Pop music listening activity: “Dibs” by Kelsea Ballerini

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The number one song on the Billboard Country Radio play chart for the second cosecutive week is “Dibs” by Kelsea Ballerini. It’s a pretty straightforward song with the lyrics so go ahead and listen to it with your students. Here’s my breakdown:

Form Letter Time Description
Intro 0:00 – 0:09

– Instrumental intro featuring acoustic guitar,
banjo, and light bass and percussion.

Verse A 0:09 – 0:32 “I know everybody wants you, that ain’t no
secret…”
– Acoustic vibe continues with sparse
accompaniment. Banjo reenters halfway
through.
Chorus B 0:32 – 0:54 “If you got a kiss on your lips that you’re…”
– Accompaniment becomes more lush and
prominent as vocals get fuller.
– Male vocal harmony part joins female lead
and a group “eh” punctuates pauses.

Transition C 0:54 – 1:05 “I’m callin’ dibs, on your lips…”
– New speech-like vocals come in over same
sparse accompaniment from verse.
Verse A 1:05 – 1:26

“Make everybody Jealous…”
– Same music as before but banjo is through
the entire section.
– Adds male harmony to vocal melody.

Chorus  B 1:26 – 1:48 Same as before.
Break D 1:48 – 1:59 Upbeat, restrained electric guitar solo over
chorus accompaniment.
Chorus B 1:59 – 2:21 Same vocal melody as before.
– Accompaniment begins sparse similar to
earlier sections.
– Second half returns to normal.
Transition C 2:21 – 2:31 Same as before
Transition C’ 2:31 – 2:43 Same lyrics as before, presented in a higher
vocal register.
– Accompaniment mirrors the chorus, not
previous transition sections.
Coda 2:43 – 3:03 Extension of the transition with similar lyrics.
– Accompaniment style from chorus continues.

There are multiple ways I have students analyze a song like this. If this is their first time listening critically like this, put a blank spreadsheet on the SMART board of white board for them, replaying the sections several times to let them hear what you are pulling apart. Then go back and listen to the whole thing to show them the overall form. Have them fill it in as you go or just watch and participate. This takes me 45 minutes or so.

Once students get the hang of it, let them pick their own song to analyze. It’s how they build skills for their own compositions and analysis, by listening to what others have done.

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Pop music listening activity: “Dibs” by Kelsea Ballerini

Charlotte Danielson’s “Framework for Teaching” and music composition assessment

Recently, I sat down with a new assistant principal who I’ve never hosted in my classroom before to discuss my observation using the Charlotte Danielson “Framework for Teaching.” He attended my high school general music class, Music Plugged In, to observe an assessment lesson. I want to take you through my explanation on a pop music composition assessment activity I used in this lesson to get a perfect score on the Danielson rubric.

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A gallery walk can be done in several different ways. The goal for the activity is each student gets to hear every composition from their colleagues. It is a great tool for differentiation as the low-performing students get to hear exemplary work while the high-performing students get a chance to hone their critical ears and voice to give constructive feedback. For the first half of the year, we have done ours all together guided by the teacher in written form so I can remove hurtful comments. Another set-up is to have the composers pull up their compositions at individual stations and students can literally walk from composition to composition, giving written feedback. You can also assign it as homework and have a more advanced class share their criticism directly with a composer. For the composer, it is a safe step into the presentation aspect of composing in a room of peers before their music goes off into the more perilous real world.

Like my previous post on the Danielson framework and popular music, this lesson is tailor-made for a perfect score, but that doesn’t mean you don’t need to prepare. Only after working with students to hone their ears and critical comments is it possible to really achieve great results.

In my district, we are not evaluated on each and every component during each and every observation so I will showcase just the components I used for my lesson. Direct quotations have come from individual component levels of Danielson’s Implementing the Framework for Teaching in Enhancing Professional Practice: An ASCD Action Tool:

Component 1b: demonstrating knowledge of students
– “Teacher regularly designs lessons that allow for individual choice.”
– “Teacher’s lesson plan reflects student-­initiated ideas for incorporating culturally relevant
activities and assignments.”

