Transcribing

In this lesson we will transcribe the well known nursery rhyme “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” using Song Maker.

Let’s Listen

About “West End Girls”

“West End Girls” by the Pet Shop Boys was written in April 1984. The song features synthesised sounds which you can hear throughout.

The song’s lyrics are about the pressures of inner-city life and were inspired by T. S. Eliot’s poem “The Waste Land”.

The song has won many awards including a Brit Award in 1987. It was awarded Song of The Decade, between the years 1985 and 1994, by the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters.

Can I complete a song using Song Maker?

In music, to transcribe, is to write the notes of a song down as you listen or play. We will transcribe the very familiar, “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star”, in Song Maker. First, let’s sing it!

Really focus on the melody (the tune). When does it go high and low in pitch?

Does it move in little steps or does it do big jumps?

Track the movement with your hand.

What do do

  1. Log in to The Henge (press the button at top right).
  2. Then come to this page from Year 4 / Transcribing.
  3. Click here for Music Lab and open Song Maker.
  4. Copy this starter!

First Notes to Copy

Alternatively, click here to open it already started.

What song is it?


How to save your work

Song Maker keeps your songs online in the cloud, possibly forever! But… to find your song again you need to save a complicated URL. Luckily… The Henge can cope.

  1. Click Save in the bottom right corner of Song Maker.
  2. On the next page, click Copy Link.
  3. Keep your Music Lab tab open and come back here.
  4. Click this link -> Song Saver .
  5. Click Add Song in the top bar. If you don’t see it, check you are logged in!
  6. Put the text cursor into the Song Maker Link box.
  7. Paste [Ctrl-V] your song link.
  8. Click the Save button.

Remember to keep all your tabs open!

Did you know?

The recorder gets its name because it was used by early composers when transcribing tunes and melodies. They played the tune on the recorder, listened and then recorded it on musical notepaper. Do you see what they did there?