The Stick in the classroom
By Sean Malone
First published February 21, 2002 on Stickwire
Re-printed here by permission
The Stick brings some unique advantages to the classroom environment.
The piano, of course, serves as a perfect instrument to express concepts
found in common practice harmony, form, figured bass etc., and by no means
is it deficient in any way, but the Stick has helped out in ways I hadn't
anticipated.
- Though I play piano consistently for the class, I find The Stick to be
the perfect continuo instrument. When it comes to realizing figured bass
it seems the Stick was built especially for it; bass in the left hand,
harmony in the right, voicings all day long...it's fantastic.
There's something to be said about mobility and portability. To be able
to walk between an overhead projector, the chalk board, toward students
while playing and speaking at the same time is a tremendous aid in
pacing and continuity. Though there's no accounting for taste, I
believe it's important in medium to large-size classes to keep moving
rather than being propped up behind the piano the entire time, and the
Stick facilitates that movement.
Being able to control the tone and having a large sonic palette has
subtle advantages when it comes to expressiveness - certain pieces or
concepts can benefit from shifts in timbre and color, and by having a
variety, students will be less likely to tune out. This is a subtle
psychological point, but repetition - in any form - can be detrimental
to attention span of a student, and the Stick is capable, by way of
amplification, of providing a great deal of variety.
Of course, even though the students have seen it, the Stick is
captivating to them. They know how it works and all, but still gaze
incredulously at an instrument generating much more sound than they
would expect from either a guitar or bass.
For aural skills classes, being able to work on harmonic dictation and
melodic dictation from the Stick provides a departure from certain ruts
that can be associated with the piano, or any instrument if it's the
only one being used. Students often associate certain cognitive skills
with timbre (especially when they are learning them for the first time)
and it's not unusual for a student to do very well with the piano, but
poorly, say, if the same melody was played on flute or some other
instrument. The Stick's ability to provide a multi-timbral palette,
again, has pedagogical and practical advantages.
As I said, I have no complaints about the piano, and the Stick for me is
not meant as a substitute - the piano gets plenty of attention in my
classes. The point I'm trying to make is that the Stick can play a very
important role in teaching music theory, aural skills, improvisation,
arranging...you name it. It's such a 'complete' instrument, that it's not
beholden to the kinds of idiomatic restrictions that prevent other
instruments from doing the same.
Sean Malone
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