Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
I've asked if the lights
could be lifted for this session,
and David Glover agreed.
And the reason, thank you very much,
is I like to see the whites of your eyes.
(Laughter)
And I like to see you as my class.
I hope you've all made the connection
that music is an incredibly important part
of what has been happening today.
We started with a didjeribone,
an improvisation
on this extraordinary instrument.
We then saw a film
that had been put together
showing how TEDx was setup,
and music, actually, made that film work.
Without music, that film
would have been a very different film.
We then saw the rabbit, that had music;
- a tragic end for the rabbit,
but nonetheless, music -
(Laughter)
and then we have had "Synergy",
whose piece, their percussion piece,
was an improvised piece.
I spoke to Bree afterwards and I said,
"That's clearly improvised,"
and she said, "Yes, we work
on a particular pattern.
We take that pattern,
and every time we perform
that piece, we do it differently."
Then, we had a string quartet,
which included amplified sounds
with improvisation.
Structures upon which other structures
had been imposed.
This is the creative process.
This is the process
which starts with an idea
which comes from the imagination,
the musical imagination.
And when the musical imagination
is ignited in a group circumstance,
we have the most extraordinary power
to change lives with music,
and to involve people in music.
And it should start
with very, very, very young children
not teenagers.
Not that -- you can't start--
I've taught teenagers
who had their first experience
with music as teenagers.
But my view is
that all of that improvisation,
all of that creativity you saw
on the stage today,
is the right of every child,
no matter where and no matter
what the circumstance.
Every child, I believe, should have access
to properly taught music
in the hands
of a properly taught teacher.
(Applause)
And it can start in the simplest way.
Music is an oral art.
And when I talk about music, I define it
as "sound, organized in some way,
passing through time."
With children, we begin with imitation,
the most powerful way of teaching.
And if you don't mind
becoming three-year-olds
just for a minute
- I promise you, a minute -
I will make my point.
I'm going to clap a pattern,
I want you to clap it back.
(clapping)
(Audience clapping)
You're clearly not three.
(Laughter)
Here's another one.
(Clapping sequence)
(Audience claps sequence)
What you notice is you accelerate,
you get louder,
and you don't actually do
the pattern properly
(Laughter)
which means you are educable,
you can be taught.
(Laughter)
When you do that with children,
what you're doing is you're engaging them
in their first oral experience.
They need to listen.
And as a result of the listening,
they repeat, and it requires focus.
When this happens, and we take
a very simple nursery rhyme,
and we say, with children, we go,
(singing) "Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall.
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall."
We do this little pattern,
I frequently say to the little children,
very young children,
"Who can do a different pattern?"
Child one puts a hand up and goes
(singing same pattern)
"Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall ..."
I said, "Thank you very much."
Who can do a different pattern?"
(singing same pattern)
"Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall ..."
(Laughter)
And then, the next child will say,
"When will this be over?"
(Laughter)
All teaching is an act of faith.
And with children,
the idea that repetition
and putting it in the circumstance
of offering ideas is vital.
Music is important
for the following reasons:
it is abstract, it doesn't mean
anything outside itself.
When we play a sound,
you can interpret that sound as you wish.
I'm going to go to the TEDx Steinway.
(Laughter)
And it is a Steinway.
I've sampled [David's] Steinway.
I'm going to play some sounds.
(playing piano)
Those sounds are abstract.
They mean nothing other than themselves.
If I then say, "I'm going to play
a composition, and it's called something.
I want you to imagine
what this composition might be called."
(Playing a short tune)
Does anyone have an idea
what that composition might be called?
Probably "Highly forgettable".
(Laughter)
But, in each person,
that sort of music, any music,
will evoke a different response.
Music does not describe.
Music does not narrate.
Music does not tell stories. Music evokes.
Music suggests, music implies,
and music opens up the mind
of a child in an extraordinary way.
And I want to give you some ideas
on that - back to the Steinway.
These three pieces deal with night.
(playing "Claire de Lune" by Debussy)
"Claire de Lune" of Debussy.
(playing "A Little Night Music" by Mozart)
"A Little Night Music" of Mozart.
