, Orff instruments, small percussion) to discover what you can imitate.

Step 2. Solicit student ideas – perhaps they will want to imitate a waterfall, laughter, or a bird call – let them suggest both the sound and the instrument they think will fit.

Step 3. Try it out. Keep asking “Anything else?” as long as the ideas are flowing.

Newspaper magic

Step 1. Take a single sheet of a newspaper and challenge the students to pass it around without any sound (very challenging!).

Step 2. Introduce the newspaper as a new musical instrument and ask a few students to try making three different sounds. Murray Schafer emphasizes that students should “make an original sound,” and as the paper gets passed, he challenges them saying “It’s going to get more difficult because I don’t want to hear the same sound twice!”

As the game progresses, students see the musical potential of an everyday object, or what Schafer refers to as “the music of the world playing around you all the time.”

Sound location exercises

I hear with my little ear…

A game based on “I Spy” in which a person says: “I hear with my little ear something that begins with…” The first letter of the object is given and everyone tries to guess what it is.

Follow that sound!

Step 1. Sit in a circle formation. Ask a volunteer to make a sound everyone can hear. It should be easy to repeat.

Step 2. The volunteer makes the sound while moving about the circle while the seated students follow the sound by pointing with their right hand, eyes closed.

Step 3. Teacher claps and says “Open!” after a few moments. Students open their eyes and check to where they are pointing to determine whether or not they were successful sound locators.

Step 4. Make the game a little more complex by adding a second volunteer. Students follow the first with the right hand, and the second with the left, eyes closed of course!

Locate the can

Step 1. Take a pop can, start crumpling it and ask students to close their eyes and point to the sound of the can. Move around the room as you do this.

Step 2. Drop the can and then tap a student on the head to go and find it, but they must keep their eyes closed. Murray Schafer learned this game at a school for the blind in Japan. It shows how our sense of hearing helps us locate ourselves in space.

Graphic notation exercises

Drawing sounds, sounding drawings

Step 1. A series of contrasted sounds is performed, using various objects at hand in the room: a ruler, a broom, a pail – any quite ordinary sounds.

Step 2. The class draws the sounds, beginning when each sound begins and ending when it ends. The drawings are short impressions only, but if the sounds are quite different, each drawing will have a different character. One sound might be a soft swish, another a loud rasping, another a steady tapping, another a falling crash, etc.

Step 3. Let the students compare their drawings. Are there any perceptible similarities?

Step 4. See if the drawings can be changed back into sounds. Ask your students to produce sounds with their voices to correspond with what they have drawn.

Interpreting a graphic score

Here is a graphic score R. Murray Schafer created. Ask the students, “How would you perform this?” Have them make up their version(s) using “found instruments” like keys, papers, shoes, etc. Give each student composition a title, and experiment with having students conduct some of the performances.

  • Reading list: Books by R. Murray Schafer

    • My Life on Earth & Elsewhere, a memoir
    • The Composer in the Classroom
    • Ear Cleaning: Notes for an Experimental Music Course
    • HearSing: 75 Exercises in Listening and Creating Music
    • The New Soundscape: A Handbook for the Modern Teacher
    • The Rhinoceros in the Classroom
    • Sound Education: 100 Exercises in Listening and Sound-Making
    • The Thinking Ear: Complete Writings on Music Education
    • When Words Sing