There's Math In The Music And Music In The Math
Thereâs Math In The Music And Music In The Math
By Martha Coville
In his 1976 hit, âSir Duke,â Stevie Wonder sang, âMusic is a world within itself / with a language we all understand.â But what precisely is the language of music? According to musician Mike Kachua, who recently visited Carry Usherâs fourth grade students at Sandy Hook School, musicâs language might just be math.
Ms Usherâs students were trying their best to settle into their seats when Mr Kachua arrived. âMrs Usher,â said one student, âdid you know sharks have teeth on their skin?â
Mr Kachua had found a perfect segue into his program. âIâve been a professional musician for 13 years,â he told the class, âbut before that, I was a chemistry teacher, and a zoologist. I worked for years with elephants and wolves.â
Ms Usherâs students whispered out âcool,â as only 10-year-olds can, with exaggerated vowels.
Mr Kachua continued. âI started playing music when I was 5 years old,â he said. Another whisper, again particular to 10-year-olds, of âawesome,â circulated through the classroom. Mr Kachua got to the point. âOne day,â he said, âI was sitting around with my scientist friends and we noticed that a lot of scientists are also musicians.â His question for the students was: âWhat makes someone a mathematical thinker?â
The definition he arrived at serves just as well as a definition for âmusical thinkers.â
âA mathematical thinker always asks the question, âHow am I going to do this?ââ Mr Kachua said. âMathematicians learn to recognize patterns.â And, he said, âMusicians recognize patterns, too.â
Musical notation is, of course, a series of patterns. In particular, notation governing rhythm forms a pattern of fractions. âMusicians work with fractions,â Mr Kachua said.
It took Ms Usherâs class a moment to accurately define a fraction. Fractions, Mr Kachua reminded the class, are not merely a parts of a whole. They are equal parts of a whole. âThe word âequalâ is key,â Mr Kachua said.
But Mr Kachua had not come to SHS to give a lecture. He began to draw a few crooked measures on the SmartBoard, and soon he was passing around instruments. âMeasures,â he said âare groups of notes for musicians.â They correspond to âsets,â which are what scientists call âa group a something.â
A series of small circles on the SmartBoard represented whole notes. The students knew it, too. âThe circle is a whole note,â one cried out. Another defined a whole note as âfour beats.â Mr Kachua passed out a couple of small hand drums, or bodhráns. After a few minutes, the students could strike them in unison, and hold the note for four beats.
Next came quarter notes, and claves. Claves are a pair of short, hollow wooden sticks. Struck together, they make a bright clicking noise. Hesitantly, the students to whom Mr Kachua gave the claves fell into rhythm with the bodhrán players. âWhat,â said Mr Kachua, laughingly, âyou mean musicians have to be able to count?â âYea!â came the response from the class.
Finally, Mr Kachua passed out a set of smaller drums, this time with drum sticks on which he asked students to beat out half notes. The result was a lovely polyrhythmic beat. Stevie Wonder would have been proud.