Meet the Instruments
These digital baseball cards introduce you to individual instruments in the orchestra. Interactive cards allow you to listen to each instrument and printable cards are available to decorate your classroom or family home, or to share online.
Information for Educators
This site is designed to accompany either the live concert experience or the film itself. It supports the 2014 Music Standards and their focus on Music Literacy. It provides opportunities to make connections to the core concepts of Creating, Responding, and Performing, while focusing on the Enduring Understandings outlined for PreK – 8th grade General Music.
The materials also provide opportunities to build and deepen connections to Social and Emotional Learning and are deliberately grounded in The Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning’s (CASEL) five competencies of SEL: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision making.
The Strings
Violin
The violin is made of wood and is the smallest of the string family. Like the viola, the violin is held underneath the player’s chin and a bow – often made of horse-hair – is pulled across the strings to make sound. The violinist can also use their fingertips to pluck the strings to make a different noise.
The Woodwinds
Bassoon
The bassoon is an unusually long, large double reed instrument and is the lowest sounding instrument in the woodwind family. The bassoonist blows air into the reed which sits at the end of a small metal tube to make sound. The musician use the keys to open and close the holes to find the right notes.
Oboe
The oboe is a double reed instrument, a long wooden tube that flares out at little at the end. To play the oboe, the musician blows through the tiny tip of the reed and uses their fingers to open and close holes with the keys to change notes. The oboe is made out of dark wood and has metal keys.
The Brass
French Horn
The French horn is made of metal and produces sound when a musician blows air through its mouthpiece. The horn consists of about 12 feet of narrow tubes wound into a circle. The player plays different notes on the horn by pressing valves with the left hand, and by moving the right hand inside of the bell.
Percussion
Piano
The piano is one of the world’s most popular instruments and used in all musical genres from classical to rock and pop. A normal piano has 88 keys: 52 white keys – each a different note – and 36 black keys, each a half-step between the full notes. The piano has one of the biggest ranges from low to high notes.