Resource: K-12 Modern Band with Jasmine
One of my favorite parts of attending any conference is meeting new people and learning new things. When you can do both at the same time, it’s pretty special. At the Modern Band Summit this week, I met a fabulous music educator named Jasmine Todd Faulkner who attended one of my sessions. She came up to me after I was finished presenting to share an incredible resource with me that she has created on YouTube. Her channel is called K-12 Modern Band with Jasmine, and it is fantastic. Jasmine is the music teacher at Polaris Expeditionary Learning School in Fort Collins, Colorado where she teaches K-12 modern band, songwriting and recording studio. She creates really cool play-along videos of TONS of pop songs. Her goal is to make a complete K-12 modern band starter curriculum for public schools, and her videos are terrific. Here are a few to give you an idea of what she does:
Modern Band Summit Recap
I just finished up three incredible days at the 2024 Modern Band Summit on the campus of Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado. It was my first time attending this conference and all I can say is WOW. I have never attended a music education conference like this one. SO much positive energy, learning, affirmation, support and downright FUN. The Music Will organization really knows how to put together an event that combines high quality pedagogy and “jump right in” performance opportunities. From the moment I walked into the Lory Student Center - the hub of all the activities - all I could hear was music being played - everything from Ceelo Greene to the B52s. Impromptu bands formed by the participants getting ready to perform the next night on stage with professional lighting, sound system, and hundreds of screaming fans. Such a great event! Hats off to David Wish, Bryan Powell, Maddy Posner, and ALL of the Music Will staff.
OGenPlus Plug & Play Course
Recently, the amazing content team at MusicFirst, in conjunction with the inimitable Marcel Pusey from OGenPlus, published an amazing new course in the MusicFirst Classroom Content Library called OGenPlus Plug & Play. This course is designed to help teachers and their students explore OGenPlus - the newly revamped version of O-Generator - one of my favorite composition tools. The course includes 20 lesson plans that help students learn both HOW to use the software while learning how to compose in various styles of music. There are also over 50 projects for students to explore, including an overarching lesson plan for each category of project as well as direct links from the lesson plan to OGenPlus - making it the PERFECT solution for teachers who are looking for an affordable, accessible and EASY way to get your students composing. OGenPlus is included with every MusicFirst Classroom seat purchase as a part of our Creativity Bundle. Below is an example of a lesson plan as well as a project. But first, a quick refresher on what OGenPlus can do from the one and only, Marcel Pusey!
Heading out to my first Modern Band Summit
This week I am thrilled to be heading out to Fort Collins, CO for my first Modern Band Summit, presented by Music Will, on behalf of MusicFirst. I will be presenting a session titled Modern Band & MusicFirst: Perfect Together on Wednesday, showing off our amazing new Modern Band Bundle in the MusicFirst Classroom, and I’ll be participating in the Tech Playground for two more sessions on Thursday. I am so excited to finally attend one of these events. MusicFirst is a proud sponsor and I look forward to meeting with other like-minded music educators and industry folks. I will be posting my session materials and a recap on Friday. Until then, I am also looking forward to some great early morning hikes, checking out some amazing craft breweries, and making some music! There is actually still time to register for the summit if you’re looking to make some last minute PD plans. I hope to see you there!
Summer Reading Recommendations 2024
For many teachers, summer is a time to relax and decompress from the stresses and challenges of the previous school year. For many, it is also a time to do some professional development and reading. While I’m not suggesting that you spend your entire summer reading music education books rather than the latest novels, or binging on podcasts and Netflix series, I do think that there are some amazing music education books that have come out in the past year or so that are definitely worth the time to read between podcasts, Netflix episodes and novels. Here are 4 that I have read recently and HIGHLY recommend to any music educator.
5 Reasons to Make MusicFirst Elementary Your New Curriculum
We launched MusicFirst Elementary less than a year ago with our partners from the UK, Charanga, and every day, more and more school districts are adopting the curriculum to engage with students and provide a high quality, standards-based spiral curriculum at an affordable price. As elementary music educators, we're constantly seeking innovative and effective tools to enrich our students' musical journey and we believe that MusicFirst Elementary is a standout option for K-5 music curriculum. Our elementary music consultant, Amy M Burns, has been creating amazing videos that show the product in action and explain both how it works, as well as how you can implement it in your school. As the 2024-25 school year approaches, and decisions on which resources to use are happening, here are the 5 main reasons why you should consider implementing MusicFirst Elementary in your classroom, complete with some of Amy’s best explainer videos.
