About Orff
Where Did It Come From?
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ORFF-SCHULWERK: WHERE DID IT COME FROM?
by Esther Gray
This article is from the "The Orff Beat -
Centenary Issue" Official Bulletin
of the Orff Schulwerk Society of Southern Africa, Vol XXIV
June 1995
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Sometimes Orff teachers or students are asked, "What is Orff? or
"What does Orff stand for?" Those questions can be hard to answer,
because Orff is many different things.
Children in an Orff class often sing and do movement. In some
classes they do plays, puppet shows or music games. They may be in a
school which has drums and xylophones, metallophones, recorders and
glockenspiels for them to play.
The special thing about all Orff activities is that they give
children a chance to make up some of their own music and dances, or
change and add to music they like.
Orff is the name of a very special man who loved music and loved
children.
He was one of the first teachers to combine singing and speaking,
clapping, dancing and instrument playing for children. Later when
other teachers decided to take some of Orff's ideas and use them with
their students, they said they were teaching "Orff".
Actually several different people started what we call "Orff" long
ago.
Carl Orff

One of those people of course was Carl Orff. He was born in
Germany in 1895, and he died there in 1982. When he was born in
Munich, the city was still governed by a king. Very few people had
cars, because cars at that time were still experimental. Many people
walked where they needed to go. If they had enough money, they might
have horses to ride or to pull their carriages.
People did not have furnaces in their houses. They had to carry in
fuel and light it in their fireplaces or in wood or coal-burning
stoves. They had no automatic washers and dryers or dishwashers, so
they had to wash their clothes and dishes the way American pioneers
had to.
Movies, television sets, stereos and tape recorders were not in
use yet. People who knew good songs or told good stories shared them
with others. Music-making, storytelling and dancing were important
entertainment for everyone.
Babies were born at home in those days. Baby Carl was born in a
big three-story house at the edge of Munich. It had a nice front yard
with tall horse chestnut trees in it and a big back yard full of
trees and wildflowers. His mother had a special flower garden, and he
loved to play there.
His father was an army officer. They lived near his father's base.
The practice field for the army band was across from the Orff's
house, and it was fun to listen to the music.
Carl's mother played piano. They say that even when he was little
Carl liked all kinds of music. When he was old enough to crawl, he
liked to sit under the piano besides his mother's feet and listen to
her play. He would pound on the floor to the beat of the music.
When he was old enough, Carl begged his mother to let him play on
the keys with her. She would sometimes take his high chair over to
the piano and let him sit beside her and "play" along.
Finally when he was five, his mother began to give him regular
music lessons. His little fingers got tired practising exercises, but
he was excited to learn how to read and write down music. Paper was
quite valuable at that time, so children learned to write on slates
which could be erased and used over and over again.
Carl's mother wrote five lines for a staff and then together the
two of them wrote down a lullaby he had made up. His mother added
some notes for a simple accompaniment, and there was his first
composition!
When he was nine years old he started writing stories and poems.
He began a special project of collecting all the information he could
find about plants which had been used at some time for medicine or
magic. He studied science books and fairy tales for this hobby.
Carl had a little sister, Mia, who was three years younger than he
was. The two got along quite well. They would play four-handed piano
music together. When young Carl wrote little songs, Mia would perform
them for the family.
From the time he was three, his family spent summers in the
country in a farmhouse they rented near a large lake, the Ammersee.
There were farm fields, wildflowers and cattle near the lake, and the
beautiful Alps mountains in the distance to look at. Carl Orff always
loved the beauty of the country.
When Orff was 16 he discovered the music written by a French
composer named Claude Debussy. Orff was so interested in the sounds
Debussy used in his music that he went to a lot of trouble to find
copies of his favourite pieces. He was excited studying the music,
figuring out why it had such a special sound.
Debussy had heard unfamiliar music from China, India and Java at a
special world's fair in Paris in 1889, before Orff was born. At the
fair there were huge powerful gongs and elegant dragon-shaped
instruments like metallophones which were decorated with gold.
