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Timothy Johnson's avatar

This is more about science and less about the songs themselves, but are you familiar with Lyrical Life Science? I was homeschooled, and I grew up with books like these in elementary school. I still remember some of the lyrics: https://www.christianbook.com/lyrical-life-science-1-with/9780974163543/pd/59775.

The tunes are mostly taken from classic folk melodies, though I'm not sure how many kids would recognize them these days.

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David Zeller's avatar

There’s a big puzzle piece that I think needs to be added in here.

We connect deeply to music primarily when we’re deeply familiar with the style:

— As far as I know, most teenagers’ music tastes expand out something like this. They fall for a simple, catchy song. Then they fall for a handful of songs by that same artist. Then they fall for that artist’s whole album. Then they finally fall for a couple of similar artists. Our music tastes naturally expand through intense exposure to subgenres, not through the random sampling of great songs.

— One of the main things that I did in music class in primary school was listen to traditional music from cultures all across the world. I didn’t have a good grasp of those styles. It felt boring and incomprehensible. Only when we worked for a long time practicing one specific style (we did 2 years of some type of African drumming) did one of those styles sink in.

— I went to Catholic school. We were frequently exposed to a very simple kind of Christian music during school assemblies. Was it good music? Probably not. But that didn’t matter. We knew our corny Christian music well. And we sang our hearts out to our corny Christian music.

If we were to play a random great song each week — the Beatles, then ABBA, then Louis Armstrong — most kids would find most songs incomprehensible/boring. It’d be like spending one week on algebra, then the next on calculus, then the next on trigonometry, never diving into any area enough to grasp it properly.

So I think this idea would work most effectively if we focused in on one subgenre of music each semester. Give the kids a chance to really get a feel for the style they’re listening to/playing with.

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