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1.4: Curwen Hand Signs

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    258460
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    Sight Singing Tools

    Over the course of this text, you will be given a variety of different methods to learn and practice your sight singing skills. The process of learning a skill like sight singing is not the same for everyone. Your collective musical experiences up to this point can assist in this process, or they may have created hurdles over which you will need to jump. We all learn differently and process information differently. One of these tools, especially for those of us who learn best by physical movement, are the Curwen Hand Signs. These were initially developed by John Curwen (1816-1880), but adapted by Zoltán Kodály into the form often used today.

    Kodály’s Philosophy

    The Kodály philosophy of music education supports music’s role in the intellectual, emotional, physical, social, and spiritual development of every child. A central tenet of the Kodály approach is that music belongs to everyone—that an education in music is the right of every human being and cannot be left to chance.

    Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967) was an ethnomusicologist and composer from Hungary. He was appalled by children’s poor singing quality, and began to create teaching methods to improve it. His approach was highly sequential. He began with sight-reading and mastering basic rhythms and pitches that gradually increased step by step to become more complex, sometimes by adding only one new note or rhythmic value at a time.

    Kodály was also appalled at the type of songs and repertoire children were learning in school. Thus, he focused on utilizing authentic folk music in music education and also composed music of excellent quality with which to teach children.

    Kodály hand signs

    Curwen's original diagram showing hand placement for each solfege syllable

    Although he did not invent the hand signs, Kodály did make alterations based on two previously established hand sign systems—Sarah Glover’s Norwich sol-fa (1845) and John Curwen’s tonic sol-fa (1858). Today, hand signs are very much associated with the Kodály method, which uses them to help children visualize the spatial relationship between notes. This aids in proper and correct on-pitch singing as well as sight reading and ear training.

    Positioning the hand signs

    When using hand signs, the low Do should be placed at your waist or midsection, with the upper Do at about eye-level. The other hand signs are placed equidistantly between the two Dos.

    Solfège in Kodály

    Although solfège singing was around long before Kodály, he became known for it as he used it extensively in his sight-singing system exercises and throughout his method. Solfège corresponds to the notes of the major scale, using the syllables Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, and Ti. These words are often abbreviated to D, R, M, F, S, L, T, and D.

    Benefits to Hand Motions

    Some of us internalize pitch and have no problem remembering and returning to key notes in a melody. Others of us find this process to be challenging. Using hand motions can connect the sound to a movement and a location and make it easier to recall when we return to it later in a melody.


    Attribution:

    Information on Kodály: Music and the Child. Authored by: Natalie Sarrazin. Provided by: SUNY College at Brockport. Located at: Music and the Child - Milne Open Textbooks Project: Open SUNY Textbooks. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike(opens in new window)

    "Manual Signs of Tone in Key” from The Standard Course of Lessons and Exercises by John Curwen. PD-US.


    This page titled 1.4: Curwen Hand Signs is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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