67 episodes

Clap for Classics! is a music education podcast for kids ages 2-8. Join Ms. Elizabeth and Forte the Lion while we sing, move our bodies, learn about great classical music and more! Toddlers, preschoolers, kindergarteners and even early elementary kids will love the engaging activities and parents will love the rich educational material found in each episode.

Clap for Classics‪!‬ Elizabeth Nixon

    • Kids & Family
    • 4.9 • 54 Ratings

Clap for Classics! is a music education podcast for kids ages 2-8. Join Ms. Elizabeth and Forte the Lion while we sing, move our bodies, learn about great classical music and more! Toddlers, preschoolers, kindergarteners and even early elementary kids will love the engaging activities and parents will love the rich educational material found in each episode.

    66. Ella's Hello, Joplin's Jazz, and Gospel Joy: A Musical Tribute to Black History Month

    66. Ella's Hello, Joplin's Jazz, and Gospel Joy: A Musical Tribute to Black History Month

    It is February, and it is Black History Month! Today we’re sharing music we love by black artists of the 20th century.

    Hello, by Ella Jenkins

    Hello hello hello and how are you

    I’m fine I’m fine and I hope that you are too

    Sing this song with any variation you can think of, soft, loud, humming, whistling, la la la-ing!

    Ella Jenkins has been dubbed the “The First Lady of the Children's Folk Song.” Here is a playlist of some of our favorites, but be sure to check her out with your kids, we think you’ll love her music as much as we do.

    To watch a mini class where Ms. Elizabeth and her 5 kids share 3 Ella Jenkins songs click here: https://www.clapforclassics.com/blog/ellajenkins

    This Little Light of Mine

    This little light of mine (tap knees),

    I’m gonna let it shine, (arms: up down up down)

    This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine

    This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine

    Let it shine, let it shine, let it shine. (dance in a circle)

    This iconic American gospel song has been energizing and uniting diverse groups of people for nearly a century. It’s impossible to sing this song without moving your body and feeling a spark of excitement and purpose. It is a great song to sing with kids because the words are so repetitive, and the message is so positive! We’ve added some simple actions to each verse, and suggested a flashlight activity for the second time through -- kids and flashlights always seem to be drawn to each other, right?

    Don’t miss these incredible renditions of this song by these famous black artists.

    Aretha Franklin

    Sister Rosetta Tharpe

    Fannie Lou Hamer

    Maple Leaf Rag Scott Joplin Performed by Stefano Ligoratti. Recording used with permission. https://musopen.org/music/43164-maple-leaf-rag/#recordings

    You don’t want to miss this recording of Scott Joplin performing this piece himself!

    Join our All Access Membership for access to activities like the ones found on this podcast.

    The membership includes:


    Over 250 engaging and educational music lesson videos.
    Comprehensive music courses organized by theme, for example:

    "Carnival of the Animals",
    "Peter and the Wolf,"
    "Rhymes and Games," etc.


    Printable resources, including lesson plan ideas, parent programs, instrument and animal puppet printables, coloring pages, and more!
    Extensive "Notes to the Grown-ups" for each lesson, so that you can see exactly what your child is learning, with ideas on how to adapt and extend the lessons.
    Downloadable audio tracks of the classical music as well as the activities, so that you can listen off screen.

    Get signed up at: www.clapforclassics.com/join

    Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review wherever you listen.

    To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics.  We love to feature our listeners on the podcast! 

    Classical music tracks are licensed for our use by Classical.com

    • 15 min
    65. Love Songs for Little Ones

    65. Love Songs for Little Ones

    This is an episode with love songs for our little ones. We include one folk song, one Clap for Classics! original song, and the beautiful Waltz from Tchaikovsky's ballet, Sleeping Beauty.

    Love Somebody

    This is an Appalachian folk song, originally a fiddle tune.

    Love somebody yes I do,

    Love somebody yes I do,

    Love somebody yes I do,

    Love somebody but I won’t say who.

    Love my mommy yes I do,

    Love my mommy yes I do,

    Love my mommy yes I do,

    Love my mommy and she loves me too!

    This song is a fun and easy one to adapt for multiple ages.


    For babies: rock your baby and make eye contact with them as you sing this song.
    Insert the names of your family members and loved ones.
    Look at a map and find the Appalachian Mountains

    What your child is learning:


    Steady beat
    Movement to music
    The repetition in the words, and simple melody makes this a great song for little ones to develop verbal skills

    The Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66- Valse Allegro, Tchaikovsky.

    Watch a video of Elizabeth and Charlotte teaching and dancing to the sleeping beauty waltz: https://www.clapforclassics.com/blog/sleeping-beauty-waltz

    If you’d like to purchase our Fairy Tale Course where we tell even more of the story of Sleeping Beauty as well as incorporate other fairy tales and wonderful music, you can find it in our Fairy Tales and Nursery Rhymes bundle, or inside our All Access Membership.

    Will you waltz with me,

    Will you be my partner please?

    If you will, I’ll spin you around

    And round, then give you a squeeze

    Pretty please will you waltz with me

    Will you be my partner please?

    Waltzing is my favorite thing in the world!

