Learning about chords at the piano is a fun way for a child to have emotional control of the piano.
Name another object that they can use to produce sounds that have an emotional quality, such as happy or sad, weird or dangerous.
Whether or not a chord is happy or sad is a tangible quality to a child. To ask a child to listen to music and make a judgment is to connect their mind to a deeper, subjective level of thought than merely pushing piano keys.
To participate in the piano as a listener is to be within its sphere of influence, and under its benevolent spell.
This is called “ear training” and comprises a good portion of a first year music conservatory student. It is easy to simplify this process so that even very young children can have the intellectual benefits of musical thought.
The simplification of ear-training has been done throughout musical history by master teachers, most recently by composer-teachers such as Hindemith, Kodaly and Carl Orff.
I teach children to recognize four kinds of sounds, or chords: happy, sad, weird and dangerous. These are emotional states that kids recognize, and correspond to the chord types major, minor, augmented and diminished.
I try to get the child to recognize the sounds as if they came from a drama or cartoon on television, an easy memory for a child to draw upon.
There are infinite games you can make up using these sounds. I’ve seen kids make up their own songs and mini-operas to make use of the new toy-like tools that chords become.
Chords are easy to comprehend visually, without any reference to printed sheet music. This is an advantage to kids that are slowly gaining confidence at reading music.
Think of the Rosetta Stone, a fabled device that allows one to see the secret of any language. Chords are the Rosetta Stone of music.
Think of the alphabet. Without it, words are incomprehensible. Chords are the emotional alphabet of music, and are the mathematical foundation for all musical thought.
Simplified, chords become like Legos to children. They are easy to understand and manipulate.
By John Aschenbrenner Copyright 2010 Walden Pond Press All Rights Reserved
See also BASEBALL, KIDS AND PIANO
See also FUN PIANO GAME WITH A PAIR OF DICE
See also FIRST INVERSION CHORDS
See also TWO NOTE CHORDS FOR KIDS
See also PIANO CHORD GAMES FOR KIDS
See also WHY CHILDREN SHOULD LEARN ABOUT PIANO CHORDS