Classical Music | November 19, 2009 | 0 comments

10 classical recordings to start your kid with

Image
slagface
When we start children out on reading, we don't hand them a copy of "Moby Dick" or "Finnegan's Wake" and say, OK, dive in. No, we start with picture books, with simple texts in monosyllables, with stories about other children and animals. We start by reading to them, and with them. We show them how.

A lot of the great masterpieces of classical music are the equivalent in depth and difficulty to "Moby Dick" and "Finnegan's Wake." So, we don't want to start there. We want to start out with short, mostly simple pieces and we want to listen with them.

Kids need two things, more or less, in a piece of classical music. They need a regular beat or they need some sort of story or picture (in the mind's eye) to go along with the music. (They don't need both in every piece.) The regular beats appear mostly in dance, or dance-like, pieces, such as "The Nutcracker Suite" or much of Baroque music. The stories or pictures appear in programmatic works such as "The Flight of the Bumblebee" or "The Carnival of the Animals."

Make it a regular habit to listen with your child, just as you did (or were supposed to) when they started out reading. When my own son was still in diapers, we'd have a short listening session every night just before his reading and bedtime. We'd play a lot of the same things night after night, but pretty soon he had a fairly big repertoire. And you'd be surprised what worked. I still remember him rocking up and down in front of the speakers to Schubert's song "Das Wandern" (from "Die schöne Müllerin") as sung, in German, by the incomparable Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. But then again, it has a powerful, regular beat.

So, establish a listening time. Then listen. That is, don't chat, or watch television, or read, or eat dinner. Give your full attention to the music. Sure, have fun, dance around, conduct the orchestra, crash cymbals or beat on drums. But make the music the thing, the only thing.

10 classical recordings to start your kid with:

1. Bernstein Favorites "Children's Classics"
2. Listen, Learn And Grow "Playtime Imagination"
3. Vivaldi: "The Four Seasons."
4. Classics From The Crypt
5. Tchaikovsky: "The Nutcracker" Bernstein Century
6. John Philip Sousa : Marches
7. Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5 and 7
8. Walter Carlos "Switched on Bach"
9. Franz Suppe "Light Cavalry" Overture
10. Carlos Kleiber "New Year's Concert 1992"
  1. groups:
    Classical Music
  2. tags:
    Culture Education Children Classical 1 more
  3.     
    |

0 comments // 10 classical recordings to start your kid with

more from Classical Music:

top videos