Join in with Big 10 Minute Sign & Sing

This term Southampton Music Hub is offering as many people as possible the exciting opportunity to join in with Big 10 Minute Sign & Sing — no matter where you are in the country!  Whether you’re a school bubble, or an individual learning at home. or a whole school participating, everyone can get involved.  

Those taking part can choose any song from the Song Bank to participate in this project (you can find songs on the website or YouTube channel), use the 10 minute Teaching video to learn the signs and/or body percussion and practise with the performance video.  When you are ready you can submit videos of your class bubble in school, multiple bubbles and pupils learning from home can submit their own individual videos to be included.

The hub’s brilliant digital team will stitch together the videos and premiere them as part of a national event, on YouTube on Monday 29th March at 1.30pm.

Monday 29th March Online workshop and Premiere

Join the music hub on the afternoon of 29th March at 1.30pm over on the 10 Minute Sing & Sing YouTube channel to participate in a new Pop Medley Sign & Sing workshop and watch the live premiere of your performances!

Find out more about the event at https://www.southamptonmusichub.org/big10

Nia Collins, Music Hub Relationship Manager, says:
“We know many of our schools are using 10 Minute Sign & Sing as part of their in-school and home learning activities during the current lockdown and that we are all missing the opportunity to take part in events and performances. What better way to build community and connect with each other than to combine all our activities into one nationwide project – so excited to see the final performances!” 

Spring Term 2021: Make Music Wherever You Are!

Whilst each new year brings new possibilities and new opportunities to explore, no other year has ever also brought with it the strange disruption that has marked the beginning 2021. Whilst some children remain in school, many are starting their year learning from home. But whether in the classroom with a teacher, or round the kitchen table with the cat, Southampton Music Hub will be helping every child make music wherever they are!

  • Online Music Lessons with Southampton Music Services are back!
    From our experiences last year, we know the comfort young musicians take in seeing a familiar face each week and the value they place on keeping hold of a little piece of normality in a world full of disruption. We know how the online learning environment encourages them to take responsibility for their own learning. We know how online music lessons help parents to see more of, and take part in, their child’s musical life. Helping young musicians and singers to carry on learning safely at home is what online music lessons are all about. Find out more, and sign up today.

  • Virtual resources and activities, at home and at school
    For Spring Term, Southampton Music Hub has a jam-packed offer of resources and activities which work wherever children and young people are learning. It could be a 10 Minute Sign & Sing, or it could be an interactive video workshop with Peruvian percussionist Sandro Granda. It could be video workshops with the English Touring Opera, James Redwood or Alexander D Great, to name a few! A full range of opportunities has been sent to every school, but if you think you’re missing out then get in touch.

  • Moving online
    From music production sessions, to orchestras and bands, Southampton Music Hub is offering online alternatives to a full programme of music-making this term. If you’re already involved, you’ll be hearing from us soon (if you haven’t already). And if there’s something you’d like to be involved in, then you can always get in touch.

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Matt Brombley
Changing Tracks: music services working together to become more inclusive
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Today, Changing Tracks release their annual findings and review in to inclusion for music services.

Southampton Music Services, the lead partner for Southampton Music Hub, takes part in the Changing Tracks network, and earlier this year, took part in an Action Research Project with Looked After Families which has contributed to this review.

About Changing Tracks:

Changing Tracks is a programme of support and learning for and with music services wanting to improve equality, diversity and inclusion. It is run by Hertfordshire Music Service and funded by Youth Music. It was previously called MusicNet East. Changing Tracks members are helping each other to be more inclusive through a peer network facilitated by Music Mark, funding for action research, support and challenge, advice and resources.

About the Alliance for a Musically Inclusive England

The network is part of the Alliance for a Musically Inclusive England.

The Alliance is a growing network of organisations working together to:

  • promote equity in music education

  • support others to do the same through advocacy, CPD, resources, and strategic alliances.

What does being musically inclusive involve?