For this activity, students have been working for several weeks to create their own remix using a Digital Audio Workstation. I’ve applied the gallery walk principle to all of our composition activities throughout the year, though. Students are using their own words to critique other composers’ works and their own decision-making process is displayed in their compositions.

Component 2b: ­ Establishing a culture for learning
– “Students take advantage of opportunities to choose their own projects and show individualism and creativity in their methods of demonstrating their learning.”
– “Teacher develops and shares high­ quality instructional outcomes and expectations with
all students.”
– “Teacher holds all students to high standards for completion of assignments.”
– “Students determine the relevance of assignment to real ­life examples…”
– “Students attribute their success to hard work and effort rather than the task being easy or luck.”
– “Students encourage each other to take risks and continually ask questions.”
– “Students reflect on their own work and consider how they might improve it.”

Each student chose their own song to remix in this assignment and through the year they have been making their own compositional choices within the framework outlined by the teacher. They have made multiple decisions along the way to craft their project. These compositions are real-world based and playing them in front of their peers solidifies that. On paper, the students are encouraged to ask open-ended and thought-provoking questions of each other’s compositional decisions.

Component 3c: Engaging Students in Learning
– “Students initiate the choice, adaptation, or creation of materials to enhance their
learning.”

Students were invited to help refine the grading rubric and point totals were altered to
reflect their input. That includes students who specifically asked to remove sections of
the song, something specifically outlawed by the rubric, if the student can justify the
decision in a conversation with the teacher. With each student listening to all the other compositions, the process enhances their understanding for what to do and not to do in future assignments.

Component 3d: Using Assessment in Instruction
– “Every student” will be “asked diagnostic questions… to see at a glance which students
do and do not understand.”
– “Teacher provides a variety of feedback including written, verbal, and modeling…”

The written feedback the other students and the teacher provide here can be used as a summative or formative assessment. I allow students to resubmit projects like this after receiving feedback from their peers. Students also use a self rubric, to articulate what is good, what needs improvement, as well as what additional learning they need to obtain success.

This model is a exactly what classroom teachers in other fields are looking for. It’s general enough where each student can make it their own but shows each student’s content language and knowledge. Bring the student feedback sheets with you to your post-observation to show the administrator exactly what the other students had to say.

Here are some feedback examples discussing the same remix of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” created by one of my students:

Screenshot 2016-02-15 at 4.58.33 PM Screenshot 2016-02-15 at 4.58.44 PM Screenshot 2016-02-15 at 4.59.07 PM Screenshot 2016-02-15 at 4.59.30 PM Screenshot 2016-02-15 at 4.59.40 PM

The level of depth shown by these comments isn’t extreme, but it’s enough to see genuine musical listening, vocabulary, and criticism skills. You can also see the feedback each composer will get to improve their work.

Read more about how you can integrate pop music activities using the Danielson rubric in my previous blog post. To support my blog, use this Amazon link to buy Implementing the Framework for Teaching in Enhancing Professional Practice where you can get ultra-specific on what makes an activity a perfect 4-of-4 on the Danielson rubric.

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Charlotte Danielson’s “Framework for Teaching” and music composition assessment

2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees: one song

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The 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominees have been announced. Here is one definitive, school-appropriate song and YouTube video for each nominee and a link to their nominee bio at the Rock Hall website.

The Cars
“My Best Friend’s Girl”

Cheap Trick
“I Want You To Want Me”

Chic
“Good Times”

Chicago
“Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?”

Deep Purple
“Smoke on the Water”

Janet Jackson
“What Have You Done For Me Lately”

The J.B.’s
“Doing It To Death”

Chaka Khan
“I’m Every Woman”

Los Lobos
“Will the Wolf Survive?”