    Many thanks to Classical.com for licensing the classical music for us to use in the podcast and in our courses.

    Let’s Sing a Song About Hugs. Written by Kathryn Lieppman, it is a Clap for Classics! original and features Kathryn Lieppman and Elizabeth Nixon on ukulele and vocals, and Imogene Lieppman (age 4) on vocals and desk bells.

    You can watch this video on our youtube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmKolRJchIg

    Let’s sing a song about hugs!

    Chorus: Some are tight

    And some are gentle

    Some are short

    And some are long and sentimental

    A hug can help you feel okay

    If you get a little boo boo

    Or you’re having a rough tough day

    Try and hug it all away

    Chorus

    A hug can help you share some love

    With a very special grownup

    Taking care of you

    So hug ‘em all day through

    Chorus

    A hug can help you cheer a friend

    When she seems a little sad

    You can bend her frown back to a smile

    Just hug her for a while

    Chorus

    A hug can help you feel so great

    But sometimes we just need some personal space (And that’s ok, too!)

    To join the membership for all the musical content we’ve ever created, and start making music with us today, go to www.clapforclassics.com/join.

    Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review wherever you listen.

    To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics. We love to feature our listeners on the podcast!

    Classical music tracks are licensed for our use by Classical.com

    • 15 min
    64. Hungry and Hibernating Bears

    64. Hungry and Hibernating Bears

    Grab our free printable arctic animal cards to extend the learning and fun of this episode at www.clapforclassics.com/episode64

    For more winter content from our Four Seasons Course check out episode 38 and episode 39.

    Clear some space to move for the first activity!

    This is a song/activity that just needs to be experienced again and again. Your child will love pretending to hibernate, and waking you up when spring returns. Learn the song so that you can sing it away from the screen.

    Feel free to expand the story as you repeat the song for the 5th, 10th or 20th time. (What is the bear eating? Where is the bear running? What is the den like? What does the bear say when s/he wakes up for spring time?)

    In Spring and Summer I’m a bundle of fun!

    I play and growl and run run run! (run run run! Run run run!)

    In fall I’m busy eating food.

    I eat and eat and eat and eat (and eat and eat and eat and eat)

    ‘Til winter chills my mood

    Now it’s time to hibernate

    I slow down and take a break

    I curl up in my cozy den

    And rest ‘til spring returns again…

     

    The second activity is a song and a game!

    Play hide and seek! The polar bear is ‘it’ and the seal/s hide while the polar bear sings the song. When the polar bear gets to the word LUNCH, s/he goes to find the seals. The seal/s can give clues to their location by playing a rhythm instrument like a shaker.

    You can optionally use our printable arctic animals, and hide the seal card instead of having someone “be” the seal.

    Learn more about polar bears and seals. Start with our printable Arctic Animal Cards (pictures on the front, and facts on the back) - then dive deeper by checking out books from the library or doing your own online research.

    My blubber keeps me nice and warm

    My fur’s as white as snow

    I smell a seal from miles away,

    And then I’ve got to go

    I’ve got to go find that seal, cuz I’m hungry!

    I’ve got to go find that seal for my lunch!

    To get ALL of our Four Seasons Content that includes art, poetry and STEM units for each season in addition to the music content that you know and love- go to www.clapforclassics.com/fourseasons.

    To join the membership for all the musical content we’ve ever created, and start making music with us today, go to www.clapforclassics.com/join. Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review wherever you listen.

    To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics. We love to feature our listeners on the podcast!

    Classical music tracks are licensed for our use by Classical.com

    Music credit: Kathryn Lieppman wrote both of the songs that we share in the episode today.

    • 14 min
    63. Flashlights, bird feeders, skittles and cornflakes! A sneak peek into the Winter Four Seasons Curriculum

    63. Flashlights, bird feeders, skittles and cornflakes! A sneak peek into the Winter Four Seasons Curriculum

    Today we’re sharing a sneak-peek inside our Four Seasons Curriculum. Check out all the details and snag the year-long course at www.clapforclassics.com/fourseasons

    Music

    We start with one of our favorite songs from the winter course: Down with Darkness.

    We have fun using flashlights and a drum while we learn this song.

    Down with darkness, up with light

    Up with sunshine, down with night

    Each of us is one small light

    But together we shine bright

    Go away darkest blackest night

    Go away -- give way to light

    Art

    For the winter course, Ms. Krisanne, our wonderful art teacher, introduces us to the artist Peter Bruegel and his wintry paintings.

    STEM

    The winter course is all about color! Dr. Rojas put together 4 stem labs that encourage curiosity, observation, and teach lots of scientific concepts in age-appropriate ways.

    Poetry

    Ms. Leslie and Ruby bring seasonal poetry to life. We share Charlotte’s favorite on the episode:

    DECEMBER LEAVES by Kaye Starbird

    The fallen leaves are cornflakes

    That fill the lawn’s wide dish,

    And night and noon

    The wind’s a spoon

    That stirs them with a swish.

    The sky’s a silver sifter,

    A-sifting white and slow,

    That gently shakes

    On crisp brown flakes

    The sugar known as snow.

