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Tuned Percussion in the Music Classroom - A Teachers Guide

By: Kevin Tuck

Tuned Percussion (using xylophones and things) can be great fun for music classes - but it can also be a source of headaches for the music teacher!

This article is to give you some hints and tricks on how to maintain and look after the instruments, plus the types of music to play which have the greatest chances of success.

1)Organization is the key

With tuned percussion instruments in a music class you have to be totally organized.

Each instrument needs a shelf where it lives permanently - so that students know where it goes back after it has been used. You've got to establish these places early in the routine and have ordering about how the students go about picking them out and playing them.

2) Go All Diatonic or All Chromatic

One of the big problems is that many orff style tuned percussion instruments are sold in two bits - the main "diatonic" part of the instrument, plus they offer a "chromatic extension" which is simply the black notes on a separate box resonator.

In my experience these things are far more hassle than they are worth, particularly for elementary school classes. You are much better off with just a diatonic instrument that isn't in "two bits"

Organizing a class so that everyone has to get the main instrument, and then get the chromatic extension and put it in front is far too difficult for most elementary classes.

In theory of course the elementary class can use just the diatonic bit, and the more advanced can use the full chromatic.. but it rarely works that way!

In my experience when I've been to schools that have chromatic extensions they are rarely ever used!

Still, if you have more advanced or older students then you should get fully chromatic instruments to start with!

3) Play everything in C Major

One of the big "time wasters" is those substitute F sharp and B flat bars that are included with many of the diatonic instruments. These have to be a complete waste of time for teachers. Often you can spend half the class making sure that all the students have the right notes on their instruments, and then you'll still hear something funny going on whenever you hear an "F" because one student has an F# on their instrument!

The best tip I have for this is to simply take those substitute bars, put them into a box and lock them away!

The best solution is to simply find music, transpose music or write music that is only in C MAJOR. That way you won't be messing around chaning notes, and you can get on with making music!

4) Go for Wood - Not Metal - and get them all at once!

I've seen more broken "Metallophones" at schools than any other instrument. For some reason they always seem to have gotten lost bars and damaged rubber strips under the bars which result in a loud "clunk" whenever you try to play them!

Glockenspiels are very challenging for young children - the bars are really small... and piercing on the ears as well.

My advice... go for WOOD every time. diatonic xylophones, with a box resonator.

You should really take ALL your budget in one year and dedicate it to this - don't buy one or two at once.. that won't suffice for an entire class. Get a class set of ten to twenty xylophones that are all identical and they will last for years.

Get one or two at a time and you'll find that they get mixed up and no-one knows what bars and bits go with what instrument!

5) Mallets all identical - all in one place

One simple thing you can do is get a full set of mallets, and make them all identical!

If you get a box or a large jar and dedicate it to this purpose then students will know that they have to get and return the mallets to this location and they'll get used to this procedure.

If you only have wooden xylophones then you won't have to worry about different mallets for the glockenspiels and metallophones.

Of course I'm talking about an ideal situation - and I know that its not common that you get the budget to go out and get a full class set of new tuned percussion instruments for an elementary school.

Hopefully whatever instruments you have you'll be able to use some ideas from this article to make tuned percussion more enjoyable in your classroom



Article Source: http://www.rightbiz.com

Kevin Tuck is an ex-music teacher and percussion educator. Kevin has a great passion for drums and percussion, particularly how they are utilized within a school setting. Kevin has loads of free resources for percussion education at the percussion education blog, which is an interactive page where you can ask questions and participate in discussions about anything to do with percussion in schools.

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