Too many times we studio teachers teach only the instrument, piano and voice in my case, and neglect the other things that make one a well-rounded musicianâhistory, theory, ear training. So for my students I made up history notebooks focusing on one particular composer each year containing articles, worksheets, and listening labs. When the makeup of the studio suddenly increased to 40% voice students, I decided to make a notebook with them in mind, one on opera. Besides, even piano students needed to know about opera.
I began with worksheets on the history of opera and types of operas. Then we moved on to study the stories of 5 different operas, followed by a listening lab on one of the more famous arias from each opera. I live in a rural county. The closest thing to opera any of these students had ever seen or heard was their grandparentsâ reminiscences of Minnie Pearl and the Grand Olâ Opry. The answers I received on many of the listening labs often made me laugh out loud and taught me a lot about perspective.
âNessun dormaâ from Turandot: (All the recordings were in the original language of the opera.) On the question, âDescribe the melody,â a 6 year old wrote, âSounds Italian to me.â How could I argue with that?
Another question attempted to point out the emotion in the singersâ voices by asking, âWhere in the music do you think he sings, âI will win! I will win!â?â Though it was in Italian it was obvious; even the 6 year old got it. But one 10 year old thoroughly misunderstood the question and wrote, âI donât know, but he was so loud, he MUST have been outside somewhere.â
âLa donna mobileâ from Rigoletto: âWhat are the main difficulties of this aria?â A 9 year old answered, âHeâs trying to get a woman, but canât.â
We could not have left out Carmen, though presenting this less than moral character to children took a bit of discretion. We listened to the âHabanera,â which is, in reality, a dance. âCarmen likes to flirt a lot. How does the fact that she is singing to a dance make it sound âflirty?ââ A 9 year answered, âIt shows sheâs pretty smart if she can sing a dance!â
Because the majority of my singers were 14-16 year old girls, I chose Charlotte Churchâs recording over Maria Callasâs version of Carmen. Charlotte was only 15 at the time and I felt they could better relate to her. However, this brought about the question, âHow is her ability to sing this character likely to change as she gets older?â Talk about perspective, a 9 year old boy wrote, âSheâll soon be married and sheâd better not be flirting with other men!!!!â But a 16 year old girl wrote--now remember Charlotte was only 15 on this recording--âIt wonât be long till she is so old she wonât even remember how to flirt any more.â
Was this notebook successful? When I took up the final exams I wondered. The first question was âDefine opera.â An 11 year old wrote, âA type of music for men and women where you sing real LOUD.â
But I also had them write, both at the beginning of the study and at the end, what they honestly thought about opera. One 14 year old was very tactful at the beginning of the year when she wrote, âI think people who can sing it are very talented.â But at the end of the year she wrote, âIf this is opera, I really like it. And I learned not to ever say I donât like something when I donât really know anything about it.â
I wonder how many people approach the Bible that way? They believe it to be a book of myths, a storybook, only a suggestion for how to live, anything but the Word of God when they have absolutely no personal knowledge on the subject. They have never considered the evidence; they have never made comparisons to other ancient writings that are far less convincing. We have only 643 copies of Homerâs Iliad but over 5700 copies of the scriptures, and no one ever questions the completeness and accuracy of that Greek epic. We believe George Washington existed and became our first president. Why? Because of eyewitness accounts, the same type of accounts available in historical documents about Jesus. Even people who accept Jesus as the Son of God, question the validity of the New Testament because it was a translation, yet Jesus himself quoted a translation of the Old Testament, one about as far removed from him in time as the New Testament is from us, and all this barely skims the surface of internal and external evidences validating the Bible.
My students learned a valuable lesson the year we studied opera: donât judge until you check it out yourself. If you are wondering about the Bible, about Jesus, and even about the existence of a Creator, the only logical and fair thing is for you to do that too.
For the word of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us who are saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, And the discernment of the discerning will I bring to nought. Where is the wise? where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For seeing that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom knew not God, it was God's good pleasure through the foolishness of the preaching to save them that believe. 1 Corinthians 1:18-21
Dene Ward
I began with worksheets on the history of opera and types of operas. Then we moved on to study the stories of 5 different operas, followed by a listening lab on one of the more famous arias from each opera. I live in a rural county. The closest thing to opera any of these students had ever seen or heard was their grandparentsâ reminiscences of Minnie Pearl and the Grand Olâ Opry. The answers I received on many of the listening labs often made me laugh out loud and taught me a lot about perspective.
âNessun dormaâ from Turandot: (All the recordings were in the original language of the opera.) On the question, âDescribe the melody,â a 6 year old wrote, âSounds Italian to me.â How could I argue with that?
Another question attempted to point out the emotion in the singersâ voices by asking, âWhere in the music do you think he sings, âI will win! I will win!â?â Though it was in Italian it was obvious; even the 6 year old got it. But one 10 year old thoroughly misunderstood the question and wrote, âI donât know, but he was so loud, he MUST have been outside somewhere.â
âLa donna mobileâ from Rigoletto: âWhat are the main difficulties of this aria?â A 9 year old answered, âHeâs trying to get a woman, but canât.â
We could not have left out Carmen, though presenting this less than moral character to children took a bit of discretion. We listened to the âHabanera,â which is, in reality, a dance. âCarmen likes to flirt a lot. How does the fact that she is singing to a dance make it sound âflirty?ââ A 9 year answered, âIt shows sheâs pretty smart if she can sing a dance!â
Because the majority of my singers were 14-16 year old girls, I chose Charlotte Churchâs recording over Maria Callasâs version of Carmen. Charlotte was only 15 at the time and I felt they could better relate to her. However, this brought about the question, âHow is her ability to sing this character likely to change as she gets older?â Talk about perspective, a 9 year old boy wrote, âSheâll soon be married and sheâd better not be flirting with other men!!!!â But a 16 year old girl wrote--now remember Charlotte was only 15 on this recording--âIt wonât be long till she is so old she wonât even remember how to flirt any more.â
Was this notebook successful? When I took up the final exams I wondered. The first question was âDefine opera.â An 11 year old wrote, âA type of music for men and women where you sing real LOUD.â
But I also had them write, both at the beginning of the study and at the end, what they honestly thought about opera. One 14 year old was very tactful at the beginning of the year when she wrote, âI think people who can sing it are very talented.â But at the end of the year she wrote, âIf this is opera, I really like it. And I learned not to ever say I donât like something when I donât really know anything about it.â
I wonder how many people approach the Bible that way? They believe it to be a book of myths, a storybook, only a suggestion for how to live, anything but the Word of God when they have absolutely no personal knowledge on the subject. They have never considered the evidence; they have never made comparisons to other ancient writings that are far less convincing. We have only 643 copies of Homerâs Iliad but over 5700 copies of the scriptures, and no one ever questions the completeness and accuracy of that Greek epic. We believe George Washington existed and became our first president. Why? Because of eyewitness accounts, the same type of accounts available in historical documents about Jesus. Even people who accept Jesus as the Son of God, question the validity of the New Testament because it was a translation, yet Jesus himself quoted a translation of the Old Testament, one about as far removed from him in time as the New Testament is from us, and all this barely skims the surface of internal and external evidences validating the Bible.
My students learned a valuable lesson the year we studied opera: donât judge until you check it out yourself. If you are wondering about the Bible, about Jesus, and even about the existence of a Creator, the only logical and fair thing is for you to do that too.
For the word of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us who are saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, And the discernment of the discerning will I bring to nought. Where is the wise? where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For seeing that in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom knew not God, it was God's good pleasure through the foolishness of the preaching to save them that believe. 1 Corinthians 1:18-21
Dene Ward