Musical Storytelling

Melody and Singing

Using music to tell stories and express feelings. How fast, slow, loud, and quiet music can show different emotions.

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Music Tells Stories

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Music Tells Stories#

Imagine watching your favorite movie without any music. A hero runs through a dangerous forest but there is no dramatic music. A puppy is reunited with a child but there is no happy, warm music. The movie would feel very different, would it not?

Music has an incredible power to tell stories and create feelings even without any words!

Program Music#

Some pieces of music are written specifically to tell a story or describe a scene. This is called program music. The music paints a picture or tells a story using only sounds.

Here are some famous examples:

"Peter and the Wolf" by Sergei Prokofiev each character in the story (Peter, the bird, the duck, the cat, the wolf, the hunters) has their own musical theme played by a specific instrument. When you hear the low, ominous bassoon, you know the wolf is coming!

"The Carnival of the Animals" by Camille Saint-Saëns different musical pieces describe different animals. "The Elephant" uses low, rumbling cello music. "The Swan" uses gentle, flowing melody. "Fossils" uses a dry, clicking xylophone.

"The Four Seasons" by Antonio Vivaldi four violin concertos describe spring, summer, autumn, and winter. Spring sounds bright and chirpy. Winter sounds cold and shivery.

How Dös Music Tell Stories?#

Music tells stories by using all the tools we have learned:

  • Fast tempo chasing, running, exciting events
  • Slow tempo thinking, sleeping, sad moments
  • Loud dynamics danger, power, climax
  • Soft dynamics secrets, mystery, peacefulness
  • High notes birds, lightness, joy
  • Low notes darkness, danger, weight
  • Smooth melody calm, flowing feelings
  • Jagged, jumpy melody surprise, energy, comedy
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