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Michelle Scharfe's avatar

Just wanted to share a couple paid musical resources for homeschoolers that you may or may not know about.

1) SQUILT Music (https://www.squiltmusic.com/) has monthly listening calendars based on themes. Unfortunately, it looks like you have to subscribe to even see the back catalog, but our family has subscribed in the past and months have themes like jazz, folk tunes, musicals, opera, specific countries, and of course, classical artists, which is their bread and butter. This might be a great resource for selecting songs as the lady who runs it, Mary Prather, has already put a lot of thought into curating her choices.

2) Classical Conversations is well-known for their songs to help kids learn history (and multiplication tables by skip-counting). This will definitely appeal more to Christian homeschoolers, though there are only a few religious references within the songs. It definitely has a Christian perspective, but I find their timeline song to be particularly useful. The math songs use famous tunes, but the history music I believe is original compositions. There is also a lady on YouTube (CC Happy Mom) who used the Classical Conversations curricula to create a series of geography songs based on real songs.

3) Beethoven's Wig albums are a Weird Al-esque interpretation of classical music. Rarely educational, but it makes classical songs fun, especially for younger kids. It definitely helps them recognize famous classical music in other contexts.

Timothy Johnson's avatar

This is more about science and less about the songs themselves, but are you familiar with Lyrical Life Science? I was homeschooled, and I grew up with books like these in elementary school. I still remember some of the lyrics: https://www.christianbook.com/lyrical-life-science-1-with/9780974163543/pd/59775.

The tunes are mostly taken from classic folk melodies, though I'm not sure how many kids would recognize them these days.

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