Skip to main content

Chrome Music Lab- Learn Music Through Fun and Hands-on Activities

Chrome Music Lab is a great music learning website that you can use with your students in class. Chrome Music Lab features a wide variety of experiments that help users learn music through fun and hands-on activities. Users can create their own music and melodies and collaborate with others in real time. Chrome Music Lab, which is part of Google Experiments, is web-based and does not require any  software download. You can simply select the experiment you are interested in and start playing right away in your Chrome browser. Chrome Music Lab works across different devices including smartphones, tablets and laptops.  Teachers are already experimenting with Chrome Music Lab in their classrooms. Combining it with dance and live instruments, teachers are exploring the learning potential of music in subject areas such as science, math and art. Below are samples of some of the main music experiments featured in Chrome Music Lab: 1. Shared Piano Shared Piano  is a web tool that enables remote live collaborative music teaching. The way it works is easy: copy the link and send it to collaborators and they can start playing together in real time. No installation or login required. Up to 10 people can play together using their keyboards or using a MIDI keyboard. Players can always scroll up to listen to what has been played. You can also save your songs to check them later. 2. Song Maker Song Maker, as its name indicates, allows you to create your own songs to share with others. You can add notes by clicking on the grid or use the keyboard keys to add or delete notes. Song maker also allows you to use the mic of your device to sing notes.  3. Rhythm Rhythm provides you with the tools to create your own rhythm by clicking on the grid. 'Rhythms are patterns of sound in time. The most common rhythms repeat every four beats, but it can also be every three, five, six, or more.' 4. Spectogram Spectogram by definition is a visual representation of the sound. 'A spectrogram shows the frequencies that make up the sound, from low to high, and how they change over time, from left to right. With this experiment you can compare spectrograms of different sounds, or use the mic to see what your own sounds look like.' 5. Arpeggio Arpeggio is 'a chord played one note at a time. This experiment lets you play arpeggios in different patterns. Tap the wheel to explore major and minor chords.' 6. Kandinsky Kandinsky, inspired by the artist Wassily Kandinsky, converts any type of drawing such as lines, circles, triangles or scribbles into sound. 7. Harmonics The Harmonic series 'is a set of frequencies with a simple relationship: twice as fast, three times as fast, four times, and so on. Musical intervals emerge from this natural phenomenon, such as the octave and the major chord (like the opening notes of "Star Spangled Banner").' 8. Piano Roll Piano Roll 'was a roll of paper that you fed into a self-playing piano to make it play a piece. This experiment is inspired by piano rolls. You can watch the notes flow by, scrub it back and forth, and change the sounds.' 9. Oscillators Oscillators 'makes sound by vibrating at a steady rate, known as its frequency. Drag your finger up and down to change the oscillator’s frequency, or swipe to hear different types of oscillators. To hear a really slow oscillator, pick the square shape and touch the very bottom of your screen.' 10. Strings Strings 'lets you explore the natural mathematical relationship between a string’s length and its pitch. For example, the second string is half the length of the first, and it plays the same note an octave higher.' 11. Voice Spinner 'Spin the spinner like a record player - slow, fast, forward, backward - to hear how it affects the sound. You can also record your own voice, or other sounds around you. The pitch of your voice gets higher when spun faster, and lower when spun slower.'This post originally appeared in Educational Technology and Mobile Learning ( www.educatorstechnology.com ).
http://dlvr.it/SXM7Z8

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

6 Great Free Digital Art Makers

Below are some of the best digital art making tools that teachers and students can use to create a wide variety of educational artworks including beautiful graphics, icons, banners, brochures,... ....read more http://dlvr.it/STwycC

Ptable- An Interactive Periodic Table for Teachers and Students

Ptable is an interactive periodic table that works on both desktop and mobile device. Chemical elements on Ptable are organized by atomic number, properties, and electron configuration. Each element on this periodic table is outsourced to Wikipedia for more information.  Some of the cool features provided by Ptable include a Time machine which allows users to go back in time and explore the elements discovered during that year.  An Isotope view which once chosen overlays selected or all known isotopes for a given element. A compound tab that provides information regarding the possible compounds elements form, and many more. Ptable also provides "complete orbital readout for each element's ground state, quantum numbers, oxidation states, and diagram following Hund's rules. Hover over each electron pair for a 3-D view of that orbital that you can drag to rotate or hover over the element to view its highest occupied atomic orbital.".  As for the structure of the data, u...

4 Best Race Car Typing Games

Race car typing games are refer to a form of interactive games designed to improve typing skills. They are so much fun to play and I definitely recommend them for use with kids and teens, and anyone else interested in developing their typing skills in fun and engaging ways. In this post, I share with… The post 4 Best Race Car Typing Games appeared first on Educators Technology. http://dlvr.it/SqvSJp