1 / 8

1. Which historical event does this piece represent?

In your groups, listen to the extract and consider one of the following questions:. 1. Which historical event does this piece represent?. 2 . When was this piece written?. 3 & 4 . What historical concept could we use this piece to explore?. War Requiem: Benjamin Britten. Composed 1961-2

qiana
Download Presentation

1. Which historical event does this piece represent?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. In your groups, listen to the extract and consider one of the following questions: 1. Which historical event does this piece represent? 2. When was this piece written? 3 & 4. What historical concept could we use this piece to explore?

  2. War Requiem: Benjamin Britten • Composed 1961-2 • For consecration ceremony of Coventry Cathedral (rebuilt after destroyed in Blitz in WW2) • Juxtaposes Latin mass with war poems of Wilfred Owen • Dedicated to four individuals who died as a result of the war • Including Britten’s close friend who killed himself as a result of ‘shell-shock’ TASK: Write a word to describe the piece of music on your PostIt

  3. We are going to: Begin to interpret Britten’s War Requiem to assess the changing significance of World War One

  4. Lines: 1. Strings (including harp) 2. Voice 3. Percussion 4. Wind/brass

  5. In your groups, listen to the extract and decide what your ‘line’ represents and why. • You will be asked to explain, using specific details from your own knowledge. • For example, if you think your line represents the soldiers because it sounds ‘heavy’, you could link this to your knowledge of the equipment soldiers had to carry. • There are ideas here to help you! Guns Angels Soldiers Bullets Britten (the composer)

  6. Living graph relay • Line up along the wallpaper • In real time, as the music plays, chart the tension of your line • E.g. bullets flying faster = more tension • Pass the pen down along the line when I signal (like a relay)

  7. David Cameron’s interpretation • Now in your groups, discuss how your line might change if David Cameron had written this piece • Use this quotation to help you: “The commemoration in 2014 should capture our national spirit in every corner of the country, from our schools and workplaces, to our town halls and local communities. It should be a commemoration that, like the diamond jubilee celebrations, says something about who are as a people.” - David Cameron, 2012

  8. Changing interpretations and significance • Write a word to describe the hypothetical ‘David Cameron’ piece on the back of your PostIt • What can these changing interpretations tell us about the significance of World War One? • Remembrance? • Change/continuity? • Relevance? • Write your thoughts somewhere on the graph

More Related