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Vivaldi winter allegro
Vivaldi winter allegro







vivaldi winter allegro vivaldi winter allegro

They should be able to count to eight 11 times before the solo violin enters. Play the opening to ‘Winter’ - just until the solo violin enters (about 30 seconds) and ask your children to count to eight in their heads over and over in time with the music. Remind your children about Vivaldi and ask them to spread themselves around the hall or classroom so that they are not touching anyone else and can swing their arms around and move freely, you are going to make a dance! Structure sections of music into a bigger pieceįor this task you will need a large, empty space – the school hall would be ideal.Use words to inspire musical motifs and structure these into a piece.Manipulate words into a musical structure.Play and perform in solo and ensemble contexts, using voices and playing musical instruments with increasing accuracy, fluency, control and expression.Improvise and compose music for a range of purposes using the interrelated dimensions of music.Develop an understanding of the history of music.Appreciate and understand a wide range of high-quality live and recorded music drawn from different traditions and from great composers and musicians.Listen with attention to detail and recall sounds with increasing aural memory.Feel free to adapt it to suit your children and the resources you have available. This scheme of work is plotted out over six lessons. Glossary terms can be found underlined throughout. Unpitched percussion - percussion instruments that can only make a limited number of sounds – drums, shakers, woodblocks, tambourines, etc.Ritornello - A structure used in concertos where the full orchestra alternates with the soloist.Programme music - Music that tells a story or describes an event, place, emotion.Pitched percussion - percussion instruments that can play different pitches – xylophones, glockenspiels, chime bars, etc.Motif - A very short musical ‘idea’ – often just a sound or a rhythm.A solo concerto has one soloist, a concerto grosso has a group of soloists Concerto - A piece with a prominent solo, the full orchestra provides accompaniment.listen with attention to detail and recall sounds with increasing aural memory.improvise and compose music for a range of purposes using the interrelated dimensions of music.play and perform in ensemble contexts, using voices and playing musical instruments.









Vivaldi winter allegro