Debussy went day after day to hear the colourful orchestras. He
borrowed musical ideas from the exciting things that he had
heard.
Carl Orff was so interested in this that he went to a museum in
Munich and studied all the instruments they had from the Far East. He
got close to a large gong and quietly played it. Much later he
recalled how thrilled he was with the sound. He felt like there was a
whole exciting world of music in those instruments which nobody in
Germany was using at that time.
During the next few years many important things happened in Carl
Orff's life. He got his first job which was in a theatre making music
for shows, and he loved the work. He was drafted to be a soldier in
World War I, and he was sent home wounded. After he got well, he
married and had a little daughter.
Times were changing. The first cars, radios and telephones were
being used by rich people who could buy them. There were streetcars
in Munich. However it was a difficult time called inflation, and
German money for some complicated reasons was becoming less and less
valuable. Food and clothing suddenly cost much more than they ever
had before. Poor people had trouble buying enough food. People who
had money sometimes had to take a basket or wheelbarrow full of money
to the store in order to have enough to pay for what they bought!
DOROTHEE GUNTHER and the
GUNTHER SCHOOL
In 1923 Carl Orff met a talented woman named Dorothee Günther
who worked with him in the theatre and then started the school where
"Orff" activities were first taught.
Dorothee Günther had studied art and gymnastics, and she
believed that most students did not get enough chances to do art and
music and movement activities. She was convinced that such
experiences were important for young people. She decided to open a
school where these things would be taught for teenagers and young
adults who wanted to become teachers, dancers or musicians.
In 1924 when the Günther School opened, few women had the
opportunity to start schools. Günther was able to because she
had worked hard studying gymnastics and physical education. Then by
teaching her first classes she figured out exactly what kinds of
studies she thought would be important in a new school. People were
impressed with her ideas, and they helped her get started.
Because Günther had gotten to know Orff's work, she invited
him to work with her at the Günther School. She knew he would be
a fine musician and a good teacher. Five years later the school had
many students. It had a popular dance group that performed in Germany
and in other countries.
GUNILD KEETMAN

Gunild Keetman with Carl Orff
1981
(Carl Orff - Fotodokumente 1978-1981
by Werner Thomas)
One of the students who came to the school, Gunild Keetman, did
such good work that when she graduated she was asked to become a
teacher at the Günther School. Nobody knew at that time she
would end up spending her life teaching and working on Orff
activities, and that with Carl Orff she would write the
Orff-Schulwerk books which music teachers use today.
Gunild Keetman was a child around the same time when Carl Orff
was. It was a time when little girls expected to always wear dresses
and to work at being polite and lady-like. Little Gunild grew up in a
family where music was so important that she was given both piano
lessons and cello lessons.
She loved music, but her teachers emphasized practice exercises,
printed music and sitting quietly. They never encouraged her to make
up pieces. It was not ok to change the things she played. Of course
practising music is important, but it is not the only thing students
can do. Those teachers did not realize how much fun it could be for
children to invent tunes of their own or to dance while they are
learning music.
Gunild Keetman never stopped being interest in music and art and
dancing. When she grew up she decided to study music and art history
and physical education. She believed that these things were all
important for children.
Keetman was excited when she heard that at the Günther School
students worked hard to learn music and dance, and that all students
there learned both music-making and dancing.
When she came to the new school, she was surprised to find that
her new teachers did not simply teach her some songs and dances. Orff
and Günther expected all the student at their school to make up
music and dances! They gave many lessons that helped the students
learn different ways to make music. But they did not teach the
students to copy what had been done before. They taught them to
always use what they were learning in order to make interesting new
music.
Gunild Keetman recalled many years later how students would sit
for hours at the piano, trying out new things. Of course many things
they played were not successful. That is the way it is supposed to be
when people are creating something new. If the students invented
something they felt good about, they would write it down so they
could play it later to Orff.
Sometimes they would take a piece they had made up on piano and
play it on xylophones, metallophones or glockenspiels. Then often
they were assigned to improvise movement that fit their music.
