Ten to Teach Harmony

Ten to Teach Harmony
Author: Matthew Cremisio
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016-03-01
Genre:
ISBN: 9780787718053

Grades K-6 These ten expertly crafted lessons provide your students with opportunities to identify and perform harmony in several ways: singing partner songs, playing barred percussion instruments, illustrating harmony with movement, and playing recorder descants, to name a few! The included CD contains audio samples, PowerPoint presentations, reproducible music for students, and various visual aids that you can print or project to suit your needs

Etude

Etude
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1888
Genre: Music
ISBN:

Includes music.

Harmony Lessons, Book 1

Harmony Lessons, Book 1
Author: John W. Schaum
Publisher: Alfred Music
Total Pages: 44
Release:
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781457451775

A practical volume to follow the SCHAUM NOTE SPELLER, Book Two. This is a book that can be used by instrumental and vocal teachers who want their students to know some of the essentials of harmony, but who haven't the time to teach it as a separate subject. Thus, a piano teacher, for example, can teach harmony in conjunction with the regular piano lesson. At the end of Book II, we have employed harmony in an accompaniment sense rather than in the traditional four-part harmony way. Transposition has been treated both melodically and harmonically.

In Vital Harmony

In Vital Harmony
Author: Karen Glass
Publisher:
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2019-11-11
Genre:
ISBN: 9781700769800

Charlotte Mason looked at the world and saw that it was governed by universal laws, such as the law of gravity. Then she wondered. What if there were similar laws that governed the way people learn? If we knew what those laws were, we'd be able to pursue education along the most promising lines . She devoted her life to finding the key principles of education and then developing methods to make the most of them. The result is a comprehensive picture of living and learning that breathes life into education at every level--from babyhood to the adult years. It's not a rote system, but a flexible set of ideas that keep education in focus. These principles are for everyone concerned with teaching and learning. They are no more difficult to implement than the principle of gravity which allows you to walk, run, and even--when you know what you are doing--to soar.

The Etude

The Etude
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 874
Release: 1907
Genre: Music
ISBN:

Includes music.

A Theory of Harmony

A Theory of Harmony
Author: Ernst Levy
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2024-01-01
Genre: Music
ISBN: 143849632X

Ernst Levy was a visionary Swiss pianist, composer, and teacher who developed an approach to music theory that has come to be known as "negative harmony." Levy's theories have had a wide influence, from young British performer/composer Jacob Collier to jazz musicians like Steve Coleman. His posthumous text, A Theory of Harmony, summarizes his innovative ideas. A Theory of Harmony is a highly original explanation of the harmonic language of the modern era, illuminating the approaches of diverse styles of music. By breaking through age-old conceptions, Levy was able to reorient the way we experience musical harmony. British composer/music pedagogue Paul Wilkinson has written a new introduction that offers multiple points of entry to Levy’s work to make this text more accessible for a new generation of students, performers, and theorists. He relates Levy's work to innovations in improvisation, jazz, twentieth-century classical music, and the theoretical writings of a wide range of musical mavericks, including Harry Partch, Hugo Riemann, and David Lewin. Wilkinson shows how A Theory of Harmony continues to inspire original musical expression across multiple musical genres.

Sessional Papers

Sessional Papers
Author: Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons
Publisher:
Total Pages: 556
Release: 1902
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN:

The Educational Ideas of Charles Fourier

The Educational Ideas of Charles Fourier
Author: David Zeldin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 157
Release: 2019-06-04
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0429632223

Originally published in 1969, this book aims to show that Charles Fourier has much to say that is of interest to modern edcationlists. Fourier hardly ever figures in histories of education because only recent developments in educational practice have shown his ideas to be of topical and practical importance to the schoolteacher and the planner of today. Fourier devised a system of education to suit a self-infulgent, democratic society, in which children's energies could be used in ways which were both socially useful and personally rewarding. He was a pioneer advocate of comprehensive education, so as to establish harmy between classes. He urged vocational training and guidance, so as to establish harmony between men and their work. He devised close links between education and industry, to bring pleasure into both school and work and to integrate the two. He was one of the first to plan social service to the community by children. This prophetic though eccentric writer, sometimes extravagant, often amusing, but always endearing, who has already exerted much influence on socialist theory, deserves to be better known by students of education.