In the Hall of the Mountain King
Sep 17th, 2008 | By admin | Category: Blog, Music Tech Pd 3, Woodbridge HS 08-09I used Sibelius to arrange a piano piece for band and then added my own percussion.
I used Sibelius to arrange a piano piece for band and then added my own percussion.
Hello,
This is a first podcast.
This is a test podcast applied to all categories (students).
To subscribe to my podcasts, simply:
1. Copy the URL above (click once on it and press Control-C)
2. Open iTunes (or other podcasting-catching software)
3. Go to Advanced>Subscribe to Podcast
4. Paste (control-v) the URL into the Box. Add the following to the end of the feed:
?feed=podcast
press OK and voila! You will now automatically download your child’s music as soon as it’s posted.
Please note - this first podcast is an example only - your child did not compose it - it was a jingle composed by Advanced Music Tech student Nikki Singletary last year. Thanks Nikki!
Hi, my name is Ingu.
I am taking this music technology class because I am interested in music, espicially composing.
I like any kind of music(rock, rap, jazz.., etc).
I play violin, guitar(electric or acoustic), drum, and piano(not very good though).
So, I am looking forward to this new school year in this class!
Hi, my name is Mrs. Gunn and I teach Music Technology at Woodbridge Senior High School in Woodbridge, VA. My hobbies and interests include playing, studying, and writing music, and specifically the sacred and jazz genres. I am currently pursuing a masters degree in music composition and performance from George Mason University. I live in Bristow, VA with my husband, dog, and 2 renters. I love jazz!
I figured it out! I’m so excited. Students can now post their music on this website and their parents and friends can subscribe to their category and automatically download their new songs as they are created. How cool is that!
Here’s how to subscribe to a student’s podcast:
1. Install iTunes on your computer (mac or pc - it works on both)
2. Open iTunes and go to Advance>subscribe to podcast
3. Put the following url in there:
http://musictech4u.com/category/subcategory/?feed=podcast
where category is the main category for your child (class) and subcategory is the child’s last name.
Is this too complex? Well, no, not if I can show everyone at back to school night!
Now I have to figure out other ways for people to subscribe other than iTunes. Some people wont’ be comfortable with that.
Well this is just so exciting! Too bad schoolfusion doesn’t allow for student podcasting.
Yay!
-Shannon Gunn
ps this is actually called Category Casting since you’re only subscribing to a certain category.
Well MixCraft is an awesome program. I will have to post that MixCraft is much easier to use than Sonar. My students picked it up so quickly at the music tech camp! Everything about MixCraft is easy to use - the virtual instruments, the loops, and I’m really impressed with the beat matching/pitch matching function. We tried to do that with AudioSnap in Sonar and it just didn’t even come close to comparing to MixCraft. I love how you can right click on anything and go to “Make into Loop” and it just works! In Sonar, if you do that with a midi track, it adds time to the end of the loop if the loop ends before or after a measure, and then it’s impossible to get rid of the extra silence. Besides, “Groove Clip Looping” is a lot more difficult to remember than “Make Into Loop” - works well for my kids. I will say that I hear a lot of distortion on the upper frequencies with Mixcraft that I never noticed before with Sonar, but I think that may be because we’re using lower quality audio loops and turning everything into an MP3. The kids can’t tell the difference. The “Save As>MP3″ feature is also very nice! In Sonar, you have to export to audio, then we open it in iTunes, and go thru a bunch of hoops to conver to MP3. It’s great they have the mp3 encoder with MixCraft - makes everything so much easier! Everyone either listens to their music on an mp3 player or the computer these days - .wav is so old-fashioned! lol Hopefully we can get it approved and on our student computers asap.
I would also like to thank David Raimono for sending us 10 free copies of Acoustica’s MixCraft to hand out to the kids. Each kid got one and now they’re going to be able to continue to compose after camp is over!
Well it’s time to give credit where credit is due. I have to say that I am thankful for the ease of use of Sibelius cause I think it really helped my students create their first band piece. The first day of camp, I had them copy a piano piece into the computer and then use the “explode” feature of the Arrange function to arrange it for concert band. That really gave them a sense of accomplishment at the end of the first day of camp! Then I used that to teach them how to write percussion parts. The only problem is, when you use woodblocks or some other pitched percussion, and you try to convert your score to a Scorch file, the woodblock sound turnes into a flute sound when you listen to it on the web. I’ve got to figure that out. Anyway, the third day of camp they started their own composition, and we did a lot of cutting and pasting to make it work. I will say that the nice thing about Sibelius is that you can highlight a section and move it up or down by steps using the arrow keys. The kids learned that if they moved it up 3 steps it sounded pretty. They didn’t have to understand the concept of intervals, theory, thirds, etc… just use the computer to make it sound good. I was really impressed with some of the harmonizations - see Megan Westcott or Jake Goodridge’s pieces to see an example. That was very helpful in avoiding the theory and allowing them to just write harmony. There are still things that make Sibelius difficult to teach with - namely, deleting multiple measures (which is way too complex), adding measures (you never know if it’s going to come before or after the measure you’ve selected, and if you want to add multiple measures to the end of the piece it adds it to the second to last measure), and the fact that it freezes sometimes. It was really helpful to have the software in general, though, cause I was able to bring them pretty far in a week. I don’t think they could have written a full band piece with pencil and paper in 2.5 days. Thanks!
Yeah, I know this is off topic, but I hate comcast and just had to vent. FIOS WHERE ARE YOU!!!???? I’ve been waiting patiently for 2 years!
Rick Germano blames his customer service problems on “high growth.” How is this growth possible with such a bad company? Only because they have a monopoly on high-speed internet! If you want to be able to see videos and look at pictures, DSL and that new broadband access through the electrical outlet just don’t compare. I’m writing to my congressman!
When you call Comcast, and you have someone from another country on the other line, good luck dealing with off-script problems. For instance, I want to login to comcast and see my bill. I set paperless billing two weeks ago, and now need to know how much I have to give them. So I try to login, but my email is not registered, even though I am obviously registered since I set up paperless billing and received an email saying I need to pay them. So I call them, but the guy on the other line is in India and doesn’t understand so he refers me to the internet department. Now the guy on the other line speaks English but he keeps telling me that my email is *myhusbandsname*@comcast.net. Never heard of this email, nor have we ever checked it. Either they gave us a new email and didnt’ tell us, or they are confused between an email we use to check our balance, and the email they give us when we sign up with them. How do you explain this to a customer service rep? A script just ain’t cuttin’ it!!!!
Lord I hate Comcast!
I was out of internet for two days last week, due to an “outage” in my area. How is that possible, when I can see about 10 wireless networks that are working from my neighbors? (ha ha) I’m sure at least one of those has comcast!
I will send an email of thanksgiving when FIOS comes around.
Sorry So Negative but I really had to vent!
Shannon
Sibelius 3 is driving me crazy! How did they get away with writing this software? A short list of pet peeves:
So why did I buy Sibelius? Cause I was a poor grad student, and at the time, it was cheaper than Finale. I figured I’d get a good software program and just make it work if I didn’t like it. Well now I have a job and I’m ready to invest in something that will make my life easier, not more difficult! But this post would not be complete without listing the good things about Sibelius 3…
So what do you think? Sibelius 5 or Finale?