HAFER - A Pedagogy of The Pedagogy of Music Appreciation
HAFER - A Pedagogy of The Pedagogy of Music Appreciation
HAFER - A Pedagogy of The Pedagogy of Music Appreciation
EDWARD HAFER
Journal of Music History Pedagogy, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 5775. ISSN 2155-1099X (online)
2012, Journal of Music History Pedagogy, licensed under CC BY 3.0
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
Rather than dismiss these untrained amateurs, Burney called for educating the ignorant lovers of music, a charge taken up in the second quarter of
the nineteenth century initially by Hans Georg Ngeli and then more successfully by Franois-Joseph Ftis.4 Ftiss writings, in particular, garnered much
attention, appearing in at least nineteen editions in seven languages by
midcentury, while Ngelis contributions never quite achieved the same
notoriety.5 Although their works were created with the amateur in mind,
Percy Scholes has suggested that Ftis made little distinction between
performer-knowledge and listener-knowledge, perhaps at times overwhelming the reader with too specialized discussions of music theory while
giving scant attention to matters historical.6
Today, most Music Appreciation textbooks are keenly aware of this
distinction, frequently situating the listening examples within larger
discussions of style and historical context. They carefully cultivate an applied
3. Charles Burney, A General History of Music from the Earliest Ages to the Present Period,
vol. 3 (London: Payne & Sons, 1789); quoted without citation in Percy A. Scholes, Music
Appreciation: Its History and Technics (New York: M. Witmark & Sons, 1935; reprint Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2005), 34.
4. Hans Georg Ngeli, Vorlesungen ber Musik mit Bercksichtigung der Dilettanten
(Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1983), (orig. Stuttgart and Tbingen: J.G.
Gotta, 1826), and Franois-Joseph Ftis, Music explained to the world, or, How to understand
music and enjoy its performance (New York: Da Capo Press, 1987), [Orig. French ed. La
musique mise la porte de tout le monde, expos succinct de tout ce qui est ncessaire pour
juger de cet art, et pour en parler, sans l'avoir tudi (Paris: A. Mesnier, 1830)].
5. Scholes, 4.
6. For a brief history of Music Appreciation through the 1920s, see Scholes, 334.
12. The visual-musical pairings I use are (1) Bierstadts Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains and Griegs Morning Mood from Peer Gynt; (2) Rigauds painting of Louis XIV and
Handels Hornpipe from Water Music; (3) Monets Water Lilies and Japanese Bridge and
Debussys Pour les arpges composs from Etudes, Book II, and (4) Munchs Puberty and
Crumbs Devil Music from Black Angels.
13. A list of the textbooks surveyed and their criteria for assessment are found in Appendix B, Assignment 2.
14. While I require students to survey the available literature, I do not insist that they use
pre-packaged textbooks and recordings for their own courses. With the general accessibility
of YouTube, iTunes, the Naxos Music Library, and online printed resources, one has great
freedom to tailor a class precisely to ones needs without relying on an exorbitantly-priced
textbook to determine course content.
15. The guidelines for their syllabi are listed in Appendix B, Assignment 4.
16. My own attendance policy in Music Appreciation, for example, allows three absences
(excused or otherwise) without penalty, and then students lose one letter grade for each
subsequent miss.
17. Guidelines for these observations and for their Music Appreciation teaching experience can be found in Appendix B, Assignments 3 and 5.
18. There is a variety of convenient options for making these videos accessible to the students. One can place them on reserve in the library, upload them to a course website (like
Blackboard or Moodle), or upload them to a private page on YouTube so that they are only
available to members of the class. More information for creating such a page on YouTube can
be found at http://support.google.com/youtube/bin/answer.py?hl=en-GB&answer=157177.
19. The university chapter of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute provided a particularly rich cross-section of eager and enthusiastic course participants.
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