(playing "Moonlight Sonata" by Beethoven)
"Moonlight Sonata" of Beethoven.
They have nothing to do
with night whatsoever.
(Laughter)
The title is simply a way in.
But this abstraction about music
is what offers a child
the chance to move into
a really special world of thinking.
And we get children, therefore,
to try to understand
that the most important thing about music
is to make your own music.
Children must make their own music.
It is not they shouldn't reproduce music,
but they must make their own,
and they make it best through singing.
That every child,
given normal circumstances,
has the capacity to sing;
you, all, have the capacity to sing.
Shall we test that?
(Laughter)
Yes, we shall.
(Laughter)
I will give you a little phrase
and I'd like you to sing it back.
La-la-la-la-la, la-la, la, la.
(Audience) La-la-la-la-la, la-la, la, la.
Richard Gill: La, la-la, la-la, la-la.
(Audience) La, la-la, la-la, la-la.
RG: Pitch better than rhythm for you lot.
(Laughter)
Very good.
Now what about if I give you
a little pattern here,
like, foot, hand, foot, hand.
Just try that, foot, hand,
and then, sing this back,
la-la, la-la, la, la, la.
(Audience) La-la, la-la, la, la, la.
RG: La, la-la, la-la, la-la.
(Audience) La, la-la, la-la, la-la.
RG: Now sing the whole thing
from the beginning. Go.
(Audience) La-la, la-la, la, la, la.
La, la-la, la-la, la-la.
RG: Exactly.
When in doubt - improvise, right?
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Through singing
is how we engage every child.
Through singing is how we teach children
to be literate, to read and write.
Through singing is how we teach
children to analyze.
I was working with a group
of first grade girls,
and we were doing a song
about "Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake".
And I had the pitch on the board.
Not that they could read the pitch,
but I believe
they should confront the example.
And throughout the lesson,
we did a number of activities.
And at one stage, I said to them,
"Let's look at the song on the board.
What do you notice?"
And one of them said,
"It goes up, and it goes down."
This little bright one
by the theater divide said,
"Well, there are crotchets
and minims in that song."
(Laughter)
And everyone else in the class
went, "Oh, boy."
(Laughter)
So at the end of the lesson,
I like to make a summary,
"What have we done?"
It's very important for me
to find out what we have done.
So all of them are sitting
on the floor, and I said to them,
"What did we do today?"
"Nothing."
(Laughter)
That's a very common response, "Nothing."
(Laughter)
We just jumped,
and we clapped, and we sang.
And they went--
and I finally got out what they did.
This one put her hand up and said,
"Well, we learned about crotchets
and minims, but I had to teach us."
(Laughter)
(Applause)
Most interesting was watching
the other kids go, "Yeah, that's true."
(Laughter)
So the next day, another song
is on the board,
and all these lessons are being videoed,
they're being taped.
Another song on the board,
we're observing the notation.
And at the end of the lesson,
I bring them all together,
and I said, "What do you notice
about the notation today?
The pattern. It goes up,
it goes down, it does this?"
And she was sitting right there,
and she looked up at me,
and she said, "I haven't got a clue."
(Laughter)
Which was tolerated
by the rest of the class.
(Laughter)
That concept. They probably agreed.
With music,
you open up the mind of a child
in a very special way,
different from drama,
different from dance,
and different from visual arts.
There was a movement which said
all the arts work the same way,
when we went through the touchy-feely 60s.
That is simply not true.
The arts function in different ways.
And music, in my view,
is at the top of the food chain.
(Laughter)
The drama people tend
not to agree with me on that.
(Laughter)
But I also put dance in there.
But what I want to say is
that the power of the creative thought
transferred from music
to all other areas of learning
is hugely potent.
The neurological evidence for music is in
in a spectacular way.
That's a bonus.
Music is worth teaching for its own sake.
It is worth teaching because it is good,
it is worth teaching because it is unique,
and it is worth teaching
because it empowers
children spectacularly.
And when you get a fifth grade boy
who comes up with a piece of music
and says, "Look, I made this myself,"
with that sort of threat
(Laughter)
you know it's working, thank you.
(Applause) (Cheers)