INNOVATIVE MUSIC COURSE USES YAMAHA AW4416 DIGITAL AUDIO WORKSTATION
TO TEACH COMPOSITION, RECORDING TO CHICAGO'S YOUTH
BUENA PARK, CA (April 5, 2002)Chicago area
recording engineer and educator Nick Jaffe has developed a program
to teach song composition and recording to children in grades
3-6 at Ariel Community Academya public school on Chicago's
South Sidethrough a special charter schools program. Charter
schools create an alternative form of public schooling, lifting
restraints so teachers can pursue innovative teaching methods
that will improve student performance. The course was taught by
Jaffe and Ariel staff member and musician Nick Michalopoulos.
Using the Yamaha AW4416
Digital Audio Workstation, the six week course allows students
with no formal music training or technical experience to compose
an original work then arrange, record and mix a finished CD, all
the while learning the fundamentals of basic acoustics, audio
electronics, and digital technology.
 |
| Students
at Chicago's Ariel Community Academy work on the Yamaha AW4416
digital audio workstation during an innovative course on music
composition and recording. The course was developed by Chicago
area educator and recording engineer Nick Jaffe. Using the
AW4416, students record and engineer their original compositions
and take home a finished CD. |
The course uses the children's enthusiasm and interest
in music production to teach useful skills, introduce general
scientific and creative concepts, and give them the experience
of working in a creative team.
"The kids respond to being entrusted with 'real'
gear with maturity and respect, and they learn real-world skills,"
says Jaffe. "The AW4416 allows them to hear the difference
between properly and improperly recorded tracks and inspires them
to get excited about their results. From day one, the kids operated
the AW4416 workstation and eventually laid down harmony vocals,
percussion tracks, and rap vocals."
In April, Jaffe plans to work with 7th and 8th graders
at the University of Chicago Laboratory School, an independent
college preparatory school which enrolls 1600 students. The course
will use musicians from other classes as the subject of the recordings
so the students can focus entirely on audio production.
"For teaching, the Yamaha AW4416 offers visual
and tactile feedback that cannot be duplicated by a computer based
system," Jaffe continues. "I strongly believe that teaching
sound recording is an avenue to many, many good things for young
people. It has an academic and creative purpose and it builds
intellectual and technical confidence."
The Yamaha AW4416 Professional Audio Workstation
is a powerful, compact system, recording up to 16 tracks of true
24-bit digital audio, and is a true combination of digital products
from Yamaha. Features include automation/snapshot capability,
full 32-bit DSP, 44 fully-automated inputs, 17 motorized faders,
four fader and mute groups, eight bus and eight aux sends plus
stereo, stereo cue busses, 4-band full parametric EQ, direct out
assignment, and a CD-RW drive.
For more information, write Yamaha Corporation of
America, Professional Audio, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622;
telephone (714) 522-9011; e-mail infostation@yamaha.com;
or visit www.yamaha.com/proaudio.