Photo by Mohammad Metri on Unsplash |
A long time ago, I thought that the
first day of school was about the rules. That ended 25 years ago when I realized
that there was no greater method to make the students believe that you, the
teacher, were like one of the horrifying teachers in the film Pleasantville; if you have not seen the film — for
shame! You have missed a film that captures the form of magical
realism so
“colorfully”…but I digress.
Music, you see, is the medium that
teachers and students still have in common. It may be the last link a teacher
has to the ‘kid culture’ — especially if you are over 40 years old (and still
think Flock of Seagulls was a band that would become legendary). I
learned that a song could speak to students much like it speaks to me and,
without them knowing, create a literary bond.
That’s right — I said literary. For all you stubborn snobs who believe
that only Dylan and his ilk of folk singers were the last of the literary
luminaries, I have news for you. When you were following that Pete Seeger group
down the Hudson River, the generation before you thought you and they were
commie/ hippie/ Woodstock druggies. That generation looked at you “upstart
crows” and dismissed you completely. So it is time to get off your high horse
and recognize music is literature, even if “it’s still rock and roll to me.”
Here are 5
songs to start your teaching year.
First. Rise Against is a band and their
anthem is a song entitled “Swing Life Away.” I would play it on Opening Day.
Why? Because its message is that we all have scars, we all have fears, (even
the teacher), and if we could just take a step closer to each other and reach
across the aisle, we would discover that we have so much in common. It is a
heart and soul melody that show the students that you care.[all grades/ all classes]
Second. Tracy Chapman’s “Fast
Car” is the finest example of the vicious circle of poverty in America. It
does not matter the color of one’s skin: poverty is poverty. Chapman’s song is
focused on black circumstances, particularly a woman’s plight as her hopes to
escape poverty vanish much like the symbolic and illusionary “Fast Car” that
lured her long ago. Since America is recognizing “The 1619 Project,” the 400
years of slavery beginning with the Dutch slave trade of that year, this song
speaks to the inherent injustice that is at the root of this nation’s Original
Sin. { high school, English or Social Studies}
Third. The Beatles’ “Yesterday”is a
compliment to Romeo and Juliet in that it is ‘Romeo’s Lament’ to his lost love,
Juliet. Just listen to the words and you can hear how Shakespeare’s “star
crossed lovers” surrender to a fate that they cannot escape, one that they do
not deserve — one that continues today as lovers are torn apart by wars and
drug lords that are interchangeable with the families of Verona. {high school
preferably}
Fourth: Bruce Springsteen’s “41 Shots-
American Skin” is a must when teaching the fate of Tom Robinson in To Kill a
Mockingbird. Springsteen,
inspired by the police shooting death of Amadou Diallo, warns his audience that
“you can get shot just for living in your American skin.” For students living
far from the inner city, or naïve to the power racism and fear instills in all
of us (even if we are afraid to admit it), it is an eye opener. After all,
Harper Lee’s theme is that you “can’t understand a person until you walk in his
shoes”…even when his shoes are stained with blood. { high school — try the
video of the live performance; it is particularly chilling}
Five: In 1989, Bruce Hornsby warned folks
of the upcoming disaster that is Global Warming in his song “Look Out Any
Window.” Hornsby looks to the sky, the sea, and the landscape and sees just how
much damage is being done. That same year Lester Brown and the World Watch
Institute published The State of the World and warned of the calamity approaching faster than
even Al Gore predicted in A Inconvenient Truth. As I type these words, the Brazilian
rainforests are burning due to deforestation that is rooted in a mentality that
deems profitability over sensibility. {All science teachers middle –high school
should be on to this; I taught this in English as part of non-fiction literature}
There you have
it. I know I have not included music from the last five years, but I could. As
a matter of fact, that is probably my next essay. But for now, just remember
this:
You cannot teach kids if you cannot reach them
Very Nice!! If you want to learn about 5 benefical tips for adult music students. You should go for it Now 5 Practice Tips for Adult Music Students
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