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- Carl Orff's philosophies in Musci Education
-
- While Carl Orff is a very seminal composer of the 20th century, his greatest
- success and influence has been in the field of Music Education. Born on July
- 10th in Munich, Germany in 1895, Orff refused to speak about his past almost
- as if he were ashamed of it. What we do know, however, is that Orff came
- from a Bavarian family who was very active in the German military. His
- father's regiment band would often play through some of the young Orff's
- first attempts at composing. Although Orff was adamant about the secrecy of
- his past, Moser's Musik Lexicon says that he studied in the Munich Academy of
- Music until 1914. Orff then served in the military in the first world war.
- After the war, he held various positions in the Mannheim and Darmstadt opera
- houses then returned home to Munich to further study music. In 1925, and for
- the rest of his life, Orff was the head of a department and co-founder of the
- Guenther School for gymnastics, music, and dance in Munich where he worked
- with musical beginners. This is where he developed his Music Education
- theories. In 1937, Orff's Carmina Burana premiered in Frankfurt, Germany.
- Needless to say, it was a great success. With the success of Carmina Burana,
- Orff orphaned all of his previous works except for Catulli Carmina and the En
- trata which were rewritten to be acceptable by Orff.
- One of Orff's most admired composers was Monteverdi. In fact, much of
- Orff's work was based on ancient material. Orff said:
- I am often asked why I nearly always select old material, fairy tales and
- legends for my stage works. I do not look upon them as old, but rather as
- valid material. The time element disappears, and only the spiritual power
- remains. My entire interest is in the expression of spiritual realities. I
- write for the theater in order to convey a spiritual attitude.1
- What Orff is trying to say here is that he does not use "old" material, but
- material that is good enough to be used again. If one eliminates the fact
- that this material was written many years ago, then there is nothing to stop
- that material from being any less legitimate in recent times.
- Orff's work in Music Education has been astounding. In the early 1920's,
- Orff worked with Mary Wigman. Wigman was a pupil of Emile Jaques-Dalcroze,
- another very influential name in Music Education. In fact, Orff's approach
- to music is very similar to Dalcroze's, but Orff focuses on education through
- percussion instruments. In 1924, Orff joined Dorthee Guenther and together
- they founded the Guenther School. The schools focus was coordinated teaching
- of gymnastics, dance, and music. Orff believed that music, movement, and
- speech are not separate entities in and of themselves, but that they form a
- unity that he called elemental music. When Orff refers to elemental music,
- he means the music, movement, or speech created by children that requires no
- special training, or in other words, the things that children do without
- really thinking about it. The basis for the Orff method is the belief that
- the historical development of music is reenacted in the life of every
- individual. This means that, when a child is young, he is similar to a
- primitive human being - at least musically - in that both are naive and rely
- primarily on natural rhythms and movement to make music. Although this
- theory has not been very widely accepted by most music educators, this is
- where the Orff method of teaching music begins. The Orff method was so
- impressive to the public that the Ministry of Culture recommended the
- adoption of the Guenther-Orff experiments in the elementary schools in
- Berlin. Unfortunately, the rise of Hitler and the outbreak of war stunted
- the growth of these plans. Finally, in 1948, the German broadcasting
- authorities urged Orff to resume his educational activities.
- The Orff approach, not unlike the Suzuki method, begins with the idea that
- music should be learned by a child the same way a language is learned.
- Suzuki calls this the "mother tongue approach". A child learns to speak
- simply by listening and then imitating and then, later in life, the child
- learns to interpret symbols as a written form of that language. So, then, a
- child should learn music in the same way. At an early age, a child is
- exposed to music and learns to sing and play percussion instruments, then,
- later in the child's musical development, he learns to interpret the symbols
- on a score as music. The music a child learns during this time of his life
- is very simple melodies that involve a lot of moving. Orff believed that
- rhythm was the most important part of music. This is because rhythm is what
- movement, speech, and music all have in common. Rhythm is what ties these
- all together to make what Orff called elemental music. Orff uses this
- approach because it is believed that children must feel and move to music
- before they are asked to conceptualize about it.
