iGetIt! Music

Online music education courseware for non-musicians who want to learn how to write their own rock songs.

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Name: Jim Plamondon
Location: Austin, Texas, United States

This blog documents the development of JIMS iGetIt! Music System (JIMS). JIMS' goal is to help you Understand Music in 24 Hours™, if you are (a) a non-musician (b) who wants to learn how to write your own rock songs. Requiring no instrument other than your own computer, and without using traditional notation, JIMS is being designed to deliver a deep understanding of tonal structure...in just 24 hours.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Kodály, Wicki, and iSlate

The Kodály music education Methodstarts young students with pentatonic songs, then slowly introduces them to the "extra" diatonic intervals, and then eventually to the "extra" chromatic intervals.


Now, imagine that the youngest students were presented with a "pentatonic keyboard" in the Wicki/JIMS note-layout, like the one shown in the (non-interactive) image at right.

For the pentatonic songs used initially by the Kodály Method, this pentatonic-only keyboard would be ideal. It would contain only the notes (intervals) that the students were currently learning. (Other keyboard controls, not shown, would be used to indicate the tonic and define its pitch.) Also, it would give students a visual, tangible metaphor for tonal space, hence (potentially) accelerating their development of audiation skills.



Then, when they were introduced to the "extra" intervals of the diatonic scale, they could get a new diatonic keyboard.


As you can see, it's the same as the pentatonic keyboard, with the addition of Fa and Ti along the left and right edges, respectively. In effect, the diatonic keyboard's extra notes expand the "tonal space" to which the student is exposed.

Again, by containing only the notes in the scale currently being studied, such a keyboard has the potential to sharpen student's focus.

Later, as the student progressed to learning about chords, they could be presented with a two-handed diatonic keyboard, suitable for self-accompaniment. (The note-layouts are mirrored for cognitive convenience, and angled for ergonomic convenience.)




...which would, in turn, be superseded by a two-handed chromatic keyboard:



...and eventually, a two-handed enharmonic keyboard, featuring all 19 intervals of the enharmonic scale:


The latter keyboard looks rather overwhelming, and it probably would be, if it were the first keyboard a student encountered. However, after starting with the simple pentatonic keyboard and working progressively up through the diatonic an chromatic keyboards, the enharmonic keyboard wouldn't seem like such a big deal. It just adds a few extra notes at the outer edges of the keyboard, leaving its pentatonic/diatonic/chromatic core unchanged.

The main advantage of this approach is that the student always uses a keyboard that has precisely enough note-controlling buttons to achieve the required pedagogical goals, thus encouraging proper focus and minimizing distraction/confusion. Of all of the isomorphic note-layouts, the Wicki note-layout is best for this purpose. Each successively-wider Wicki keyboard enables the student to see farther into tonal space, literally expanding their tonal horizons.

The main disadvantage is that the student must trade-up keyboards rather frequently.

Perhaps this disadvantage could be ameliorated by using a virtual multi-touch keyboard, such as the much-rumored Apple iSlate (see article here):


Such a multi-touch sensitive display would perhaps lack the tactile feedback needed in a true performance instrument...but that's not the point. The Kodály Method stresses the use of one's voice as one's performance instrument. Hence, in a Kodály context, the Wicki note-layout keyboard would be used not for performance (absent the Thummer [sigh]), but rather for pedagogy -- i.e., in helping students apply additional senses (sight, touch) to the development of proper audiation skills.

Using a virtual keyboard would enable new intervals to be introduced not just one scale at a time, but one note at a time -- first just So and Mi, then also Do, then Re, then La, etc. -- following the standard sequence of the Kodály Method.

Apple's iSlate is likely to be to expensive for K-12 music instruction. Give it 10 years, however -- maybe less -- and iSlate clones will be cheaper than traditional band instruments.

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