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Fun Music Activities To Try At Home

July 12th, 2023 | 3 min read

By Adam McCulloch

Fun Music Activities To Try At Home

The best musicians didn't start in concert halls or conservatoires: they started at home.

Encouraging your child to make even more noise around the house might seem counter-intuitive. But there are lots of fun ways that you can bring some musical learning into your home, and help your child to progress on their musical journey.

The Warwick Music team have put together eight easy ways that you can bring some musical learning to your home.

1. Sing (or whistle) to your child!

You don't need to be the best singer in the world to sing to your children. When tiny, it's a fantastic way of bonding and singing them to sleep, and even introducing rhythm as you rock them.

If you'd rather save your singing for the shower or the drive home from the school run, why not try whistling or humming with your child?

2. Be colourful!
Soundbops Board 2

Using colours is a great way of teaching children to read music and a fantastic building block for learning to read and interpret music.  Think how hard it is to look at a black-and-white piano keyboard, and a black-and-white page of music and try to see the connection between them.

Soundbops, for example, uses coloured bops that children can place on the Soundbops board. And each bop is a different note, and each note in our simple notation is the same colour. So the note C is red, and the bop is red. It's so much easier to grasp the meaning.

Using a system of colours for each note and the same on a printed sheet gives children their first introduction to reading and playing music. Try putting coloured stickers on a keyboard, and using the same colours to write out the tune.

Start Music Smarter With Soundbops!

3. Try making your own musical instruments

Making your own instruments is great creative fun, and lets you and your children explore different aspects of music.

Try creating shakers with rice or pasta in empty jars, or crisp tubes. Fill glasses or bottles with varying volumes of water for a makeshift xylophone.

Best of all, use a shoe or tissue box and varying sizes of elastic bands to make a guitar. Cut a hole in the box and stretch the bands across it. Here's one we made earlier.

4. Listen to the sounds around you

Encourage your children to listen to sounds on trips to school, shopping, or visiting family. What does a trip to the park or playground sound like? How many noises can be made into music?

Tooting horns, the rhythm of traffic, or the noise of a train crossing a junction - everything is an inspiration, on foot, in a car or on a bus.

Listen and explore how you can make those sounds at home. You can compose a journey symphony, using beats, voice and whatever you can find around the house - use saucepans as a drum set or use your shakers.

5. Colour and draw

Listen to a piece of music. Draw what you hear, or what the music makes you think and feel. Or talk about the music. It's a great way of exploring vocabulary and emotions.

Build a gallery of musical paintings - listen to different types of music and use paints, crayons, felt tips or pencils to allow your children to follow their imagination.

You can explore what types of music to which your child really responds, and discover what instruments appeal to them. You can produce prints or outlines of instruments and musical scenes and colour them in, so your child gets to know what different instruments look like, and what sounds they produce.

6. Play music and play games

Soundbops 15 Feb 2020 Finals Copyright 2020 @cursetheseeyes-9-2

Play music with your children in the background of daily activities and let them associate being happy with music. Play while you cook or on a road trip. You'll be creating memories that will be recalled in the future, reinforcing their love of music.

Play musical games at parties or with friends or just with you and them. Try clapping games like B-I-N-G-O, or musical chairs. Play 'what comes next' games to learn songs and lyrics.

And, best of all, let them play music with the instruments you have. It may be a Soundbops, a tambourine, a recorder or a shoe-box guitar, but letting children experiment with music is unbeatable.

7. Go on a journey together

Go on that musical journey together. Teachers use modelling activities to teach children by example, and it's a brilliant way to teach. Discovering music together means your child has an example and will associate those positive learning experiences with you.

You could learn an instrument alongside them, or sing with them.  Colour musical pictures with them. Play musical games. Teach them to whistle or learn the building blocks of music with the Soundbops system.  Learning lyrics together will help them extend their vocabulary and understanding of words.

8. Let's talk about pitch

We teach children about colours, and numbers and letters - all the fundaments of reading and counting, and music, too. What we don't teach them about is pitch - how the letters represent different sounds. 

Perfect pitch turns out to be a bit of a myth. It's just memory. One in 10,000 people have this skill innately, but like any skill, it can be taught. And, like language, which it is closely related to, it has a critical period - it needs to be learnt before the age of 5 or 6. 

How to make music part of your child's life

You don't need to be a musical expert or a teacher to start teaching your children about music at home. You don't even need to spend a fortune. You can easily use some of these ideas, and make your own instruments, or buy inexpensive toy instruments. With Soundbops, you get a complete series of lessons and songs that will take your children from the basics of music to being able to read and play music, and ready for a grown-up instrument.

Start Music Smarter With Soundbops!

 

Adam McCulloch

Adam is the Content Manager at pBone Music. This should mean that he’s the ideal person to write about himself, but he finds boasting in the third person a little awkward. He honed his word wizardry with a degree in English Language and Literature at the University of Leeds. He has since written copy for clients and businesses across the land, from awards to something beginning with “z”. He also spent a number of years as a musician. He has written pop songs and even jingles for kids, performed more first dances at weddings than you could shake a pBuzz at, and once played a gig for a pie company at The Etihad Stadium in Manchester. When he’s not reminiscing about those good old days, you might find Adam enjoying the football (although as an Everton fan, that can be difficult). He also loves spending time with his partner, Jen, and his family and friends, and sincerely hopes they feel the same way.

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