Sometimes it was hard to do, sometimes easy.
They found that they got better and better at inventing music and
movement. They got better also at working together. It was easier to
think of something new to try when they did not like part of an
improvisation.
Some days students took off their shoes and socks and started out
creating movement while others improvised music on recorder or barred
instruments that seemed to fit the movement they were watching.
The students would always take turns playing music and doing
movement. At times the dancers themselves made music, wearing jingles
or rattles on their legs or playing drums or cymbals as they
moved.
When a group was able to do that well, they would try to create
several parts at once!
Gunild Keetman discovered that it was an exciting way to learn.
She was happy she had come to the Günther School.
After she finished her studies there, she was thrilled to be asked
to stay and teach her new students. She had been an important member
of the school's dance group, and now she learned to be a good
teacher.
THE INSTRUMENTS

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When the Günther School opened, Orff did not have the kinds
of "Orff" instruments we enjoy today. He began teaching music classes
with a piano.
A friend, Oskar Lang, loved exploring second-hand stores and
sales. Bit by bit he brought Orff a fine collection that included
unusual rattles, little bells and even a large African slit drum.
A year after the school opened, small drums like Orff timpani were
invented. Friends gave the Günther School wood-blocks, bamboo
scraping instruments and many different kinds of drums and gongs.
There was something missing. Orff liked the work the students did
on these instruments. But he wanted instruments besides piano that
could play melodies.
In 1926, two years after the school opened, he got some help from
two women from Sweden who traveled a great deal. They had heard of
his music, and they hoped he might bring some Günther school
students to perform music for puppet shows they were working on. Orff
liked their shows and he thought it might be a good idea. When they
heard he liked xylophones, they said they would try to get him one.
He did not think they could.
He went on working at the Günther School, and sometime later
a large package was brought to the door. Inside was a large African
xylophone, a marimba.
Keetman and Orff, Maja Lax (an outstanding dancer) and several
Günther School students worked with the xylophone and loved it.
They invented a lot of music and exciting dances.
Orff wanted to have more xylophones, but he could not find a way
to get them. He was told it would be impossible to build them with
German materials, and too difficult to get African materials.
Because he learned that recorders had been used in early times to
play melodies with simple instruments, he decided to order some for
the school. At that time recorders were rare and few people knew how
to play them.
While everyone waited for the recorders to arrive, a wooden box
from Hamburg was brought to the school. It was from a Günther
School student, and in it was a simple xylophone from Africa with 10
short bars.
Orff became excited when he discovered that this instrument was
built from a wooden German box that had been used to ship 10,000
nails to Africa! What a surprise! The only African parts of the
xylophone were the bars.
Orff and Keetman and their friends set a trap. They prepared a
special show for a special friend, Karl Maendler, who built
instruments. First they played the large marimba and Maja I-ex danced
The Dance of the Marimba Bars (Stäbetanz). Then Keetman brought
out the smaller nail-box xylophone and played on it. They all hoped
Maendler would be fascinated. He was. He watched The Dance of the
Marimba Bars three times!
Maendler figured out that they were going to ask him to try to
build a xylophone. Normally he built harpsichords! He was intrigued,
and he decided to try to build a German xylophone. He finished one,
named it an "alto" xylophone and brought it one night to the
Günther School. He had tuned it to the D scale because the
recorders Orff had ordered would be tuned in D. The students were
thrilled. They improvised all evening to celebrate. They begged
Maendler to build another and he promised to build a higher "soprano"
instrument, which he did.
Finally the recorders arrived. Unfortunately nobody knew how to
play them. They had no recorder book and no instructions. What a
disappointment after all their waiting!
Keetman decided to do something about that. She said, "Give me a
recorder and I will find out how it works - in a month the lessons
will begin." She figured it out, and besides teaching recorder
lessons, she created recorder books.
THE END OF THE GUNTHER
SCHOOL
Another war, World War II came to Germany at one of the most
painful times in human history. Many Germans had hoped that a strong
leader, Adolf Hitler, could keep promises he made and help Germany
get past the hunger and poverty they suffered. Then everyone would be
better off.