Introducing the Habits of a Young String Musician COURSE in the MusicFirst Classroom
The MusicFirst content team has been hard at work over the last few months, bringing a brand new publication from GIA Publications into the MusicFirst Classroom - creating an exclusive COURSE for music teachers to use with their students alongside PracticeFirst - our revolutionary performance assessment program. This course includes all of the incredible instructional materials from the new Habits of a Successful Young String Musician book, and breaks it down by individual lesson plans and assignable tasks for every single exercise in the book. Combined with the unique functionality of the MusicFirst Classroom, where teachers can simply drag and drop these lessons and tasks into a class calendar, this exclusive offering from MusicFirst is a MUST HAVE for any string teacher at the elementary or middle school level. Here’s how it works.
MusicFirst Joins AI For Music
As part of all of the research that I’ve been doing for my AI in the Music Classroom online course - currently being run through the MusicFirst Summer Teacher Academy - I ran across a wonderful initiative called AI For Music, spearheaded by Roland and Universal Music Group. This initiative has created a set of seven core principles that help “establish a guideline for the responsible use of Artificial Intelligence in music. By adopting these principles, companies and organizations commit to protecting the vital contributions of human creativity and to the responsible development and application of artificial intelligence for music creation.” As a company that lives exclusively in the education space, I felt that it was extremely important to support this very important cause. I am thrilled to say that MusicFirst is one of a handful of companies that are official supporters of these principles. I hope that my competitors do the same.
Randy Travis Sings Again - with a little help from AI
With all of the negative attention that AI in music has been getting lately, here’s something that should brighten your day. Country music legend Randy Travis, known for his distinctive baritone voice and numerous hit songs, has been largely absent from the music scene since suffering a stroke back in 2013. The stroke left him with limited vocal abilities, making it all but impossible for him to record new music. That all changed recently when his long-time producer Kyle Lehning and Cris Lacy from Warner Music Nashville approached Randy and his wife Mary to try to use AI technology to recreate his voice on a new song.
A Reckoning for AI Music Tools?
Yesterday the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), in conjunction with labels including Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music Group Recordings and Warner Records, filed a MASSIVE lawsuit against two of the most well known (and best) AI-assisted music tools - Udio and Suno - something that I believe we’ll be seeing more and more as the music industry tries to figure out what to do with all of the tools that have been trained on copyright-protected music. The lawsuit claims Suno and Udio’s software listens to, analyzes and copies music to create similar works and asked for compensation of $150,000 PER WORK. As I have been writing about for months now, the music industry is at a crossroads with AI, and this recent legal action by the RIAA alleges copyright infringement on a massive scale. This case has significant implications for music technology and the future of creative tools in the industry. Suno’s CEO said the technology was “designed to generate completely new outputs, not to memorize and regurgitate pre-existing content” and doesn’t allow users to reference specific artists. Suno says that they have tried to explain this to labels “but instead of entertaining a good faith discussion, they’ve reverted to their old lawyer-led playbook”. My gut tells me that the end result of this lawsuit is a revenue sharing scheme that will pay royalties to artists for every song generated. How they’ll figure out how to do that, I have no idea - I’ll leave that to the lawyers.
Move Over ChatGPT - Here Comes Claude
This past weekend I learned about another AI tool from a colleague at work. This one is called Claude and it is similar in many ways to the other AI tools out there like ChatGPT, Gemini and Copilot. Claude is an advanced AI tool that is created by Anthropic, and it has three versions: Claude 1, Claude 2, and Claude 3.5 Sonnet, which is what I decided to experiment with over the weekend. What sets Claude 3.5 apart from other language models is its comprehensive knowledge base (that isn’t connected to the Internet - yet)., spanning a wide range of topics - including music - and it’s focus on ethics, safety and transparency which is pretty refreshing. Before I entered my first prompt, it gave me the following warning:
Celebrate Make Music Day 2024
Make Music Day is a worldwide celebration, occurring annually on June 21st. It underscores the universal language of music, encouraging everyone to engage and participate in musical activities. The origins of the “Fête De La Musique” trace back to France, 42 years ago. Jack Lang and his team at the Ministry of Culture envisioned a new type of musical celebration. They pictured a day filled with free music in every conceivable public space—street corners, parks, rooftops, gardens, and storefronts. Seventeen years ago, the spirit of Fête de la Musique traveled across the Atlantic to inspire the first Make Music event in New York. The event has since grown and spread well beyond New York, with cities across the United States embracing the celebration each year on June 21 with thousands of musicians—ranging from amateurs to seasoned professionals and spanning all genres—delivering almost 5,000 free outdoor concerts across the United States. To better coordinate and enhance these widespread efforts, in 2014, Make Music organizers from across North America came together to establish the Make Music Alliance. This organization aims to nurture and expand the reach of Make Music Day across the continent. Here’s a guide to some invaluable tools and platforms for music educators planning to celebrate Make Music Day.
AI, Music & Copyright: What’s the Story?