Musically inclusive practice involves making sure young people’s music is HEARD:

  • Holistic: placing emphasis on personal, social and musical outcomes

  • Equitable: people facing the biggest barriers receive the most support

  • Authentic: developed with and informed by the people we do it for

  • Representative: the people we work with as participants and colleagues reflect our diverse society

  • Diverse: all musical genres, styles, practices are valued equally

Schools and children are enjoying their 10 Minute Sign & Sing — here's this week's new songs

Schools, children and families across Southampton and Isle of Wight have been enjoying joining in with last week’s “10 Minute Sign & Sing” videos:

I did 'Try Everything' with the whole school on Friday… They absolutely loved it!!

It was fantastic standing at the front and watching the concentration on their faces as they signed along with Kelly.. she was really great - so clear.

— Jill (teacher at Beechwood School)

Sandra, is a music teacher at Great Oaks, a secondary school for young people with a range of complex learning difficulties including autism and speech and language difficulties, and she says:

I really like this new song… thank you for your hard work in putting these songs and the signing together. I like the fact the signing is Makaton!

And for schools who are seeing disruption to their usual music making, the videos have helped to create new, exciting shared music experiences:

These are fab!  That's fantastic as we can't do our Christmas Nativity do want to do something different for parents…

— Laura, teacher at Newchurch & Nettlestone Primary schools

Launching "10 Minute Sign & Sing": putting singing safely at the heart of daily school life

This week Southampton and Isle of Wight Music Hubs launch a new “10 Minute Sign & Sing” series — weekly videos to help children enjoy making music safely in class, and at home.

All the songs include step-by-step instructions to help everyone enjoy singing along, as well as signing along using fun and easy Makaton signs.

Whilst Covid-19 restrictions mean that, for some, whole-school singing assemblies may not currently be possible, these quick ten minute videos can keep music at the heart of daily school life in a new way — as part of class or year group “bubbles”. As an added bonus, videos can be sent home to children self-isolating, so that no one misses out on making music this year.

Makaton Foundation says:
For those not familiar with Makaton, it is a unique language programme that combines signs, symbols and spoken word to aid with communication and understanding new ideas. Using Makaton with Singing is a fun and easy way to learn to use signs with singing for young children. Signing and singing have been shown to encourage the development of communication and language skills and are beneficial for vocalisation, confidence, social skills, emotional development, well-being and self-esteem.”

Each week the team will be creating video resources covering two songs: one for Early Years and Key Stage 1; and the other suitable for Key Stages 2–3. Children with Special Educational Needs can join in with whichever song they like best — all the songs come with Makaton signs and instructions, and can be enjoyed by everybody.

The music hub has partnered with Welsh National Opera as part of this project and their fantastic vocal practitioners — opera singers and workshop leaders Emily Rooke and Dalma Sinka — will be creating the videos for Early Years and Key Stage 1.

Nia Collins, Music Hub Relationship Manager, says:
“By keeping videos quick and accessible we hope to encourage regular, short singing, to take place on a daily basis in a well-ventilated classrooms and homes throughout the year. As government guidance outlines, singing a little and often is absolutely possible and we believe the health and wellbeing benefits that come with this are absolutely vital to children and young people.”

10 Minute Sign & Sing is part of the Everybody Sing Song Bank:

Sharing how music can support development of "The Recovery Curriculum"
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Earlier this term, Southampton and Isle of Wight Music Hubs shared their response to Barry Carpenter’s Recovery Curriculum with schools teachers and leaders across the region.

Artswork — the South’s Arts Council Bridge Organisation — hosted a webinar called “Supporting Pupil Wellbeing and Reconnecting with Learning through Creativity” where the hubs presented the way the recovery curriculum had informed planning and projects for the year ahead. The event featured a keynote from Professor Dame Alison Peacock, CEO of the Chartered College of Teaching, and was well attended by schools, as well as arts professionals from across the South .

About the Recovery Curriculum:

The Recovery Curriculum outlines five losses and five levers of recovery for children and young people.

