Nothing but the Stars
August 17th, 2006 at 11:46 am (Unschooling Life)
Kenzie’s back in the bedroom singing yet another song he’s composed. I think the melelody and last line of this one are loosely based on a SharkBoy and LavaGirl song, but (as usual) he’s changed it up pretty thoroughly. I thought I’d write down the one verse I could decipher (I don’t want to intrude):
There it is
Here we are
There is nothing but the stars
Dream dream dream dream dream
I remember coming up with songs when I was his age, but it was a laborious process for me. There were really only a few, and I had to work on them and work on them….
Kenzie’s songs, on the other hand, are spontaneous. He usually comes up with melodies on his own, but sometimes uses ones he’s heard recently. He simply starts singing and rhyming, and if he’s at a loss for words, he sort of mumbles through until he reaches the chorus or the next verse, then starts rhyming again. He’s done this for years. And, he sings constantly: in the bathroom and the tub, while building with Legos or other toys, as he draws superheroes, when he’s making his lunch, during car rides, when he picks up his cards and toys and, of course, when he’s listening to music.
And he sings passionately. When he really gets into a song, he closes his eyes and lowered his head, and his voice takes on this forlorn quality that stops you in your tracks.
As much as I’ve wanted to write songs well, and as many books and websites and forums as I’ve read on the subject, I have to admit that Kenzie is, without doubt, much better at it than I am. Always has been. My melodies and rhymes sound forced - and they are! I can sing, I can phrase a song like nobody’s business, but I simply can not compose. Listening to Kenzie do it so effortlessly is thrilling! What an astounding talent….
dharmamama said,
August 27, 2006 at 4:27 pm
Today my four year old was singing a song about dinosaurs. It had about 20 verses. I was able to write down one, which seemed to be a chorus of sorts:
Pteranodactyl, Pteranodactyl
Big and powerful
Flying through the sky with his long long wings …
T-rex, T-rex, T-R-E-X
Hungry hungry T-rex
Hunting that Pteranodactyl
(Pteranodactyl is a cross between pteranodon and pteradactyl.)