Women's Writes: A History of Women Composers - a podcast by Louisville Public Media

from 2020-09-17T11:00

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So many of the composers we usually learn about in school are men -- but that's only telling half the story of who writes the music we love.



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National Standards Incorporated:

Analyzing the elements of music (including form) of musical works, relating them to style, mood, and context, and describe how the analysis provides models for personal growth as composer, performer, and/or listener



Understanding the relationships between music and the other arts, other disciplines, varied contexts, and daily life



Understanding how music is informed by the structure, the use of musical elements, and context (such as social and cultural)



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Additional resources:

The Story of Music (BBC)

History of Women in Music

The Birth of Jazz

Scat Singing Explained and Example



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Featured music:



Felix Mendelssohn: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Op. 61, Incidental Music, No. 9 Wedding March (Boston Symphony, Seiji Ozawa)



Fanny Mendelssohn: String Quarter in E-Flat Major: IV. Allegro molto vivace (Quatuor Ebene)



Igor Stravinsky: Firebird Suite (Chicago Symphony)



Ethel Smythe: The March of Women (Chorus and Orchestra of the Plymouth Music Series, Philip Brunelle)



Duke Ellington: Cottontail



Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington: Cottontail



Pete Seeger: Freight Train



Elizabeth Cotten: Freight Train



The Chicks: March, March



Beyonce: Brown Skin Girl



Annie Lennox & Aretha Franklin: Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves





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