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Saturday, February 28, 2009, from 10:00 am to 10:15 am
With Tawnie Olson — Composition Instructor, ACES Educational Center for the Arts (New Haven, CT, USA)
(The following is the complete presentation, provided by Tawnie Olson)
Good morning! My name is Tawnie Olson, and today I am going to offer a window into one approach to contemporary composition pedagogy by describing some of the things I do as a composition teacher at the Educational Center for the Arts (hereafter ECA), an arts magnet high school in New Haven, Connecticut.
ECA was founded in 1973 with the idea of providing an intensive arts education to students in Visual Arts, Music, Theatre, Dance and Creative Writing. It is a half-time interdistrict magnet school, which means that our students complete their academic coursework at their sending schools in the morning and then are bussed to us in the afternoons. Our 300 students come from 23 different school districts and we have a very diverse but well-integrated student body. An unusual feature of ECA since its inception is that our teachers are not arts educators but “teaching artists” who teach a few hours a week at ECA and maintain active professional careers as artists at the same time.
The ECA Music Department offers courses in music theory and composition on Mondays and Wednesdays, and rehearses large and small ensembles on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Students are placed in theory classes based on their coursework and their scores on placement exams that are given at the beginning and end of each year. All students in level two theory or above (just over half of our students) are placed composition classes. My colleague, Jeff Fuller, teaches two classes in songwriting and jazz composition, and I teach two classes in classical composition. Most students study with both Mr. Fuller and myself, regardless of whether they are more interested in jazz or classical composition.
Over the course of four years of teaching composition at ECA, I have begun to develop my own approach to composition pedagogy, and I will discuss three aspects of this approach today. Namely: the use of contemporary compositions as models, the creation of frameworks that encourage students to use new techniques while allowing them creative freedom, and the importance of creating opportunities for collaborative projects, performances, and the recognition of student work.
Over the years at ECA, I have observed that students have an easier time composing when they have a clear framework within which to work. Most (though not all) students are not very familiar with new music, and I have found that having students study contemporary compositions and write short pieces using they techniques they learn is enormously helpful to them.
I do this as follows: I begin by giving the students a copy the score of the work at hand and asking them to listen to a recording of the work. They are given several questions to answer, questions that may focus on the form, extra musical meaning or (when improvisation is involved) the performance of the work. If possible, we then perform the work in class. Next, the students compose short works in which they must use or freely adapt the concepts we learned from the work studied. We then play and discuss student works in class.
I’d like to show you an example of one of these listening assignments, in which the students studied “Les Moutons de Panurge,” by Frederick Rzewski. This is a piece that is designed to make the performers lose their place in the music (they are, in fact, told not to try to rejoin the rest of the group when they get lost, but to continue boldly along the path they fall into), and that raises a real challenge to anyone who wishes to perform it. Since we planned to play this work in class and write and perform works based on it, I wanted students to think about how we might perform it convincingly. I therefore asked the students to listen carefully to 8th blackbird’s performance on their recording. The music that you’ll hear as you look at the assignment is Hommage ˆ Rzewski, written by one of the students and performed by the class.
[Play and Show example]
[Next slide]
Since we spend about half of the year working from models like this, I take a lot of time and care in selecting the works we study, and I’d like to briefly summarize the criteria I use in choosing these pieces.
You will observe that I have not made any mention of canon in the list of criteria above. I’ve made the decision that, as I am teaching a composition course and not a history course, the class should study pieces that are most helpful to the students as composers, rather than those that are deemed to be “representative” or “important.”
One concern about using existing works as guides for student compositions might be that students could be denied the opportunity to develop their individual voices as composers, and that their creativity could be stifled.
I have tried to avoid that danger in the following ways:
In my advanced class, students must use the process or technique in the piece we’ve studied, but they are free to creatively interpret or alter what they have learned.
[CHANGE SLIDE]
Here, for example, you can see two responses to Terry Riley’s In C. The student on the left followed Riley’s example closely in composing short melodic cells that the ensemble moves through and repeats according to the rules he devised. You’ll notice that the student added two new rules of her own at the bottom, but otherwise she stayed quite close to the model.
The second student, however, dispensed with Riley’s eighth notes and — more importantly — with any clearly defined rhythm. (Unfortunately, we did not record these works, but I can assure you that when we played them through in class they sounded quite different.)
I would also like to mention that in the second half of the year students in both the beginner and the advanced classes compose larger works. In those pieces students are given even more freedom to choose what they write, though I do ask them to use at least one concept we studied in the first semester.
Of course, once students have written all of this music, it needs to be performed! There are three different forums in which student works are performed during the year: informal recitals during school hours, collaborations with other departments or with professional musicians, and the New Music Festival.
[Play Yoni’s piece]
This spring the Maenad Ensemble is also going to do a workshop/performance of works by our beginner students.
[Show Louis image and piece]
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