(If you read on a feed, you miss the subject lines!)
Plans for October 31st:
1. Poetry: Shakespeare's Sonnets 71 and 73. ("Bare Ruined Choirs")
2. Out of the Silent Planet, one chapter
3. Nature notebook scavenger hunt, if it's not raining
4. Plutarch's Life of Crassus, Lesson 8. "But now as Crassus was passing his army upon the bridge he had made over the river of Euphrates, there fell out sudden strange and terrible cracks of thunder, with fearful flashes of lightning full in the soldiers' faces: moreover, out of a great black cloud came a wonderful storm and tempest of wind upon the bridge, that the marvellous force thereof overthrew a great part of the bridge, and carried it quite away. Besides all this, the place where he appointed to lodge, was twice stricken with two great thunder claps. One of his great horse in like case, being bravely furnished and set out, took the bit in his teeth, and leapt into the river with his rider on his back, who were both drowned, and never seen after. They say also, that the first eagle and ensign that was to be taken up when they marched, turned back of itself, without any hands laid upon it. Further it fortuned that as they were distributing the victuals unto the soldiers, after they had all passed over the bridge, the first thing that was given them, was salt and water lentils, which the Romans take for a token of death and mourning, because they use it at the funerals of the dead." (Who needs horror movies?)
5. Musical Interlude 1: Sofia Opera's Flash Mob, Ride of the Valkyries (3 minutes long)
6. Reformation Day and Church History: Martin Luther's Defense before the Diet of Worms. Such an interesting connection: who was the Holy Roman Emperor before whom Luther appeared? Hint: Titian painted him twice in 1548.
7. Musical Interlude 2: Verdi vs. Wagner (6 minutes long)
8. Latin Lesson. Play Concentration with some seasonal vocabulary: "cucurbita" (pumpkin), "vespertilio" (bat), "cornix" (crow).
9. Extra readings as needed (finish up any history or science readings).
10. Choice of board games.
Showing posts with label Richard Wagner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Wagner. Show all posts
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Lydia's Grade Eight: Today we are listening to Wagner's Lohengrin
"Even the feeling of "unremembered pleasure"--for it is possible to have the spring of association touched so lightly that one recovers the feeling of former pleasure without recovering the sensation, or the image, which produced the sensation, but merely just the vague feeling of the pleasure, as when one hears the word Lohengrin and does not wait, as it were, to recover the sensation of musical delight, but just catches a waft of the pleasure which the sensation brought--intangible, indefinite as they are, produce that glow of the heart which warms a good man to 'acts of kindness and of love,' as little, as nameless, and as unremembered as the feelings out of which they spring." ~~ Charlotte Mason, Parents and Children, page 197
Vintage Postcards from Lohengrin! (sample above)
"I just happened to be on the same bus as a party of young German children going back after the performance and they unanimously told their teacher they had enjoyed it and said out loud their favourite moments. More tellingly the teacher told one of her charges how he had shown he could concentrate for over an hour watching an opera and now she wanted him to do that in class. There was a reply from another adult in the party – possibly not an actual colleague – to the effect that perhaps the teacher should learn to sing!" ~~ "Bayreuth Opens Up Wagner to a Younger Audience", by Jim Pritchard, at Seen and Heard International (2014)
Resources:
"Lohengrin," chapter in Stories of Favorite Operas, by Clyde Robert Bulla (free to read online!). Retold for children.
Daily Telegraph article: "The opera novice: Wagner's Lohengrin," with one or two omissions. You-tube video of the overture, at that link. You-tube video of Elsa's Procession to the Cathedrral. And the Wedding March! This description is interesting too, and goes a little more into the specific songs.
Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin, You-tube link above. Does this sound familiar?
Many would find this offensive, but the Prelude to Act I was used (most ironically) in a scene from Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator, made in 1940, where the title character dances with a large globe.
It's also interesting to search You-tube for examples of Liszt's piano transcriptions of Wagner's music. We can imagine Mrs. Howard Glover, the first CM Music Appreciation mama, playing it in much the same way for her son. "Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral" seems popular.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Check these out: family-friendly opera books, free online
Do you want to introduce your children to opera, particularly Richard Wagner, but worry about the often questionable content of the stories? Clyde Robert Bulla, children's writer of many subjects, came to the rescue half a century ago, and two of his books are available for free on Archive.org. We have had a copy of his Stories of Favorite Operas for years, and I think Lydia read some of the stories when, even with them family-friendlied up, she was a bit young for some of what is, still, not always meant for the nursery crowd. Still, with Bulla, you know you are on fairly trustworthy ground; you are not going to get anything beyond general fairy-tales-and-legends sorts of violence and misbehaviour.
So, keeping that in mind, here are the links:
Stories of Favorite Operas (contains several by Wagner)
The Ring and the Fire (Bulla's retelling of Wagner's Ring Cycle operas).
So, keeping that in mind, here are the links:
Stories of Favorite Operas (contains several by Wagner)
The Ring and the Fire (Bulla's retelling of Wagner's Ring Cycle operas).
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