Steve Miller
“Fly Like an Eagle”

Nine Inch Nails
“The Day The World Went Away”

N.W.A.
“Express Yourself”

The Smiths
“Shiela Take A Bow”

The Spinners
“Rubberband Man”

Yes
“Owner of a Lonely Heart”

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2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees: one song

Popular music listening activity: “Cheerleader” by OMI

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The number one song on the Billboard Hot 100 chart this week is “Cheerleader” by OMI. It’s a pretty straightforward song with the lyrics so go ahead and listen to it with your students. Here’s my breakdown:

Form Letter Time Description
Intro 0:00 – 0:24 Trumpet performs a repetitive melody
over piano chord progression.
Verse A 0:24 – 0:42 “When I need motivation…”
Singer enters accompanied by a conga
drum and continued piano chord progression.
No trumpet.
Pre-chorus B 0:42 – 0:49 “Do you need me?”
Piano accompaniment changes to
arpeggiated chords. More drums enter
toward end of section in preparation of chorus.
Chorus C 0:49 – 1:05 “Oh, I think I’ve found myself a cheerleader…”
Steady synthetic bass and keyboard
underscore the new singable melody.
Verse A 1:05 – 1:23 “She walks like a model…”
Same piano and conga drum as first verse
but more drums added.
Pre-chorus 1:23 – 1:29 Same as before. Adds crescendoing single
trumpet notes to accentuate strong beats.
Chorus C 1:29 – 1:46 Same as before but trumpet continues to
play a counter-melody above singer.
Break D 1:46 – 2:18 Instrumental break continues the
instrumental counter-melody on trumpet
and same accompaniment. A new trumpet
melody enters at the 2:05 mark over the
original piano chord progression.
Bridge E 2:18 – 2:35 “She gives me love and affection…”
Conga, piano chord progression, and new
melody on the trumpet
Chorus C 2:35 – 2:52 Same as before.
Coda 2:52 – 3:09 Similar to intro

There are several fascinating parts of the song to elaborate on if you would like.

  • OMI is Jamaican but the sound of the song has more to do with the producer, who was given the song in 2011. The producer, Felix Jaehn, is German.
  • The song was recorded in 2011, released in May of 2014, and hit number on in the summer of 2015. Weird.

There are multiple ways I have students analyze a song like this. If this is their first time listening critically like this, fill it in on the SMART board or chalk board for them, replaying the sections several times to let them hear what you are pulling apart. Then go back and listen to the whole thing to show them the overall form.

Once students get the hang of it, let them pick their own song to analyze. It’s how they build skills for their own compositions and analysis, by listening to what others have done.

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Popular music listening activity: “Cheerleader” by OMI

2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band

As we get closer to the 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction, I’ll share short and sweet profiles of the inductees and some lesson ideas. Bookmark it.

the-paul-butterfield-blues-band
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Biography:

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band brought Chicago blues and rock and roll together in a way that hadn’t been done before and they did it as a racially integrated band in the middle of the 1960s. The blues had been dominated by black artists and Paul Butterfield and his crew cleared the way for white musicians to be taken seriously in the genre. Butterfield’s harmonica playing, in particular, is among the most influential performances on the instrument. On a much different note, they also provided the backbone for Bob Dylan’s iconic performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival when he famously “plugged in” and brought about the folk rock revolution.

Listening:

“Born in Chicago”
The band’s signature song, it was their debut single and resonated well beyond Illinois. It features some incredible harmonica work by Butterfield and the raw power that was Chicago blues but gives it the electric treatment. It’s a gritty piece I play every year during my blues unit to reinforce the 12-bar blues chord progression and that blues doesn’t have to be slow.

“Maggie’s Farm” with Bob Dylan, Newport Folk Festival 1965
The moment when rock and roll woke up, this performance merged folk and rock in a way that had never been done before. It was very poorly received at the time, which the boos heard in the background can attest, but it was a watershed moment in rock history. Though not the entire band participated in Dylan’s iconic performance, several members did and it was the band’s performance the day before that had inspired Dylan to perform the electric set in the first place.

“Love March” from Woodstock 1969
Included on the Woodstock film soundtrack in 1970, this is the second incarnation of the band following the gradual departure of everyone but Butterfield himself. It features a more horn-driven sound.

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2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band