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bally and musically simple they are.’ Though, let’s stop giving concrete quotations
and say that the link between the start and end of the thoughts of nearly all authors of
music educational texts written in Czech literature till now, is the intended pointing
out to these facts:
1. the basic music material for vocal education and related intonation activities
is a folk song,
2.
insuffi cient number of music lessons and different standards at different sta-
ges of education and types of school,
3. aesthetic educational pursuits
shifted to the emotional, intellectual, moral,
patriotic and other meanings,
4. necessity for though-out systematic approach to music educational activity.
Framework Education Programme for Primary Education really does not come
with any revolution changes to the sphere of Arts and Culture education, when it says
on page 57: ‘
Vocal activities include working with voice, during which singing and
spoken expressions are cultivated by means of the application and reinforcement of
proper singing habits’. If the detailed description
involves breath control, articulati-
on, pitching and creating a tone, dynamically differentiated singing among the vocal
skills, if the effects of voice hygiene and expanding one’s vocal range are considered,
is must be evident to a teacher with an average erudition in the vocal skills that mee-
ting the objectives is only possible through the vocal presentation of folk songs of
adequate parameters in all relevant categories. The absolutely fundamental position
of a folk song in the general vocal education (as well as in the fi rst stages of educating
professional performers) is given by the music qualities
that suit the physiological
development of the vocal apparatus, which is a fact that does not change in time. The
gradual alienation of folk lyrics from the present life reality is evident; they become
a matter of more general meaning and message. As ensues from one of the above
quoted citation, this phenomenon is not new either. All the given statements shall be
understood as a fully positive defence of the presence of folk song in education.
Another topic, whose meaning in life of the young generation is gaining on im-
portance in view of music education, is the popularity of modern pop genres. Neither
this topic, which has been recently expanding
into the sociological sphere, is a new
phenomenon. The following appeal was published as early as 1933 in the magazine
Hudební národ (The Music Nation) in an article called Let’s cultivate music and
singing:
‘It is up to you, the young generation, to fi ght against worthless ‘hits’ and to
replace them with a beautiful folk song.’ (C
ENEK
1933: 151). Similarly, e.g. F. Lýsek
warned against the ‘hit’ danger. The approach to the implementation of so called non-
classical genres in music education is open nowadays again. Songbooks and music
textbooks include songs that are found popular and suitable
for work with pupils only
by the generation of the books’ authors, but pupils will not see any substantial dif-
ference between the works of Jaroslav Ježek, Jiří Šlitr or Beatles, all of that is music
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of the past to them. So the vocal education needs to solve the following disharmony
between the selection criteria of a suitable repertoire: while for pupils, the primary
motivation lies in the contemporary popularity of performers, or sometimes a longer
popularity of evergreens, the teacher should take into account
not only the content
aspect, but also its vocal suitability of the music structure. The defence of the teach-
er’s choice is not easy: the given aspects are many a time in a complete disharmony.
Here we can apply the thesis about the predomination of non-artistic (non-music)
features in functioning of the sphere of show business production. In relation to this,
it is noticeable that capturing of the wide range of works that would be popular with
children could really be a quantitavely unreal task to teachers.
If we accept the overall conservative music-educational standpoints formulated
above, we need to raise a question of whether and how the ideas are accepted in real
time and real school environment. In the assessment of the state, we need to bear in
mind the close relations with vocal educational or singing topics. The foundations
that we consider important include:
1. music activities remain the
main content of music lessons,
2. teachers regard folk music as the most frequent genre,
3. 98,52% of respondents among teachers believe that folk songs are a suitable
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