Loses:

  1. Routine

  2. Structure

  3. Opportunity

  4. Friendship

  5. Freedom

Levers of Recovery:

  1. Relationships

  2. Community

  3. Transparent curriculum

  4. Metacognition

  5. Space

Sharing the hubs’ approach

In the virtual session, Nia Collins, Relationship Manager for Southampton and Isle of Wight Music Hubs, shared how projects and plans for the year ahead are designed to address the five losses through specific music-making activities which build upon the five levers for recovery.

In the session, the hub also shared a growing body of evidence showing that music can have a positive impact on both social, emotional and wider academic outcomes for children and young people in the longer term.

Nia Collins, Music Hub Relationship Manager said:

“Huge thanks to Artswork for inviting the music hubs to be part of such a wonderful event and for bringing us together with the other brilliant speakers and a great number of teachers too. I came away inspired and hopeful for our children and young people, seeing the passion and compassion that our educators and arts colleagues have at this extraordinary time has motivated me even more to continue on this path of putting health and wellbeing at the forefront of what we do in the Music Hub.

The role of music in supporting the health and wellbeing of pupils, and in particular how this can be so closely tied in with schools’ recovery curriculum planning, is an incredible opportunity to broaden the curriculum. We should absolutely take in this extraordinary year.”

Two years ago today: 600 young musicians perform at the Royal Albert Hall
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It was on Monday 5 November 2018 when 600 young musicians performed on the world-famous stage at the Royal Albert Hall: one of the biggest, most inclusive ensembles ever to do so!

The momentous performance was made possible thanks to Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, and was a huge celebration of their 125th anniversary, seeing 400 young musicians from Southampton and Isle of Wight Music Hubs joined by 200 from Poole and Bournemouth Music Hub, Soundstorm.

Two years on, on Thursday 5 November 2020, as England begins a second national lockdown as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, huge massed performances like this one can feel so far away. However, all the children, young people, teachers and music leaders who took part in the event — and other inspirational events like it — all hold on to unforgettable memories of making music with others.

It is these memories that keep us all motivated to continue to enjoy music wherever we are — in school, at home, or elsewhere — and to look forward to days in the future when we will be able to make music together with so many others once again.

Matt Brombley
Black Lives Matter: first two commissions released as Songwriter Sessions resources

Today, Southampton Music Hub launches “Black Lives Matter: Songwriter Sessions” — a new ebook resource featuring performances and interviews with Sheldon Hamilton McKenzie and Sal Resco Chitulu.

Through their music, and in conversation, these two talented local artists share their music and their stories: helping us to better understand where their music comes from.


Schools celebrate Black History Month with Calypsonian Alexander D Great
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Southampton and IOW Music Hubs are celebrating Black History Month with Calypsonian, musician and educator, Alexander D Great. Thanks to exciting new digital resources, children and young people will gain a fascinating insight into the music of Trinidad and Tobago, as well as an understanding of Alex’s experiences growing up as part of the Windrush Generation.

Each set of videos features performances of Alex’s unique Calypso songs; storytelling in the Griot style; historical background to Windrush, and the origins of Calypso; as well as help for schools to compose their own calypso music. These digital resources are available for all schools in the region, with versions suitable for ages 5–18 years old.

During the month of October, Alex will also be visiting the Isle of Wight, thanks to a collaboration with hub partners The New Carnival Company and the Isle of Wight Heritage team. On Wednesday 14 October 2020, will be performing and speaking about his experiences at an evening event in Brading Roman Villa .  

Also, in February 2021. Southampton and IOW Music Hubs will follow up this resource with a Calypso writing project, led again by Alexander. This will focus on writing songs telling pupil’s own stories from lockdown and the lasting effects of Covid-19 in their lives.  

Nia Collins, Music Hub Relationship Manager, says:
“Alex is such an incredible polymath and I can’t wait for them to enjoy his colourful evocations of the past and present through songs and storytelling. His enthusiasm and engaging style will no doubt captivate pupils’ imaginations and inspire their creative responses. As part of the recovery curriculum this year it is vital that we give pupils the space for self-expression and to rebuild their relationships with each other through shared experiences while still safely offering them the same high quality opportunities we always have which I believe this project does”

Virtual Premier Tonight: Groove Merchant perform 'Locked Out of Heaven'

Join Groove Merchant tonight on YouTube as they premier their performance of Locked Out of Heaven by Bruno Mars.