- Speech is one of the key elements in the Orff approach not only because
- speech is an inherently rhythmic action, but because Orff was the only one of
- the major educational philosophers (Dalcroze, Kodaly, and Suzuki) to use
- speech in this way. Orff's thought was that a transition from speech to
- rhythmic activities and then to song was the most natural for a child. So,
- the student moves from speech to body rhythms such as clapping or tapping,
- and then finally leads to the playing of an instrument. Orff's philosophy
- continues on in this way even after a child has developed a skill for an
- instrument. For example, concepts such as meter, accent, and anacrusis are
- introduced in speech patterns, reinforced in other activities, and then
- studied in a musical context. A specific example of this is the teaching of
- the concept of a canon. A simple yet varied chant or other form of rhythmic
- speech is taught to the class. The students then use the idea of a "round"
- to explore how each entrance by each different part is achieved. Finally,
- the teacher notates the rhythmic pattern and shows how each part of the
- pattern works with the other parts.
- Orff's approach to Music Education notes that speech, chant, and song are
- all points along the same line. That is to say that one leads directly to
- the next. Children's experiences with singing follow directly from speech.
- This means that melody is actually an extension or an outgrowth of rhythm.
- When children begin to learn to use their voices as musical instruments,
- they enter another pre-planned part of Orff's method. There is a very
- specific order in which students learn to use solfege. As with most other
- theories that involve singing, the descending minor third, sol-mi, is the
- first interval that is taught. Other tones follow in succession in this
- order: la, re, do, to complete the pentatonic scale, and then finally fa and
- ti. The Orff method uses the pentatonic scale because Orff believed it to be
- the native tonality of children. This is cohesive with Orff's belief that
- music history is relived in the development of each individual because he
- considered the pentatonic mode appropriate to the development of each child.
- The use of the pentatonic scale also gave the students confidence. After
- all, it's very difficult to improvise and sound bad when the only notes
- available are those in the pentatonic scale. This kind of constant
- affirmation is crucial to a child's development.
- The last part of Orff's elemental music is elemental movement. As stated
- earlier, the word elemental in this sense refers to the kind of action, in
- this case movement, in which the child participates with no prior training or
- instruction. Orff said that this kind of activity made it easier for
- children to become expressive. This is because children are more able to
- express their thoughts and feelings through movement and painting than
- through words. Allowing children to express themselves in this way allows
- them to use their imagination because, as we adults often forget, children
- have the most vivid imagination. After observing these actions, the teacher
- then relates them in some way to music and build musical concepts out of
- them. Unfortunately, many of the activities that adults scold their children
- for are the same ones that are the most suitable for expressing feelings,
- such as walking on tiptoe, hoping over imaginary obstacles, or spinning to
- the point of dizziness. These are actions that adults would react to as
- being 'fidgety' or 'squirmy' when, in fact, they are simply natural movements
- that children use to express themselves. The ideal Orff educator would
- encourage these behaviors and use them to teach musical concepts.
- The end goal of the Orff method is to develop a child's musical creativity.
- Where traditional Music Education dictates that a child must learn to read
- music right away in order to be a self-guided and independent musician, the
- Orff method focuses on the creative and expressive side of music.
- The instruments that are commonly associated with the Orff method
- distinguish it from other methods. Orff uses xylophones and various
- metalophones that use removable bars. This allows an educator to change bars
- for different modes or to remove unnecessary bars to keep from confusing
- young students. The Orff instruments are modeled after and are closely
- related to the Indonesian gamelans. These instruments allow great
- flexibility for children who have handicaps. For example, students with
- visual handicaps or hearing handicaps can hit just about anywhere on an Orff
- instrument set up to use a pentatonic scale so he can feel like he is being
- included.
- In conclusion, the Carl Orff has been a very influential person in the field
- of Music Education. He has demonstrated to us that the way to teach music to
- children is to let then go back to the basics, or elements, of speech,
- movement, and singing. He has reminded us how much we really expect children
- to learn music differently in the traditional method than it is natural for
- them to learn.
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