First, teacher Jessica Foster demonstrates on the piano what a fanfare sounds like and the pupils discuss what a fanfare would be used for. The pupils are given a very tight structure from which to work from in order to keep the composing very simple and therefore achievable in one lesson. By only allowing three notes and four bars of music the pupils remain focused on the task. In pairs or small groups the children take their recorders and compose a Tudor fanfare. At the end of the lesson the pupils perform their fanfares in front of the whole class. The class discuss whether they achieved what they intended and what they would do if they weren’t limited by just the recorder and only 15 minutes to compose the whole tune.

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Reviews

4.3

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craig1

11 years ago
4

Lesson was very good. Only issue being an instrumentalist is that the rhythm for here comes the king is incorrect. It should be crotchet dotted crotchet quaver crotchet. Also I don;t think she should have used the word 'noise' when the pupils played the recorders.

eittol

12 years ago
5

Thank you. Gave me ideas which I can adapt.

bk15

12 years ago
4

A lovely lesson idea for KS2 Music which links to Tudors!

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