When it comes to the endless images, text and music that is being created by the many generative AI tools that are out there, what does it all mean for copyright? There are SO many facets to this question, including what about copyright protection for the works that the AI algorithms were trained on, is AI-generated content copyrightable? If not, how much human input should be required to make it eligible for copyright protection? If you create a new piece of music with the assistance of AI, who gets the copyright - you? The software company that created the AI tool? The artist(s) that the AI tool used to train itself? Recently, the US Copyright Office has issued some guidance on this topic - as they are feverishly trying to draw up new copyright legislation that will address these questions as well as many more that will come up as generative AI improves and evolves.
The Ethics of AI
For the past 3 weeks I have been teaching an online course for MusicFirst titled AI in the Music Classroom. Running a music tech company is a full-time gig but I am thoroughly enjoying teaching this course, not only for the meaningful interactions that I’ve been having with the students enrolled in the class, but also the deep prep work that I’ve been doing each week. I truly believe that the only way to be a good teacher is to throw yourself in the deep end and do LOTS of preparation before each class. As part of that work, one of the aspects of AI that we looked at last night was the ethical considerations and issues that go hand in hand with AI - specifically Generative AI. While the focus of the class last night was the impact that AI is having on the music industry, the portion of the class dedicated to the ethics of AI seemed to resonate the most with my students. Here is an overview of that discussion.
Lesson Plan: The Star Spangled Banner
As June 14th is Flag Day here in the United States, I thought it would be fun to share a lesson plan that I wrote that focuses on the American national anthem, the Star Spangled Banner. The lesson focuses on the artistic interpretation of the anthem and asks students to watch two performances of the Star Spangled Banner and then compare and contrast those performances. It’s a simple activity that can be done at almost any grade level. I hope that you can use it today in your classrooms!
Resource: Toby Rush Music Theory
When I woke up this morning, I knew that I needed to write a blog post, and was running through resources that I LOVE that I might not have shared in my head. One of my all-time favorites is titled Music Theory for Musicians and Normal People - created by Toby Rush, an Assistant Professor of Music Theory and Technology at the University of Dayton in Dayton, Ohio, where he teaches music theory, aural skills, music technology and composition. He also happens to be a GIFTED programmer and graphic designer and the FREE resources that he posts on his site are amazing. If you teach music in middle school, high school or college/university, I highly recommend bookmarking this site right now (if you haven’t already) and start printing out and laminating his materials to either decorate your classroom or hand out to your students.
APME 2024 Recap
I’m currently flying at 35,000 ft on my way from LAX to Mishawaka, IN for the Conn-Selmer Institute Midwest Conference after spending the last 4 days with some incredible music educators at the 2024 APME Conference on the campus of USC in Los Angeles titled Come Together: Considering the Past, Present, and Future of Popular Music Education on behalf of MusicFirst. As I have about 4 hours in the air this morning, I thought I would write down my thoughts about this conference for those of you who have either never attended, or those who know just how great an event this is.
Resource: Switched on Pop
I’m out here at the APME Conference on the campus of USC in Los Angeles this week. It’s been a great few days and I will be writing up a recap tomorrow, but I felt compelled to highlight one of the many excellent sessions and keynotes at this conference. Yesterday I had the absolute pleasure of attending a keynote address by Nate Sloan - a cohost of one of the best podcasts on pop music there is - Switched On Pop. This podcast has been around for over 10 years and has well over 350 episodes. The keynote address was amazing - a very rare combination of academia, analysis, music and humor. Nate is a gifted educator and speaker and I enjoyed every second of his talk. If you’ve never heard of Switched On Pop - the following is a review of what it is, why it is SO good, and why you might consider integrating it into your music instruction - especially if you’re looking for high quality resources that focus on popular music.
Introducing the Drum Channel Method
As part of the MusicFirst Classroom Modern Band Bundle that is scheduled to launch on August 1st, I thought it would be fun to share some of the amazing new resources that will be included as they come online. When we were building this offering, we wanted to make sure that we had the highest quality resources for all of the instruments that you might find in a “modern band”. The heart and soul of any band is the rhythm section, and perhaps most importantly, the drum set. We commissioned Mike Packer to license us his incredible drum set method - Drum Channel Method - Step By Step. Day By Day - which is now live in the MusicFirst Classroom Content Library in the new Modern Band section. The following is a quick overview of what you’ll find and how it can be used to supercharge your rhythm section.
Music Theory & Ear Training Just Got SO Much Easier
If you are a MusicFirst Classroom subscriber and also have access to AuraliaFirst & MusitionFirst then I think you’re going to LOVE what our content team has just launched in conjunction with the amazing folks at Rising Software. If you’re NOT currently a subscriber, then please sign up for a FREE 30-day trial to see what we have put together for music teachers who are interested in teaching their music students about the fundamentals of music. We've just updated our Auralia and Musition service with 200+ pre-linked tasks to our 'First' quizzes and worksheets, making them easier to use and saving you loads of time!