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Learn Online

Virtual Teaching Resources for Music Educators & Lifelong Learners

Sponsored by Gail & Dan Kopp

Overview Build Your Own Music Listening Resource Modules! Chat Videos for Musical Elements Chat Videos for Specific Works Chats Videos with Listening Guide On Screen Miscellaneous Chat Videos Glossary of Terms Fall in Love with Music 8 Part Series Virtual Music Listening Lectures
Overview

 

For over 30 years, The Discovery Orchestra’s mission has been to teach listening skills that help people really connect with classical music.

The Discovery Orchestra would like to share resources we have developed with the hope they will benefit anyone who would love to get more enjoyment out of actively listening to music.

We have organized our Discovery Orchestra Chats, which are available for free on YouTube, into various categories to make them easily usable. Our Chat videos are short (5-15 minute) music listening lessons, that focus on everything from rhythm and melody to a composer’s life and times. They are perfect for teachers to engage students, or for a quick journey into a specific piece or musical style. You can listen to them individually, or binge on an entire category if you like!

We also offer a collection of Maestro Maull’s Listening Guides for you to download for free. Maestro Maull pairs these visual guides with recommended YouTube recordings so you can incorporate this resource into your listening experience or lesson plan.  Listening Guides are visual "roadmaps" highlighting specific details to notice as one is listening to a piece of music.

We hope these materials will assist you in your journey to more fulfilling listening experiences. If you enjoy using our resources, we would love to hear from you – please email us at Rick@DiscoveryOrchestra.org with any feedback!

Build Your Own Music Listening Resource Modules!

Are you looking to curate the perfect set of music listening tools and resources for your class or student ensemble?

Simply use our "SEARCH" function to type in your subject (i.e. "Beethoven," "Dynamics," "String quartet," etc.) and we'll automatically assemble  a set of Chat Videos on YouTube, blog posts and Listening Guides relating to that subject.

The "SEARCH" function (the magnifying glass) can be found at the top right corner on each page of our website.

Chat Videos for Musical Elements

Click on the italicized title link to watch the Chat on YouTube. There is a description of each Chat on YouTube as well as on our website. 

Dynamics

Dynamics

Noticing Dynamics

Form

Great Intros

Variation Form

Another Look at Variation Form

Variation Form 3

Musical Paragraphs

Revisiting Paragraphs

Codas

Melody

Aspects of Melody

Counter Melodies

What’s an Ostinato?

Thematic Transformation

Ornaments

Ornaments Episode 2

Repetition & Sequence

Question & Answer

Did You Say Modal?

Follow That Subject

Incredible Gas Mileage

A Very Special Melody

A Very Special Melody Part 2

How Fast Can You Sing?

Harmony

Suspension & Resolution

Cadence

Deceptive Cadences

Pedal Point

Chord Progression

Change That Chord

Change That Chord Again

The Land of 6th’s & Octaves

Mood

Moods

Lightness to Darkness

Darkness to Lightness

Pain in Music

Musical Comfort Food

Utter Simplicity and Effective Surprise

Effective Surprise Part 2

Another Effective Surprise

Rhythm

A Matter of Meter

Name That Meter

Noticing Tempo Change

Noticing Tempo Change #2

Syncopation

Rests

How Fast Can You Play?

Stealing Time (Tempo Rubato)

Texture

Texture Part 1

Texture Part 2

Texture Part 3

A Texture Quiz

Timbre

Name that Timbre

Name that Timbre Part 2

Name that Timbre Part 3

Change of Timbre

Clarinet Timbres

 

 

Chat Videos for Specific Works

Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite

Lullaby

Finale

Vivaldi’s Four Seasons

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Ravel’s String Quartet

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4 (Movement 4)

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

Part 7

Part 8

Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 23 – Appassionata (Movement 3)

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

Brahms' Rhapsodie Op. 79, No. 2 in G Minor

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Dvorak's Symphony No. 9

Chats Videos with Listening Guide On Screen

Follow along with our Listening Guide on the screen.

Stravinsky’s Firebird Suite (Lullaby & Finale)

Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 (Movement 1)

Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 (Movement 3)

Handel’s Messiah (Hallelujah Chorus)

Dvorak’s Symphony No. 9

Miscellaneous Chat Videos

Program Music

Program Music

Another Episode of Program Music

What in the World

Major/Minor

Major or Minor

Major & Minor Revisited

Special Effects

Pizzicato

Spiccato

Double Stop

Glissando

Tremolo

Subtle Gestures

Harp

Text Painting

Text Painting

Fiddle

Latin Fiddle

Cajun Fiddle

Celtic Fiddle

Blues Fiddle

Old Time Fiddle

Interpretation

Interpretation

Glossary of Terms

Click here for our 2 page glossary of listening guide terms.

