Hello all!
I feel very excited by the response to my last posting. It isn't often I get such support and encouragement for my ideas. Actually I was a bit apprehensive about logging on to Piano Forum tonight in case I got shouted down again! By the way, that first post I entered that made Thierry so angry was a bit of a mistake. After getting some ideas down quickly, I pressed 'Post' instead of 'Preview' so didn't get the chance to tone down my provocative language.
Alice - bravo! You were a very smart kid. Logical and brave as well! I think a lot of kids, when they don't really understand something, follow the leader or try to guess what the teacher wants. The pity is you probably didn't get a chance to tell your teacher why you placed your hands that way, and the teacher probably just thought you were dumb or disruptive! I always listen to what kids say, and its amazing how logical they often are, eg the kid who asked "Are these the flats?" running his hands over the flat surface of the white keys, "And these the sharps?" - the black keys sticking out of the plane.
Vera, my way of teaching the letternames is my own invention. It started, as I have said, when I suddenly saw the piano keyboard in a new way. (I was 17.) Instead of
| U U | U U U |
| | | | | | | | I saw:
U U U | U U | U U U
| | | | | | | |and realised the alphabetical set ABCDEFG was symmetrical; in fact it is the only set of 7 consecutive white keys that form a symmetrical pattern with the black keys. I then thought it would be more logical to kids if I taught it this way. In fact it is, specially to older kids being taught the keyboard for the first time. One clarinet student complained to her teacher that she couldn't understand the school music teacher's way of pointing out the C key and working out the other letters from there. When the clarinet teacher showed her
my way, the student exclaimed "Oh that makes much more sense!" She rang me up to tell me.
The big question to me has always been: were the notes originally named like this to show the symmetry, or is it merely a coincidence? I have done a lot of historical reseach to try to answer this, but it becomes very complicated. I feel that it is deliberate but can't yet prove it.
The scale or tonality of C major really is of no relevance when you are first teaching keynames. Kids only need to know how to read the white key notes at the start. I have written lots of pieces that are in C major but not in the 5 finger position; they don't need to know the scale. After a while they will notice that a lot of the pieces end on a C, but that is not a reason to make C the centre of the musical universe! A child's singing range is pretty much middle A up to middle G. (As you see, grouping notes in units A to G makes it easy to specify notes by their register as well as lettername.) When they sing m.A it is in a low voice; they play it with their low hand, and it is written on the bottom stave. Middle G is for high voice, high hand, and is is written on the top stave.
Here is one of my tunes in the unit A to G (LH on middle ABC, RH on middle GFE):
3/4: AB|C C, GF|E C, C |B A B |C - , BA|B B G |F - AB|C C G |E - ,
E |F G F |E -
AB|C C, GF|E C, C |B A B |C - ,BA|B B G |F, - AB|C C E |C - ||
When you say you have to get to C eventually, I don't really agree. It is only the easiest key from the
notational point of view. It is just as easy to play in F# - only the notation and our key signature system makes it harder. If you look at the mnma.org site, you will see that the new proposed notations (over 500) have the premise that there are 12 notes in the octave and they each should have a place on the stave. You might also like to consider the 6/6 keyboard, on which every major scale has the same pattern: 3 notes from one wholetone scale, move up a tier (the semitone), play 4 notes from the other wholetone scale and move back for the tonic. No learning 15 key signatures! If you look up
www.ii4i.net, you can even turn your typing keyboard into a working 6/6 musical keyboard! (Go to the grand piano then to the typing keyboard.) I have looked at Klavarskribo, even learnt Liszt's Petrarch Sonnet 104 in this system. It is not a good notation. Others are better; mine is the BEST!!!
Of course this is not relevant to teaching beginners traditional notation. You do it the best way you can and today I made a big magnetic grand stave ready for a new beginner student. I am quite into 'gadgets' actually - the more apparatus you have, the easier to change activities for kids with short attention spans. But I don't try to sell the idea that traditional notation (TN)
is music.
My ideal system has only one type of stave; the clef shows which register, but all octaves of the same note look the same - no learning the 5 C's! The notation I have invented, which I call Express Stave, has a number of stages, and is derived from the bass clef (symmetry again). What makes it different from all the other inventors' systems is that a person brought up with TN could sight read in my system straight off. The white key notes look pretty much like bass clef notes and the black keys ... well that's my secret for now!
Thanks for listening to my ideas and sharing yours. Cheers, John.