Social Studies > Place Names > Asia > China (47 resources)
1f2n3n

FREE Lesson Plan - 1st of 3 Free Items

View 2 more resources at no cost, and then subscribe for full access.

Chinese Percussion Music

Grade Levels: 5 - 10

Teach students about Chinese percussion instruments and ensemble performances. This lesson was contributed by Han Kuo-Huang.


Objectives

  • Students will play in a Chinese percussion ensemble.
  • Students will perform several compositions with percussion instruments.

Materials

  • “Lion Dance Number 1,” “Lion Dance Number 2,” and “Dragon Dance” (found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles).
  • Cymbals
  • Small gongs played with a thin wooden mallet
  • Large gongs played with a padded mallet
  • Large drums played with two thick sticks

Procedure

  1. Give the students the following background information: The Chinese call their percussion ensemble luogu, which means “gongs and drums.” The ensemble may range in size from two to a small group of players. Percussion ensembles are used in a variety of settings: theaters, parades, and folk music groups. The four major instruments used in Chinese percussion music are the bo cymbals, the xiaoluo (small gong), the daluo (large gong), and the dagu (large skin-headed drum). If Chinese instruments are not available, use Western substitutes, such as drums, tam-tam, and small cymbals.

  2. Perform the “Lion Dance Number 1” and “Lion Dance Number 2” (Found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles) and then perform the “Dragon Dance” (Found in Chinese Percussion Ensembles). Read the following performance instructions before proceeding:

    1. The drummer is the leader of the ensemble and sets the tempo (each quarter note equals approximately 100-112) by striking the drum twice on the rim before each selection (indicated in the score by the x-shaped note heads). Each composition repeats in ostinato fashion. To end the performance, the drummer should play the ending signal, which is a drumroll followed by two eighth notes, shown just below the appropriate measure of the score. This signal leads the group to the conclusion.

    2. Perform each composition alone. When the students have mastered the performances, play all the compositions together as a suite, repeating the individual segments as many times as you wish. When played as a suite, only the introductory signal for the first piece is used; the ending measures of the first and second pieces are omitted. The “ending signals” in the first and second pieces become “changing signals” for the next section.

Standards Correlations

  • Standard 2

    : Performing on instruments, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music
  • Standard 5

    : Reading and notating music

Excerpted from Multicultural Perspectives in Music Education.

MENC icon

Provided in partnership with MENC



Join TeacherVision
for $39.95 a year and start receiving benefits today!
Free 7-Day Trial

Highlights

December Events

Find educational resources for every day in December. Fill your December lessons with activities for Hanukkah (Dec. 21 -- Sundown), Winter Solstice (Dec. 21), Christmas (Dec. 25), Kwanzaa (Dec. 26), New Year's Eve (Dec. 31), Universal Human Rights Month (Dec.), World AIDS Month (Dec.).

Rulers & Number Lines

Take a look at our collection of printable rulers and protractors and number lines and place-value charts.

Letter-Writing Activities

Develop students' composition skills with these printables and activities. Students will learn about basic letter formats and practice writing formal, persuasive, and friendly letters.

Walden Forums

Wondering about online education at Walden? Get answers to your questions, meet faculty, and learn what it's like to be a Walden student. Click here to check out our free Walden Forums!

2009 Educators' Calendar

There's something worth celebrating every day! Find fun and educationally relevant holidays, events, and celebrations for each day of the year.

Printable Maps

Enrich your lessons with our collection of printable world maps depicting continents, countries, capitals, political boundaries, lines of longitude and latitude, climate zones, oceans, land forms, and more. Plus, browse our collection of Unites States maps.

Daily Printables

Add a TeacherVision widget to your blog, personalized homepage (such as iGoogle or Pageflakes), or social networking sites (such as Facebook). Our widgets feature a different fifth-grade language arts printable or fourth-grade math printable for each day of the year.