Listen Up, Canada!

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

Grades
3-6

Gitanjali

The sounds of Gitanjali

Listen to I Am Here to Sing Thee Songs from Gitanjali by R. Murray Schafer, a composition inspired by the poetry of Bengali artist Rabindranath Tagore.

The music starts with just rattles and a soprano singing. Then a new sound is introduced. Can you tell what it is? If you said a drum, you are correct! Now, can you be more specific? Here are some clues. The drum is goblet shaped and is often heard in Middle Eastern music. Yes! It is a darabukkah!

As you listen again, notice that some of the drum beats are heavy and some are light. The heavier sounds are played in the middle of the drum. You can practice doing this. Say ‘dum’ with a low voice and pat your left knee; say ‘tak’ with a high voice and pat your right knee.

Here’s how Schafer wrote it:

Download: Darabukkah Rhythm from Gitanjali by R. Murray Schafer

Darabukkah rhythm

Now try to tap the pattern along with the drum gently as you listen again to the music. Not easy, is it!

Keep listening carefully and you will hear that the darabukkah plays throughout most of the song. It is a very important part of the score!

Listening as inspiration

Have students create a piece of visual art or a dance (or any other type of artistic expression!) inspired by Gitanjali. Share and discuss their creations with each other.

If time permits, seek out some of the other wonderful music by R. Murray Schafer on YouTube. Play some selections for your students, and have them decide what Schafer piece will inspire their choreography, drawings, poems, etc. Selected and suggested recordings of Murray R. Schafer’s work can be found below.

  • String Quartet No. 8; Theseus; Beauty and the Beast, music by R. Murray Schafer performed by Marie-Danielle Parent, Julie Nesrallah, Jennifer Swartz, and the Molinari String Quartet (Quatuor Molinari)
  • A Garden of Bells; Gamelan; Felix’s Girls; Miniwanka; Snowforms; Sun; Epitaph for Moonlight; Fire, music by R. Murray Schafer performed by the Vancouver Chamber Choir
  • Gitanjali; The Garden of the Heart; Adieu, Robert Schumann, music by R. Murray Schafer, performed by Donna Brown, Judith Forst, Annamaria Popescu, and the National Arts Centre Orchestra
  • Flute Concerto; Harp Concerto; The Darkly Splendid Earth; The Lonely Traveller, music by R. Murray Schafer performed by Robert Airken, Judy Loman, Jacques Israelievitch, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra

YouTube is a wonderful resource! Many Schafer compositions can be heard here for free, including performances by choirs, orchestras, string quartets, and chamber ensembles.

Further listening using the elements of music

As you listen to Gitanjali with your students, consider how Schafer uses the other elements of music in this piece. Here’s a list of definitions to get you started.

Teacher note: You can also use this list as you’re working with the Character Tunes for The Concert in Skywater Hollow.

Melody: This is the part of the music you can hum, whistle, or sing to yourself. You might call it a tune. Tiny’s Tune is a melody, and the soprano you hear in Gitanjali sings the melody most of the time.

Rhythm: This is the flow of faster and slower sounds, usually in relation to a steady beat. If you clap all the notes of a melody or all the words of a song you are clapping the rhythm. Rhythm can be complicated, constantly changing, or very simple and repetitive. The daraukkah player in Gitanjali repeats the same rhythm many times.

Metre: This is the part of the music you can tap your foot to – the steady beat. You will usually find that the main pulses fit into groups of twos, threes, or fours. The music for Tiny’s Tune, the Bully-Beast Chant and the River Ostinato are all in a 4 metre.

Tempo: This is the speed of the music. The speed may vary from very slow to very fast. Most composers use Italian words to describe the tempo: adagio, for example, means very slow; andante, moderate; allegro, lively; and presto, very fast. Try the Bully-Beast chant using different tempi (that’s plural for tempo). How does a change in tempo change the mood or the character?

Dynamics: Dynamics refer to how loudly or softly the music should be played. Do you think the Bully Beasts speak with piano (soft) or forte (loud) voices? What dynamics will you use for Tiny’s tune? Schafer’s Gitanjali is full of dynamic contrasts. Notice that gradually increasing or decreasing the number of instruments playing together causes the music to grow louder (crescendo) or softer (descrescendo).

Timbre: The specific kind of sound each instrument makes is its timbre or tone colour. Sometimes timbre is very obvious – a trumpet’s unique sound is very different from that of a harp, for instance. When the instruments are from the same family, the difference is more subtle. Think about how the bright violin sounds different from a darker-toned viola or from the deep, low cello, even if it’s playing exactly the same note. The Bully-Beasts have three different timbres: squeaking, snuffling and grunting!

Harmony: Underneath the melody are clusters of notes called chords, each of which sounds different. These chords can stand alone or they can support a melody. Some chords sound gentle and pleasant; some may sound harsh or unpleasant. The composer uses these to create the kind of mood she wants at each moment. When you play Tiny’s Tune at the same time as the River Ostinato, you are creating harmony.