    Tune in to the other Four Seasons Curriculum sneak peek episodes:

    Spring 

    Summer

    Autumn

    To join the membership and start making music with us today, go to www.clapforclassics.com/join.

    Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review wherever you listen.

    To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics.

    We love to feature our listeners on the podcast!

    Classical music tracks are licensed for our use by Classical.com

    • 15 min
    62. The Nutcracker Part 2

    62. The Nutcracker Part 2

    Inside our All Access membership we have a Nutcracker music course for young kids! It is an immersive experience with Tchaikovsky’s iconic ballet. You and your kids will be experiencing the story and music of the Nutcracker through songs, games, active listening, instrument playing, and using your imagination right alongside Ms. Elizabeth and her daughter Charlotte.

    To join the membership and start making music with us today, go to www.clapforclassics.com/join. Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Alternatively, you can purchase just the Nutcracker course on it’s own or as part of our Holiday Bundle at www.clapforclassics.com/store

    Grab a free printable of hand-drawn images of the characters from the Nutcracker. www.clapforclassics.com/episode61. We like to make simple popsicle stick puppets out of ours to play with while we listen to the music. Kids can also use them to retell and act out the story on their own!

    For more ideas on how to supplement your Nutcracker study at home with young kids, including ideas on how to watch the ballet at home, check out this article: https://www.clapforclassics.com/blog/nutcrackerresources

    Please help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review, telling your friends, or sharing our social media content! To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics.

    We love to feature our listeners on the podcast! Special thanks to Classical.com for licensing the classical music that we used in this episode and that we use in all of our music courses!

    • 13 min
    61. Introducing the Nutcracker!

    61. Introducing the Nutcracker!

    Join us for even more Nutcracker fun, sign up for our FREE 5 day Nutcracker challenge that starts December 4th. www.clapforclassics.com/nutcracker2023

    Grab a free printable of hand-drawn images of the characters from the Nutcracker. www.clapforclassics.com/episode61.

    We like to make simple popsicle stick puppets out of ours to play with while we listen to the music and during this episode. Kids can also use them to retell and act out the story on their own!

    Inside our All Access membership we have a Nutcracker music course for young kids! It is an immersive experience with Tchaikovsky’s iconic ballet. You and your kids will be experiencing the story and music of the Nutcracker through songs, games, active listening, instrument playing, and using your imagination right alongside Ms. Elizabeth and her daughter Charlotte.

    To join the membership and start making music with us today, go to www.clapforclassics.com/join.

    Use the code “LION” for 50% off your first month!

    Alternatively, you can purchase just the Nutcracker course on it’s own or inside our Holiday Bundle at www.clapforclassics.com/store

    This episode is a re-air of episode 35 and next we will re-air episode 36. Your kids will have fun coming back to these same activities year after year. They will learn more each time they listen.

    For more ideas on how to supplement your Nutcracker study at home with young kids check out this article: https://www.clapforclassics.com/blog/nutcrackerresources

    Please help more families find out about this podcast by leaving us a review, telling your friends, or sharing our social media content!

    To leave Forte and I a message or a joke please record it here: http://www.speakpipe.com/clapforclassics.  We love to feature our listeners on the podcast!

    Special thanks to Classical.com for licensing the classical music that we used in this episode and that we use in all of our music courses!

    • 14 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
54 Ratings

54 Ratings

Wonderfully Made Baked Goods ,

Simple but so rich!

I like this bc it's bite-size for my son w special needs who is toddler-level but needs grownup music. Thank you!

Dustbuster4676 ,

I love forte! I also have a suggestion.

Forte is hilarious! I love his roars and his lion jokes. I may not be a child, but I love children’s songs because of the happiness and excitement that you hear rather than all the negative stuff you hear in today's world. I love really old songs too, like 50s and 60s kind of songs. I also love songs from different countries such as Italy, Mexico and even indigenous songs like from Hawaii. but I think my favorite genre is children’s. I even find myself doing the actions, even though I myself am an adult and I don’t have any kids of my own. But these songs would be perfect to teach to my new niece. I have a suggestion for another episode. What if forte caught a cold or flu, and we used music to make him happy and calm again. I can already imagine him sneezing with the loudest and funniest of sneezes. Lol. ah, ah, aaaaa choooooooooo!!!!!!!! Lol. It would be so funny. but at the same time we would be like, poor forte. I hope he gets better. maybe you could use that as an opportunity to study crescendo and decrescendo. Or, you could play songs that sound happy and sad. You could use those to help display forte’s emotions when he’s dealing with this cold or flu. Maybe when he’s feeling sad, you could play something happy to cheer him up such as his favorite piece, the march of the lion, or, when he needs to sleep to regain his strength, you could play a softer more piano piece like the cuckoo, so that way, the kids can lull him into a very peaceful and calm sleep to help him on his road to recovery. if you wanted to, you could have children get their favorite stuff toy whether it’d be a lot or a teddy bear and they could pretend to help it sleep.

Jaclyn I. ,

Wonderful!

My littles and I love this podcast! Miss Elizabeth’s energy and excitement is contagious. My children delight in the creative way Miss Elizabeth presents classical pieces of music fun and digestible way.

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