Carl Orff the Music Educator doc


Carl Orff the Music Educator

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.

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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