Prairie Post (East Edition)

Central School students write a song for Remembranc­e Day

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

Central School students in Swift Current learned more about songwritin­g and created a Remembranc­e Day song that will be performed by the entire school.

A group of Grade 5-8 students participat­ed in a day-long songwritin­g workshop with Saskatchew­an singersong­writer Jeffery Straker, Oct. 4.

“It was a good day,” he said afterwards. “We had 19 students, who had not written a song before, go from no song to full song that they learned and sing really well in a school day, and it's a really good song. So the day was uplifting.”

They initially worked in small groups and then came together during the last workshop session to finalize the verse details and melody.

“I took them through this exercise to give them hints to guide them to write the words,” he explained. “They wrote all the words themselves and they came up with the rhymes and the repetition­s and things.”

Thereafter he assisted the group to select a melody for the new song through a collective process.

“When it comes to the melody, that's almost a whole separate thing,” he noted.

“So I gave them options and they yay or nayed the options to hone in to how we would do it. That started the big picture of the melody. Then what we did, just like any songwritin­g process, you just sing it a whole bunch of times until you're almost sick of it, but that helps you understand what about the melody works and doesn't work.”

The students were fast learners and he was surprised by the speed at which they completed the entire songwritin­g process.

They totally understood the essence of Remembranc­e Day and what it's all about, but I think the surprise with them was the speed at which they started writing the poetry,” he said. “It was kind of startling, in a good way.”

Central School music teacher Celia Hammerton also felt the songwritin­g workshop was a resounding success.

“We had a fabulous day,” she said. “The kids were totally engaged and had a lot of fun, and learned a lot about the writing process and wrote a song.”

The songwritin­g already started before the workshop with a brainstorm­ing process that involved the entire school.

“I have Jeffery sent me questions on the topic and then I will brainstorm with every class in school so that every child gets the opportunit­y to offer some of their ideas,” she said. “So when they hear the song and they get to sing the song, they might think that was my idea.”

The results from this brainstorm­ing process provided the basis for the group of students who participat­ed in the workshop with Straker.

“That's the ideas that the actual songwritin­g starts with,” she noted. “So they're not starting from a blank page.

They actually have a sheet of brainstorm­ing ideas to get them going as a starting point.”

The title of Central School's new Remembranc­e Day song is Take Two Minutes. The process after the workshop was to create a backing track for the new song, which was done by local musician Ken Friesen, and thereafter students began to learn the song in preparatio­n for its performanc­e at the school's Remembranc­e Day assembly on Nov. 10.

Hammerton was able to arrange this songwritin­g workshop with Straker after receiving a grant from the Saskatchew­an Music Educators Associatio­n.

“He does such an amazing job with the kids,” she said. “I'm just always amazed by what we achieve in a day with them and that's I think down to the way he presents it and the way he works with the kids.”

This was the fifth time since 2014 that Central School students participat­ed in a songwritin­g workshop with Straker.

He previously guided them to create a song for the school's centennial celebratio­n, a song for a TeleMiracl­e performanc­e by the school choir, an anti-bullying song to perform on Pink Shirt Day, and a Cougar Strong song to reflect the school's culture and values.

“It's a great opportunit­y for the kids to learn about the process of songwritin­g and realize that they themselves can be songwriter­s,” Hammerton said.

“They often think I can't do this, but this gives them an opportunit­y to try it out and Jeffery is so good at engaging the kids and teaching them about the whole process and helping with it.”

Straker is an award-winning singer

songwriter with a busy tour schedule, but he enjoys doing songwritin­g workshops with both students and adults.

“I've done them for all sorts of things, like recently a centennial of a town,” he said. “I've done them for school themes and mottos, but I've never done one for Remembranc­e Day. So it was really cool.”

He released a new acoustic five-song EP titled Just After Sunset a few days after doing the workshop at Central School and he will be going on a twoweek concert tour to England in November. These songwritin­g workshops serve as a reminder of his own experience.

“I was a late bloomer, because I never understood for the longest time that anybody could write a song,” he said.

“The reason I do this is because I can see little light bulbs go off in some of these young heads. … It's really enabling to create the next generation of musicians and songwriter­s, because as a songwriter at some point you've got to think about this. Who's going to do this next and how do we keep this wheel rolling. So I'm trying to plant seeds, and not every kid is going to write songs, but I saw a few lightbulbs go off and there are some who I know is going to write more.”

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 ?? Photos by Matthew Liebenberg ?? From top: clockwise: Singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker plays the new song on a piano during the final workshop session, Oct. 4; (bottom right photos) Straker discusses ideas with students; (bottom left): Grade 5-8 Central students with music teacher Celia Hammerton and singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker after the conclusion of the songwritin­g workshop, Oct. 4.
Photos by Matthew Liebenberg From top: clockwise: Singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker plays the new song on a piano during the final workshop session, Oct. 4; (bottom right photos) Straker discusses ideas with students; (bottom left): Grade 5-8 Central students with music teacher Celia Hammerton and singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker after the conclusion of the songwritin­g workshop, Oct. 4.
 ?? ?? Singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker plays the new song on a piano during the final workshop session, Oct. 4.
Singer-songwriter Jeffery Straker plays the new song on a piano during the final workshop session, Oct. 4.

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