Guitar A Strategy For Teaching
Grades 5-8 STANDARD 3C
Improvising melodies, variations, and accompaniments: Students will improvise short melodies, unaccompanied and over given rhythmic accompaniments, each in a consistent style, meter, and tonality.
Objective
• Students will improvise twomeasure melody solo answers at the end of each phrase of a 12-bar blues in the key of E.
Materials
“Rock Trax #1″ and “Rock Trax #3,” in Rock Trax-l by Will Schmid (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corporation, 1985), book and compact disc or audiocassette
“Good Morning Blues,” in The Chord Strummer by Will Schmid (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corporation, 1982), or in Contemporary Class Guitar, Book 1, by Will Schmid (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corporation, 1982)
Audio-playback equipment
Prior Knowledge and Experiences
• Students can play melody notes E, E and G on string 1 and B, C, and D on string 2 of their guitars.
Procedures
As students are entering the classroom, play “Rock Trax #3.” Have students tune their guitars to the tuning notes at the beginning of the Rock Trax-1 recording and warm up with other songs, chords, or melodies. Tell them that today they will begin learning to play one of the greatest African American styles of music–the 12-bar blues, which gets its name from its 12 measures, or “bars.”
Have each student locate first-string notes E (open) and G (third fret) and briefly practice playing these two notes by themsleves. Be sure students are using the third finger for the note G. Explain that they will practice playing all solos together by echoing what you play. Say: “I will play measures 1 and 2 (eight beats) like this:”
Then say: “In measures 3 and 4, you echo on your guitar what I have just played. I will always start and end on the open E (first string). Try to play exactly what I play, using the same notes and rhythms. Later, you will have a chance to make up your own solos.” After students have echoed the above example, play each of the following examples and have students echo them:
3. Repeat step 2 using second-string notes B (open) and D (3rd fret). Create patterns similar to those above and have students edco them.
4. Combine notes E and G on string 1 and B and D on string 2 (see example) for a two-measure teacher’s “call,” and have students echo. To make it easy for students to follow you, start and end each call on either the open E or open B. Be ’sure that students can see your left hand.
When students seem to have grasped the concept of echoing a call, repeat the process by having them play along with “Rock Trax #1,” cut 2, in Rock Trax-1.
5. Have students turn to “Good Morning Blues” (12-bar blues in E) and learn to sing it with the background on “Rock Trax #3,” cut 10, in Rock Trax-1. Ask students how many phrases the song has [three] and whether any of the phrases are almost the same as each other [first and second]. Show them how the phrases can be labeled “A A B.”
6. Ask students to locate the two empty measures at the end of each phrase (measures 3-4, 7-8, 11-12) of “Good Morning Blues,” and point out that the E chord is played in all of these measures. Tell students that they will learn the E chord later, but first they will be playing solos in the “open” measures, using just the notes E and G. Have the class sing “Good Morning Blues” and play the following solo in all of the open measures:
7. Have students sing and play along with “Rock Trax #3,” singing each phrase with you and then improvising their own solos all at the same time in the open measures. Note that they should start and end on the note E. When students are successful in doing this, have them expand the scope of their solos by adding the notes B and D but still beginning and ending on E.
Indicators of Success
• Students improvise two-measure solos using the notes E, G, B, and D in measures 3-4, 7-8, and 11-12 of a 12-bar blues, beginning and ending their improvised solos Within the prescribed measures.
Follow-up
• As students indicate that they are ready to improvise individual solos, have volunteers take turns while the rest of the class sings and supports them. Encourage students to create interesting syncopated rhythms, which are important to the style.
08

