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1st and
3rd Graders “Travel” through Sound and Time
by Karine Blemur-Chapman
“Sounds show us what is inside of us, in our minds and hearts.” —Darius
Kaufmann
Imagine yourself lying quietly in a cool, dark room, listening
to mesmerizing hums of ancient instruments and rhythmic chanting.
What would you envision? Where would you go?
Last week, the musicians of Journeys with
Sound, Darius Kaufmann
and Ron Pizzi, invited Lower School students to take mystical inter-dimensional
journeys. Just as people from cultures around the world have done
for centuries, the first and third graders were encouraged to pay
close attention to what they were feeling, hearing and seeing in
their heads as they traveled between time and place. The evocative
sounds of deer-skinned drums, Aztec wind whistles, Scottish Bagpipes,
Tibetan chimes, ocarinas, and crystal singing bowls coaxed from
their minds dreams of courageous warriors, horned dragons, pink
ponies and unicorns, wise bats, spirit-chasing monsters, silver
river fish, grieving hawks, prehistoric civilizations, and tree-top
flights. “I traveled through time, making visits into different
centuries,” shared a third grader. “I surrendered
to the moment.”
The Journeys with Sound ensemble has been visiting BFS for five
years. In particular, third graders are able to connect the experience
to what they are learning this year about the Haudenosaunee culture.
In music class, Piper Macleod has been teaching them to play the
traditional Native American flute and compose simple songs. Darius
showed them how to creatively improvise by combining basic finger
movements. Overall, the interactive presentation encourages all
students to acknowledge the interconnectedness of the natural world,
to search for symbolic meaning in their imaginings, to and discover
their inner serenity and power through music.
Try this at home!
An Australian Aboriginal didgeridoo is wind instrument made of
a dead eucalyptus branch which has been hollowed out by ants
and termites. When played, it creates a vibration that imitates
animal sounds. (Some say it sounds like the scientifically magnified
echo of the Earth spinning through the universe.) You can make
your own didgeridoo by painting a cardboard tube of wrapping
paper. By buzzing your lips and blowing into one of the openings,
your can experiment with creating your own animal sound.
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