Classical Music as Background for Kids?

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“What classical music do you recommend that I play in the background for my kids?” This question came up during last week’s conference with the Classical Consortium entitled The Art of Soulcraft.

Answering it is a bit of a delicate dance because I first need to say that any fruitful approach to classical music needs to place it in the foreground. Any serious art needs to engage the senses. There are of course times when background music can be enjoyable, and maybe even useful, but the amount of extraneous musical sound forced on us daily has conditioned us to view music merely as an accompaniment to something else. (Do we really need music blaring at us when we pump our gas?)

Children today, as well as many parents, dwell in a world of pre-recorded music. Few youngsters routinely encounter live music-making on the back porch with neighbors bringing over banjos and accordions. Few children are likely to find themselves sitting mid-hall during a rehearsal of a good wind ensemble, symphonic choir, or orchestra. And even in church, fewer and fewer children experience the vast power of a pipe organ, or the vigorous upsweep of traditional hymns sung by a congregation unafraid to sing.

Of course, recorded music provides a wonderful resource for both education and simple enjoyment. And background music seems so “easy” to present, a kind of distraction or automatic atmosphere-creator. But a child’s musicality is not well served by this ease, at least not without an initial, cognitively active exposure to the music presented.

In our courses at Professor Carol, we offer concrete steps for students of all ages to move from passive to active listening so that they can get the most out the music they are encountering. This is not to say that music needs to be approached as though a test might be waiting in the wings. Certainly not! So let me offer a few suggestions:

First, have a purpose for picking whatever you choose to play. If students are studying King Arthur’s Court, it is easy to find recordings of songs from the Middle Ages. Rather than plow through dozens of these admittedly intriguing pieces, pick two or three, and try to offer the child a chance to hear them performed in different ways, by different performers (comparative listening). Just this morning, my granddaughter and I spent a little time listening to radically different renditions of a favorite old ballad: Barbara Allen. We moved from an old-time string band to a mesmerizing French chanteuse from the 1960s (Marie Laforêt, utterly new to me) to John Denver.

Similarly, children are better served hearing a single movement of a symphony multiple times, particularly with different orchestras and conductors, than by a drone of symphonic works put into the background.

Thus, a parent might pick the first movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 1 (or perhaps the whole work at just c. 27 minutes). Here will be an attractive, easily accessible composition that one can find on line and watch or listen to in countless performances. Start with two performances—perhaps an performance filmed (likely a bit fuzzy and probably in black-and-white) from a legendary conductor of the early or mid-20th century, now magically available on YouTube. Then turn to a recent, slickly filmed performance, with great cutaways to the players so that kids can match the sounds of the oboe, clarinet, or cellist to images of actual musicians.

Next, you could get bolder (!) and listen to a piano version of this same work made by the 19th-century virtuoso Franz Liszt, who artfully arranged all nine of Beethoven’s symphonies into virtuosic tapestries for piano. Exposure to just this one unexpected version opens up transformative ideas that notes can take different forms, that the piano offers a completely different listening experience than an orchestra, and that a single player, with the right arrangement, can play through a complex orchestral or operatic work. Indeed, that is precisely what people used to do in their parlors for entertainment!

After these steps, particularly if you concentrate on one movement at a time, you will have given your child a sense of this work’s identity and personality. Accordingly, should you decide to play recorded versions (again, limitless) in the “background,” Beethoven’s Symphony No. 1 will have meaning and bear musical and cognitive fruit for the child. Don’t be surprised, for example, if you hear the child humming melodies from it or tapping out its rhythms.

In a similar fashion, much can be gained by playing the soundtracks of dramatic works in the background (musicals, opera, film scores), so long as the child knows the works already, and particularly if your child has been lucky enough to experience it live in a theater, whether professionally done or in a performance by a high school, college, or community group.

And, yes, it is possible to go the other way by creating familiarity with a single song to lead into a new work. So, for example, if you expect that your family will be seeing a performance of The Music Man or Cats or Carmen in the future, then playing the songs (or, better yet, singing through them at the piano or along with a recording) is quite a good idea. But again, this becomes listening with a purpose.

dog-listeningFinally, even if the music is in the background, please try to have good speakers for delivering decent sound. The repertoire we call “classical” uses the full range of pitches (from high to low) and orchestra colors (string, wind, brass, percussion timbres). These musical elements absolutely require decent speakers or they are lost. Alas, people have accepted the inferior sound of music delivered through the speaker in a laptop (no matter how impressive technologically) or the ubiquitous plastic ear buds. That listening experience is neutral at best, and in many ways deleterious.

Oh these tinny sounds would annoy the composers who sweated blood and tears to write their music! Their compositions were designed to resonate against the wooden walls of gilded theaters and concert halls, inside acoustically rich salons, or impressively vaulted cathedrals. Old-style speakers can deliver a semblance of this sound. You may find some excellent ones at terrific prices on Offer-up (www.offerup.com), at estate sales, and in flea markets. Or ask relatives and neighbors what lies unused and unwanted in their garages or attics.

You can see why answering the original question is a delicate dance, yes? To state “Don’t play music unless you are connecting it or making it a focus!” seems harsh, particularly if your family just enjoys having what we used to call the “classical radio station” going 24/7. And if the modern equivalent of that radio station (“Alexa, play some classical music!”) does delight you and your family, then have at it! But check the children’s eyes occasionally. If they are glazing over (which means their ears already have turned off), then not much positive is likely to happen, and it would be good to turn to a more conscious strategy to help that child to build a musical understanding.

1 thought on “Classical Music as Background for Kids?”

  1. Thank you Professor Carol for an insightful look at this issue. One thing I thought worth mentioning was that my mom played several albums for us children at similar times each year. Handel’s Messiah was enjoyed the most around Christmas and Easter, but we grew to appreciate it so much that we would choose this particular selection of Handel’s when given the option for background music during our math studies particularly. The Nutcracker Ballet was of course another Christmas favorite. Winter did seem to be the most likely time that we would enjoy classical music. Peter and the Wolf is another one that taught us to listen for the different musical instruments. My mom, who is not overly musically inclined, never prodded us to listen to these pieces, but introduced them enthusiastically to my siblings and me, and now as adults we eagerly commend them to our children.

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