I have recently had all of my students listen to Bolero and The Four Seasons and gave a number of them an assignment to do some kind of art work while listening.
One of my students (a mature woman) said in our last meeting that she did not really understand why I wanted them to listen to this. Well, part of me feels like, "if you don't get it, how can I possibly explain it ?" But, probably that is not fair. I suppose I can see how somebody might thins this way. So, I was thinking about it and, I wonder how one does explain it...
These are the reasons I want my students to be exposed to music other than just piano :
1. I am wishing for them to develop a broad base of music appreciation to help themselves as musicians (and as persons) and to help the field in general. I want them to appreciate local concerts of both well-known pieces as well as less-known pieces. I want them to be somewhat educated listeners.
2. For their sub-conscious to become more immersed with music in general; instrumentation, musicality.
3. Because the piano is like an orchestra at our finger-tips, I feel it is important for the student to become familiar with different registers, timbres, etc... also, composers like Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven often thought symphonically. I feel it is important for the pianist to have a concept of these instrumental sounds that might be imitated in a sonata, for example.
These are the main things that I can think of, and it is what I explained to my student who then came back with : "Well, I am attracted to piano music. That's why I am interested in Chopin and Liszt, they were primarily composers for the piano."
hmmmm... I actually got pretty angry inside (it makes me want to scream, actually), and that's not that great...
My questions regarding this are :
1. How do you explain to a student why you might have them listen to orchestral, opera, other instrumental music ? Or even music in general, for that matter.
2. Do you have a list of things you would like your students to listen for while they listen ?
3. How do you go about giving them listening assignments ? Do you have some kind of list of pieces you would like for them to know, and then some sort of order to have them listened to ?
I am a bit frustrated.... I am not organized enough yet to have a list of pieces I feel they should know, and then I do not have any organization in terms of the order they may learn. Maybe I would be smarter to start with chant (I don't have any) ? If you wish to add any kind of suggestion toward my project... heh... I am incredibly hungry for it.
Thank you very much for your time,
m1469