Playlist
Example Introductory Pieces for Plastique Animée
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Posted Spring 2023 | Added June 3, 2025
When introducing plastique animée, different pieces are more and less appropriate for different students. A good piece has a mix of technique, expressivity, density, and complexity that match the interpreter. Here are three pieces that university students have presented successfully in my classroom.
Claude Debussy: String Quartet in G minor, ii. Assez vif et bien rythmé
A contemporary-sounding pizzicato piece with an urgent character that later becomes melodic with bowed playing. The instruments of the string quartet either play together or take turns in the lead role, which can help guide students in their onstage groupings and texture.
Maurice Ravel: Piano Trio in A minor, 2nd movement
A beautiful yet frantic scherzo and trio with elements of canonic playing between the three instrumentalists. The B section features a change in meter from 3 to 4, which can be a nice moment for students to choreograph.
Antonín Dvořák: String Quartet No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96, “American” B.179: iii. Molto Vivace
A lovely American-sounding piece in ABABA form where the B section uses the theme of the A but in minor. Elements of a bird call can be heard in some of the melodic lines.
It is noteworthy that in each of these pieces, there are lots of notes! That is to say, one cannot (should not) attempt to find discrete movements for every note. Instead, selections such as these require the interpreter to choose—what of the complexity is so salient that it must be brought to the front and demonstrated in gesture? Much of the point is that different interpreters will choose different lines, different emphases, different motions to reveal their own embodied music. Every new artist reveals something different and personal about the selection.
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Author
Stephen Neely
Stephen Neely, PhD, Dalcroze License, Associate Professor of Music, Director of Graduate Studies, and Director of the Marta Sanchez Dalcroze Training Center at Carnegie Mellon School of Music, is a teacher, conductor, and writer who lectures in the fields of music, design, and pedagogy.
He teaches Dalcroze Eurhythmics and Dalcroze Pedagogy for Carnegie Mellon, having taught every BFA in Music Performance and Composition at the School of Music since 1999. He directed the Opera Workshop and taught Eurhythmics at Pittsburgh’s High School for the Creative and Performing Arts (23 years), served as Chorusmaster for Opera Theater of Pittsburgh (10 years), and was a featured speaker at TEDxCMU 2012.
In addition to his duties at CMU, Stephen is faculty for the Houston Grand Opera Butler Studio Emerging Artist Program, Co-Chair of the International Conference of Dalcroze Studies, co-founder and co-host of the Virtual Dalcroze Meet-up, special faculty for the Tepper School of Business Executive Education team, and an author. His recent book, Make it Music, is an invaluable resource for classroom teachers interested in including more movement activities in their practice.
Example Introductory Pieces for Plastique Animée
Stephen Neely, Author
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Example Introductory Pieces for Plastique Animée © 2023 by Stephen Neely is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
Catalog
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Resource ID2766
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ISBN / ISSN
ISSN 2769-8602 (Online)
ISSN 2769-8564 (Print)
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Original DateSpring 2023
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Date AddedJune 3, 2025
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Dalcroze Branch
Plastique Animée
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About the Author(s)
Author
Stephen Neely
Stephen Neely, PhD, Dalcroze License, Associate Professor of Music, Director of Graduate Studies, and Director of the Marta Sanchez Dalcroze Training Center at Carnegie Mellon School of Music, is a teacher, conductor, and writer who lectures in the fields of music, design, and pedagogy.
He teaches Dalcroze Eurhythmics an…
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