Lesson Plan: Music for Spring

With Spring fast approaching, I thought I would highlight one of the thousands of lesson plans for music teachers contained in the MusicFirst Classroom Content Library titled Music for Spring. Lots of great stuff in here to get your students listening, responding, and composing music inspired by the Spring season. I hope that you can use this lesson with your students!

Music For Spring

Objectives:

  • Students will listen and respond to a variety of pieces of instrumental music depicting springtime.

  • Students will create an original piece of music for spring.

Materials:

1. At your discretion, edit the choice of pieces for student listening.

2. Consider altering the assignment to response to 1 piece instead of 3

3. **CHOOSE how students will compose their own Spring music. You can use notation software such as Flat or Noteflight, or a digital audio workstation like Soundtrap.

Procedure:

Student Handout:

Music for Spring

Spring: warm sun, flowers blooming, birds singing.

This hopeful time of year is represented in music through many time periods.

In this lesson, you will

  1. Listen to a variety of different pieces of music

  2. Respond based on your listening

  3. Create your own spring-inspired song.

The music presented below is all instrumental music. There is a wealth of vocal music about spring.

You may include singing or spoken word in your creation.

1. Listen

Using the videos and/or the Spotify playlist below, sample each song.

Choose 3 that are VERY DIFFERENT from one another. They are listed somewhat by era & genre.

In the box below the playlist, list the three songs you chose, then describe, compare & contrast them. Use musical vocabulary as much as possible.

  1. "Spring" movement 1 - Antonio Vivaldi

  2. "Spring" movement 4 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

  3. "Pastoral" Symphony movement 1 - Ludwig van Beethoven

  4. Spring Song - Felix Mendelssohn

  5. "Spring" Symphony movement 3 - Robert Schumann

  6. The Lark Ascending - Ralph Vaughan Williams

  7. Morning Mood from Peer Gynt Suite - Edvard Grieg

  8. On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring - Frederick Delius

  9. Spring Song - Antonin Dvorak

  10. Le chocard des alpes - Olivier Messiaen

  11. Bird Concerto with Pianosong - Jonathan Harvey

  12. Swingtime in Springtime - Django Reinhardt

  13. Joy Spring - Clifford Brown

  14. Up Jumped Spring - Freddie Hubbard

"Spring" movement 1 - Antonio Vivaldi

"Spring" movement 4 - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

"Pastoral" Symphony movement 1 - Ludwig van Beethoven

Spring Song - Felix Mendelssohn

"Spring" Symphony movement 3 - Robert Schumann

The Lark Ascending - Ralph Vaughan Williams

Morning Mood from Peer Gynt Suite - Edvard Grieg

On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring - Frederick Delius

Spring Song - Antonin Dvorak

Le chocard des alpes - Olivier Messiaen

Bird Concerto with Pianosong - Jonathan Harvey

Swingtime in Springtime - Django Reinhardt

Joy Spring - Clifford Brown

Up Jumped Spring - Freddie Hubbard

Response Task

3 Pieces for Spring - Response

Description

Sample each of the pieces in the videos/playlist.

Choose 3, then listen to them all the way through.

In the space below,

  • Tell which three pieces of music you chose

  • Compare/contrast them using musical vocabulary as much as possible

  • Tell which is your favorite and why

If your teacher gives you the option to respond with audio or video, paste a link to your submission in the space. Be sure that you adjusted the sharing settings whereever you stored the file so your teacher can access it.

Create Task

Original Song for Spring

Description

Create a piece of music inspired by some aspect of the spring season that is at least 1 minute long. You may include lyrics/singing or spoken word.

Your teacher will give you specific instructions for creating your music. You may need to use specific software, including Flat, Noteflight, Soundtrap or other similar music creation programs.

Remember to structure the music for the listener. Choose 1 of these forms:

Through Composed: Intro - Main section - Outro No repeated sections

ABA (Ternary): Main idea - Contrasting Idea - Main idea again, usually with something added and a short ending (coda)

Rondo (ABACA): Like ABA/Ternary, but with 2 contrasting sections

Theme & Variations: Main tune or riff (theme) + repetitions. Repeat the main idea, changing aspects as the music progresses. The main tune is recognizable throughout.

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Resource: George Collier Transcriptions

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