NYC Photos:
Chicago Photos:
Pittsburgh Photos:
San Francisco Photos:
Transitions--what are their purpose?
Power of repetition
Chorus/refrain
You are writing a musical, this requires there to be a connection between each of
your songs. This connection has to be communicated to your audience. We are
going to ask you to do this in 2 ways. As a group you will need to settle on what
we will call a bridge and the other is a transitional narration. Let’s talk about the
bridge first.
your songs. This connection has to be communicated to your audience. We are
going to ask you to do this in 2 ways. As a group you will need to settle on what
we will call a bridge and the other is a transitional narration. Let’s talk about the
bridge first.
examples
BRIDGE: This is 2-3 lines that capture the fabric of your city and your slogan.
This will be played directly after every song and should, therefore, somehow pull
in ideas that illustrate your city--consider images and for sure your slogan has to
be in this.
This will be played directly after every song and should, therefore, somehow pull
in ideas that illustrate your city--consider images and for sure your slogan has to
be in this.
TRANSITIONAL NARRATION: These are lines that are crafted specifically for the
purpose of moving your song along. They will include a line that recaps the info
from the song before and one that is a preview of the song to come.
purpose of moving your song along. They will include a line that recaps the info
from the song before and one that is a preview of the song to come.
THEME → The Great Plains late 1800’s
Topic 1 → Custer’s Last Stand
Topic 2 → Carlisle Indian School
Topic 3 → Hunting the Buffalo
Topic 4 → Massacre at Wounded Knee
Topic 5 → Reservation Life
Meet with group. Work out the order you will be delivering
your songs. Record this on your team share document.
to showyour songs. Record this on your team share document.
Work on finalizing last few stanzas of song.
HW: Song is complete on Final Flocab document
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