Part of Hitler's plan was to get rid of any people who disagreed
with him so he could run the country freely. Another part of his plan
was to find somebody to blame for Germany's hard times. The hard
times had not been caused by any particular person or group. Still,
some Germans were so angry about working hard and being poor and
hungry that they wanted to think it was somebody's fault. They were
willing to listen to the things Hitler said.
Nobody wanted to believe it was happening, but gradually they
found that many good people including teachers, doctors and
scientists were being put into ugly, crowded prisons simply because
they were Jews or because they disagreed with Hitler's government.
Even children could be arrested by the secret police.
People in Germany lived in worry and fear. Eventually any person
with new or unusual ideas could expect to be punished. Artists and
authors had to decide whether or not to hide their beliefs.
The people in Hitler's government did not like the Günther
School. Five years after the war began, they told the Günther
School teachers that they could no longer have a school. The police
confiscated the school and all its contents. Teachers and students
were shocked. They believed with reason that they must leave the city
or be called into war service.
The year after the school closed, the school building was bombed
during fighting. Most of the special instruments, music and costumes
were completely burned up. It was the end of the Günther School
which had trained 650 teachers and many dancers. But it was not the
end of Orff.
After the war, life was still very hard in Germany. Hitler's
government was ended, but houses, stores and schools were damaged in
the fighting, and people did not have enough new material to rebuild
them right away. There was not enough cloth and wood to make new
clothing and furniture. People did not have enough soap or food.
Dorothee Günther decided to move away from Germany to Italy.
Carl Orff began to write an opera.
A NEW
BEGINNING
There were still people who remembered the music of the Gunther
School and like it. Three years after the war they came to Orff and
asked if he could make up some music like the "Gunther School music"
to play on the radio for the school children. Orff talked about it
with Keetman. They wondered if they could. They had only worked with
older students at the Günther School, but they still believed in
the things that had made their work there important to them. They
wanted more people to know about it.
Orff and Keetman did write music for the radio programs. In fact,
they wrote five books of music in five years (1950-1954) - music for
children to perform or work with. After children heard the music on
the radios in their schools, they and their teachers and parents got
very excited about the way it sounded. They decided they wanted to
try to get Orff instruments for their schools. New ways were
discovered to build Orff instruments because the old building
materials were not easy to find.
It was the beginning for Orff teachers like the ones today who
take Orff ideas and work with them in their own special ways with the
children in their classes. It was the beginning for children around
the world who love to make Orff music.
In 1961, about 10 years later, a new school for Orff teachers and
students was built. Orff and Keetman had been directing
Orff-Schulwerk classes in rooms loaned by another school. When the
bulldozers had dug the hole where the new school would be built, Orff
went to the building site and stood in the dirt looking over the job.
He worried a little about whether or not there would be enough
students for a grand new building. He need not have worried.
Teachers come from many countries to Salzburg, Austria to study at
the Orff Institute. Orff classes are also taught in other countries
so teachers do not have to travel far away to learn how to teach
Orff.
We cannot name all the places besides the U.S. where there are
Orff teachers, but we can list some of them. You might like to find
these places on a map or globe: Australia, Austria, Namibia (S W.
Africa), Japan, Brazil, Uruguay, Greece, Mexico, Italy, Malaysia,
England, Czechoslovakia, British Virgin Islands, Hungary, Poland,
Israel, Sweden, the Soviet Union, Belgium, Canada, Germany, and South
Africa.
In those countries we find what is most important in Orff. Not the
books in many languages. Not the instruments. But the people who
enjoy Orff.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Günther, Dorothee, "Der Tanz als Bewegungsphanomen," Rohwolts
Duetsche Enzyklopädie. Nr. 1951/152, Hamburg: Rohwolt, 1962
Keetman, Gunild. Reminiscences of the Güntherschule. American
Orff-Schulwerk Association Supplement Number 13, Spring 1978