Exploring Musical Emotions
Overview
Duration: 45 minutes
Year Level: Year 5
Class Size: 25 students
Learning Area: The Arts – Music
Curriculum Link:
Australian Curriculum – The Arts: Music (Years 5–6)
ACAMUR097: Explain how the elements of music communicate meaning by comparing music from different social, cultural and historical contexts, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander music.
ACAMUM090: Explore dynamics and expression, using aural skills to identify and perform rhythm and pitch patterns.
Lesson Focus
WALT (We Are Learning To):
- Listen to music and identify how it makes us feel.
- Understand how tempo, pitch, and dynamics contribute to the emotions in music.
- Express musical emotions visually using drawing and colour.
Success Criteria
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
✅ Identify different emotional moods in music
✅ Explain how musical elements affect the way we feel
✅ Represent musical emotions using colours, lines, and shapes in a drawing
✅ Discuss their personal emotional responses using appropriate musical vocabulary
Resources Needed
- Audio system or speakers
- Pre-selected music tracks (see details below)
- Drawing materials (paper, coloured pencils, crayons, textas)
- Whiteboard and markers
- Emotion cards (happy, sad, angry, calm)
- Visual aid: A3 music emotions chart (tempo, pitch, dynamics with visuals)
Lesson Structure
1. Warm-Up & Hook (5 mins)
- Activity: Class brainstorm — “How can music make us feel?”
- Teacher writes “Emotions music can create” on the whiteboard. Students call out feelings they’ve experienced while listening to music (e.g. relaxed, excited, scared, joyful).
- Introduce emotion cards and explain that we’ll be listening for these today: Happy, Sad, Angry, and Calm.
🌟 Tip: Do a quick stretch and shake-out to “reset” their energy before diving into the listening tasks.
2. Listening and Drawing: Exploring Emotions (25 mins)
Activity: Students listen to 4 short music excerpts (1.5 to 2 minutes each), each representing a different mood. After each one, they create a drawing that shows how the music makes them feel using colours, lines and shapes.
| Emotion | Suggested Piece | Key Features (to discuss) |
|---|
| Happy | Vivaldi’s "Spring" from The Four Seasons | Fast tempo, major key, high pitch |
| Calm | Yiruma’s "River Flows in You" | Gentle dynamics, slow tempo |
| Sad | Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings | Slow tempo, soft dynamics, minor tonality |
| Angry | Orff’s "O Fortuna" from Carmina Burana | Loud dynamics, intense rhythm |
- Students listen with eyes closed and focus on the mood.
- After each track, give 3–4 minutes for sketching their emotional reaction.
- Encourage use of abstract symbols, swirling lines, sharp marks, colour choice—anything that shows the feeling.
3. Group Reflection and Musical Elements Discussion (10 mins)
- Pair-share: Students turn to a partner and compare their drawings for one emotion.
- Class gathers and shares interpretations. Teacher guides a discussion on:
- Tempo (fast = excited/happy; slow = sad/calm)
- Pitch (high = joyful; low = gloomy)
- Dynamics (loud = angry/agitated; soft = peaceful)
- Use visual chart on board to anchor vocabulary terms with emotive expressions.
Guiding Questions:
- What parts of the music made you feel that way?
- What did you draw, and why?
- How does the tempo affect the emotion?
4. Wrap-Up and Exit Ticket (5 mins)
Activity: Exit Slip
Each student writes on a slip of paper:
- One emotion they felt most strongly today
- One musical element they heard that helped create it
Collect slips on the way out to check for understanding.
Differentiation Strategies
For Diverse Learners:
- Use emotion icon cards as visual anchors for students with additional needs or EAL/D students.
- Provide a drawing template with labelled face outlines for students needing extra support (e.g. choose one: sad, happy, angry, calm – and draw in and around it).
- Offer sentence starters during discussion:
- “I felt ___ because the music was ___.”
- “The pitch was ___ and that made the music sound ___.”
For Students Requiring Extension:
- Challenge to identify multiple emotions within one track.
- Ask students to create a key for their drawing (e.g. blue lines = calm; red zigzags = angry).
- Extension task: Choose a short poem or emotion-based paragraph and match it to one of the pieces. Justify selection using musical elements.
Assessment for Learning
- Formative assessment through:
- Observation during drawing and discussion
- Exit slips showing understanding of emotional responses and musical elements
- Assess use of appropriate music vocabulary and depth of reflection.
Teacher Reflection (Post-Lesson Prompt)
- Which emotion did students connect with most easily? Why?
- Were students able to articulate how musical elements influenced their feelings?
- What drawing strategies were most effective in expressing emotional responses?
Optional Extension/Homework
- Students create their own "Mood Tracklist": a short playlist (real or imagined) of five songs that make them feel different emotions, with notes about tempo, pitch, and dynamics for each.
- Can be shared in the following lesson as a music diary or class display.
Extra Notes
🌱 Integrating Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Perspectives:
In a follow-up lesson, explore how traditional Indigenous Australian music uses musical elements to tell stories and represent emotion, connecting land, people, and spirit.
Prepared by: AI Assistant for Creative Teaching Australia
Designed to meet: The Australian Curriculum, provide engagement & depth, and offer a creative cross-modal approach to musical understanding.
"Music speaks where words fail—today, each child became a composer of feelings.”