Fall in Love with Music 8 Part Series

George Marriner Maull, Artistic Director of The Discovery Orchestra, and Midnight Media Group have created an entertaining music listening series that helps viewers connect – both intellectually and emotionally – with classical music. Conceived and presented by Maestro Maull, Fall In Love With Music offers streamlined, effective pathways to musical understanding based on the educational strategies of Dr. Saul Feinberg, a pioneer and recognized authority in the teaching of music listening skills.  In addition to sharing music excerpts on the piano, Maestro Maull uses recordings from the Naxos Music Library as well as live performances by string and jazz quartets to demonstrate the listening concepts.  Each episode, enhanced with engaging visual graphics and a bit of humor, has a special focus and builds upon ideas explored in previous episodes to create a larger understanding of the listening process.  However, each episode can be enjoyed on its own:

Episode 1: Our Musical Focus – Maestro Maull jumps right into creating an “aha” around listening versus hearing and the process of noticing detail in music using the third movement of Bela Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta as the vehicle.

Episode 1 on YouTube

Episode 2:  Why Aren’t We Listening? – This episode examines the factors that predispose people not to listen, but also offers an opportunity for some focused guided listening in the first movement of Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 4 "Italian".  Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 makes a humorous appearance, and a portion of the third movement of Bela Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta is reprised.

Episode 2 on YouTube

Episode 3:  Is This Music? – Viewers are asked to think about what are the most basic ingredients of music.  Brief excerpts from the Gregorian Chant Victimae Paschali Laudes; the Medieval Song Quan vei la lauzeta mover; the 3rd movement of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3; 1st movement of Mozart's String Quartet, K. 387; 3rd movement of Rachmaninoff's Symphony No.2; 1st and 2nd movements of Bartok's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta, and Desmond's Take Five, played by the Dan Crisci Jazz Quartet, are used to stimulate this thought process. Morton Subotnick's electronic music composition Silver Apples of the Moon is used to encourage speculation about what can be considered to actually be music... or not.

Episode 3 on YouTube

Episode 4: The Elements of Music - The elements or basic ingredients of music are defined. Some of the musical excerpts in Episode 3 receive brief encores to prod the viewer’s memory.    Very brief references to the 1st movement of Mozart's Piano Sonata, K. 545; Bach's Little Prelude in D, BWV 936;  3rd movement of Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2;  1st movement of Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 4, "Italian" and Morton Subotnick's Silver Apples of the Moon – as well as a bit of humor - are all used to refine these definitions.

Episode 4 on YouTube

Episode 5:  How Listening Affects Us – What happens to us, psychologically-emotionally, when we listen to classical music?  Open-mindedness and flexible thinking as prerequisites are explored using visual puzzles and musical examples. Handel's fugue from his Concerto Grosso, Op.6, No. 7 reinforces flexible listening. Effective surprise in music is presented using Bela Bartok's For Children Vol. II, No. 12 for piano.  The 3rd movement of Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2 is used to demonstrate tension and release.

Episode 5 on YouTube

Episode 6:  Paragraphs Without Words - Listeners are encouraged to grasp larger chunks or "paragraphs" of musical information.  Ruby My Dear by Thelonius Monk is played by the Dan Crisci Jazz Quartet.  Robert Schumann's piano composition Wichtige Begebenheit from his Kinderszenen presents another opportunity to notice larger sections and introduces the concept of program music. Mozart's clever Variations on Ah! vous dirai-je Maman, K. 265/300e also for piano solo, reinforces the concept of open-minded listening.

Episode 6 on YouTube

Episode 7: Leave It to Beethoven! Episode 8: Putting It All Together, provide an in-depth exploration of the 4th movement of Beethoven's String Quartet, Op. 18, No. 2.  Concepts presented in the previous six episodes are revisited in this "new" context.  The members of the Amphion String Quartet join Maestro Maull for this opportunity to experience an entire movement of classical music. Each episode contains a complete performance of the movement: one at the beginning of Episode 7, prior to the detailed investigation - the other at the conclusion of Episode 8.

Episode 7 on YouTube

Episode 8 on YouTube

Virtual Music Listening Lectures

Looking for a complimentary 30-minute interactive music listening lecture for your classroom?

Maestro Maull regularly visits music students and provides short, interactive and engaging lectures about noticing more detail in classical compositions.

This can be done virtually with your music students anywhere you are located!

Some of his prior lectures have been on Vivaldi’s Four Seasons,  Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus, Berlioz’s Roman Carnival Overture, Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto #4 and Handel’s Royal Fireworks Overture.  If there is something else your group would like to learn about, please ask us!

Just remember the focus will always be on noticing more detail in classical music, and would be best suited for middle school and older students.

For more information, please email Michael@DiscoveryOrchestra.org

Sign Up Here to get your FREE Listening Guides!

Audience Member with Listening Guide

Each Listening Guide is paired with a YouTube recording. Follow along, listen and explore the music! Available Guides are:

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Discover Mozart's Variations on a Familiar Tune

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Romeo and Juliet, Overture-Fantasy After Shakespeare

Florence Price - Symphony No. 1, Movement III, “Juba Dance”

John Philip Sousa - The Stars & Stripes Forever March

Arcangelo Corelli - Concerto Grosso, Opus 6 No.4

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from Candid/GuideStar. This seal gives funders insights into our
organization’s programs, demographics, diversity,
and impact, all enabling educated grant-giving decisions.

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