Groove Merchant’s guitar player Tom says:
”The song is enjoyable to play live and on my own. The changes between clean and distorted settings makes the song challenging when performing. There are fun chords in the main riff, and the lead notes at the chorus making the song more enjoyable to play.”

Aidan, the group’s band leader, says:
”This video is the culmination of a fantastic year for Groove Merchant. They have displayed superb musicality in their live performance at the Mayflower and hard work, resilience and tenacity in their home recordings. Enjoy!”

Recruiting a new Digital Music Engagement Worker

Southampton and IOW Music Hubs are looking to recruit a talented young (18–25), BAME music artist and/or producer, who is passionate to work with younger musicians, producers and performers: helping them discover digital music genres, build musical and personal skills, and move forward towards better musical futures.

This role is part of the new ‘Digital Native Artists (DNA) Programme’ which has been funded by Art Council England.

Working across electronic dance music genres, modern rap and hip-hop genres (including grime, trap and drill) and progressive R&B and pop genres, you will help build a diverse and inclusive programme of music making and learning.

You will use your music and production skills to develop and deliver a programme of digital music resources, workshops, and events which engage with aspiring young musicians in schools and other settings across the region. The programme will enable participants to improve their musical skills, develop new personal skills, and inspire them to continue making music in the future.

This a development role, and training and support will be given to help build your teaching and learning skills, as well as mentoring and support to help you develop a wide range of professional skills for working within formal and informal education settings.

This role is a one year (48 weeks), fixed-term contract, for one day per week (6–8 hours) starting in Autumn 2020. Salary is £400 per month, £4,800 total.

Get in touch to send a CV, covering letter and a link to examples of your music.

Applications should be received no later than 12noon on Friday 16 October 2020.
Interviews, via Google Meet, will take place during the week beginning Monday 19 October 2020.

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Art Asia offer four creative ways to explore the Mayflower 400 story
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Art Asia are offering four creative ways to explore the Mayflower story:

“The Mayflower Story began with the epic voyage of the pilgrims, in search of the New World and finding their site of belonging. It is a story of persecution, hope and challenges they encounters as they negotiated a new regrouping of communities to call it home. The Mayflower story has a double edge — the pilgrim finding a new home but at the same time displacing the indigenous people and paving the way for colonialism. It is important to recognise this. At a time when we are living through some extraordinary times, not only because of the pandemic but because of inequalities and entrenched racism in society ‘Belonging’ attempts to bring the lives and stories of the new settlers in Southampton.

Art Asia are offering creative responses, including singing, storytelling and craft, and are inviting Southampton’s communities to respond.

Let the music play! A new school year begins

As a new school year begins, and teachers welcome back pupils once again, Southampton Music Hub is working with schools to keep music at the heart of creative learning communities. Much about the year ahead can feel very uncertain, however, the whole team are dedicated to responding to challenges in the same spirit as they have done before: keeping our focus on bringing the life-changing power of music to every child in the city.

Here are a few of the ways we’re getting ready to do just that:

Empowering and developing teachers

This year, instrumental and vocal teachers are being given extra time to plan and prepare for the year ahead. The team are having training sessions with educational psychologists, to better understand the personal and emotional challenges young musicians are facing, and how music lessons can be part of the response. There will be training on how to recognise and nurture the personal and social development of young musicians, as well as training on how, where it may still be needed, online music lessons can be the best they can be, for all involved.

Additionally, “Music for Wellbeing” guides for schools use music a tool for helping children understand and overcome the emotional challenges faced throughout the coronavirus pandemic. The hub is empowering and developing teachers so that young musicians can reach their fullest potential.

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Special guidance and practices

Working together with school’s, Southampton Music Hub is helping to keep all children, teachers and the community as safe as possible, including guidance around good hygiene, social distancing, engaging with NHS Test and Trace, as well music specific risk assessments. Music can only change lives for the better, when we first keep each other safe, and these new practices will help happen.

