My school recently (last week) agreed to providing a yearly subscription to Soundtrap.com's new EDU website https://www.soundtrap.com/edu/, which gives all of my students in the Upper Elementary and Middle School grades their own Soundtrap account with unlimited space for projects and access to over 2700 loops. I could not be happier. The simplicity, ease of use and ability to share and collaborate on projects instantly created a huge buzz with the students....I can already see that this was a very good decision.
I also see that although this is probably the most powerful creation tool I have been able to offer my students, it does not mean that they will have instant success composing and producing original music that they can share with the world as their own. There are some basic principles and many lessons to teach in order to get them using this technology as a tool to make original music. I will outline some of those here.
1. Making the leap.
My approach with new technology is usually to jump in the deep end and see what happens. So in that spirit, I sent all of my Middle School and Upper El students a link to join and let them go to town. No assignment, no direction. I just open the doors and let them play. I did ask them to share their projects with me. The whole experience has been great, I love getting the message "Evan wants to share his project with you" in my inbox. I can just click and play and hear what they have done within a few seconds. Occasionally I make adjustments, add a part here and there and message them back. All of this happening on the outskirts of actual class/teaching time and it feels like I am hanging out with the students in their domain. Not everyone is on board, but in this case, the students have been getting other students interested and signing on, the snowball effect is apparent.
In hindsight: I may have made some sort of simple assignment that is required in order to get everyone up and running right away, although I can still do that, and now I have some mavericks that can assist in getting the new students up and running.
2. At first, it is all about the loops.
With the Soundtrap Edu account, students have access to a huge loop library. Loops are short snipets of sounds, (2,4,8,or 16 beats long) that have been professionally recorded and mastered and can be placed into a track and repeated as much or little as the user desires. So far, my students are showing a great affinity for the drum and bass loops, which is great. They have a good instinct for the foundational aspects of music creation. There are many many more loops to play with, so it will be interesting to see how they use them. Here is a screenshot of the loop categories:
Each of these categories contains many many loop choices. So far my students have focused on DRUMS, BEATS and BASS loops. |
3. Moving forward - First lesson ideas, structure and harmony.
So being one week in, I am already getting an idea of how I can not only provide the students with this amazing tool, but also guide them through a process of creating a song that has complex structure and some harmonic movement. Here are some ideas:
Mapping Music Lesson:
Have the students pick a favorite song, map out the basic structure, then apply that structure to their piece. Here is an example that a student mapped out of one of her favorite songs (the numbers on the right are the length in measures).
She then took this map to Soundtrap.com and began creating loops that matched the length of each part. She decided that 12 measures was too long for the verses, so she shortened them to 8, which is great, all part of the process of taking ownership. The key: She is not making a replica of her favorite song, she is just using the skeleton to create something totally new.
Chord Progression Lesson:
Earlier in the year I gave some lessons on popular chord progressions, I-IV-V-I and the like. Some of my middle school students took these lessons to Noteflight.com (incredible free online music notation software) and wrote some melodies to lay over these simple chord progressions. We then exported the written music as a .MIDI file. I found that if you rename the file to a .MID (take away the I), you can simply drag and drop them into Soundtrap! The different voices in the score automatically became separate tracks, which we could then assign different instruments and sounds to. It also imported all the tempo and key data, which meant we could then add loops and really bring the music to another level.
As an added bonus, (which I did not see coming)...When the student played the enhanced piece for the string orchestra they immediately asked if they could play it at the next concert. So she printed off the parts and now we will be performing the piece. She will also release the studio version on the next School album!!
You can visit http://golikethewindmusic.bandcamp.com to hear the last 10 years of original student work from my students at Go Like The Wind School in Ann Arbor, MI. It is already apparent that Soundtrap.com will play a huge role in the next album set to release in June. I could not be more excited, and there is so much more to explore!!
1 comment:
Nice article. Good luck
Cathy
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