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Blended delivery

Not all music can be face-to-face, at least, not yet, and so online and remote music-making will still be a core part of the hub’s offer. But online is not just a second-best option. Digital workshops open up capacity, so that more schools can be inspired by world-class musicians and composers. Ensembles will continue to develop their exciting digital performance programmes which can reach a bigger, broader audience, in the year ahead too. Online music lessons will also continue for some, where needed, enabling musical learning to continue when face-to-face lessons are not possible. By blending online and face-to-face music-making — embracing the best of both — the hub is able to make sure more children than ever can access music.

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Looking ahead

Every new year brings new possibilities, including new challenges, and this year, that is particularly true. But music has a unique role to play, helping bring people together, helping us understand ourselves and each other better, and helping us to imagine a bright future for our schools and communities.

An extraordinary year for Southampton Music Hub 

As another school year comes to an end, Southampton Music Hub looks back on a year which has been unlike any other.

Mayflower 400

Symphony 400: The Voyage

The year, and our Mayflower 400 journey, began in four primary schools, where composer James Redwood collected musical ideas inspired by the Mayflower story. 

Over the next few months, those ideas inspired a momentous musical voyage for a new orchestra of 100 talented secondary musicians, alongside digital remixes and resources for others to play and create for themselves.

Big Sing: The Journey

Alongside Symphony 400, Southampton Music Hub partnered with Mayflower Theatre to take inspirational songs from their newly commissioned musicals to school children across the city. The songs inspired and motivated hundreds of hours of workshops and rehearsals for young singers.

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Southampton: A Musical Odyssey 

In early March, over 1000 young musicians performed two nights of unforgettable music at the Mayflower Theatre, with a programme of music which included musical performances of all shapes and sizes, including the debuts of Symphony 400: The Voyage and Big Sing: The Journey.

“I was really nervous — I’ve  never done anything like this before — but being with my friends, I was able to get on stage and sing with everybody!” 

— year four pupil from Hollybrook Junior School

Responding to Covid-19

Just a few weeks after the unforgettable events at the Mayflower Theatre — a celebration of the passion, creativity and resilience of the city’s young musicians — the country went into lockdown in response to the coronavirus pandemic, and that same passion, creativity and resilience was shown once again, in the face of unprecedented circumstances. 

In the past few months...

At every stage, young musicians and all those that support them — from their families to music teachers, to hub partners and beyond — have shown incredible resilience, creativity and passion for keeping music playing.

Looking Ahead

There are so many uncertainties ahead, and as Southampton Music Hub charts out a plan for returning in September, the challenges ahead feel huge. Not least of all because we know of the huge emotional burden that has been placed on the city’s young musicians over these past months, being separated from the friends and musical communities they love. 

Nights like Mayflower Theatre in March, and the incredible response of the past few months, serve as a reminder of what can be achieved when people come together and unlock the passion, creativity and resilience of the city’s young people and communities. 

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More pizza boxes, including music activities from Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, given to shielded children and families
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Thanks to Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, more pizza boxes of exciting music-making activities have been sent from Southampton Music Hub to shielded children in the city.

Whist some children have been able to be back in school ahead of the summer holiday, shielded children are having to wait until September. Pizza boxes of fun music activities mean that even those with limited access to technology or instruments can enjoy making music at home over the summer holiday.

Thanks to Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, who’s musicians and team have used their orchestral expertise to create inspirational ideas, shielded children in the city can be inspired by the work of world-class musicians.

Hub choirs, Bella Voce and Soton Voce, perform virtually

Southampton Music Hub Find out more about our Hub Choirs at: Bella Voce - Senior Chamber Choir Soton Voce - All ages Community Choir https://www.southamptonm...

Southampton Music Hub choirs; senior youth choir Bella Voce and community choir Soton Voce, have worked together this term to contribute to a recording of a All Is Found from Frozen 2. Weekly virtual rehearsals have been running since lockdown started and this song has been learned entirely remotely by members in three part harmony!