About this deal
Watch this animation that was created to promote the book. Could you create your own animated trailer? The bear’s friends hang special objects in the tree above the piano. Could you create something similar to record your own special achievements and memories? Night Mayor Franklefink has vanished from the Transylvanian Express - and it's up to you to solve the case! Part of the Solve Your Own Mystery seri... Found a couple of copies of this on a table at work with a sign saying "Free to those with kids" no idea who put them there, this looked like an interesting book so a nabbed a copy.
The Bear and the Piano animation score includes some well-known piano pieces written over the last 400 years alongside Daniel Whibley’s original music. Watch the trailer below: One day, a bear cub finds something strange in the forest.” Use this line from the book’s blurb as the starting point for your own story. Before beginning the story look at the cover illustration and wonder together about where this story might happen and how a bear might be playing a piano. Read the story aloud pausing to talk about the decisions the bear might make, for example when he is invited to leave the forest and when he is sitting on the roof in the city lost in thought. Join inA magical tale of a talented bear who discovers fame and fortune through his piano playing skills. This text explores themes such as belonging, exploration and overcoming fears. It can encourage healthy discussions with children around what is important in life. This text is also part of a fun trilogy which follows the ups and downs of Bear’s life. Award-winning David Litchfield is a significant author-illustrator. Links and themes: This is a three-sessionspelling seed for the book The Bear and the Piano by David Litchfield. Below is the coverage from Appendix 1 of the National Curriculum 2014. PRELUDE IN C MINOR – Another piece by Bach. Well, his music is so good, after all. Bach loved coffee and once said, “Without my morning coffee, I’m just like a dried-up piece of roast goat.” The Sunday Times -'The influence of the great illustrators Jon Klasen and Shaun Tan are detectable in David Litchfield's opulent The Bear and the Piano.' You know who the Piano Guys are, right? They play beautiful music in breath-taking natural settings, such as on top of a sunset plateau, at a white sandy beach, or in a elf-ish like forest ... Well this is the story of what happened to one of the pianos they left behind after a shoot. ;)
Letters of advice, short news-reports, writing in role, retellings, information poster Main Outcome: Write a newspaper article about the bear’s first performance. Use the headlines shown in the illustrations as a starting point.Families can talk about music. What kind of music do you like? Why do you think all the bears and people in the city like music and gather to listen? It's possible to pursue one's artistic interests in ways that broaden your horizons while also maintaining a connection to and love for your original family and community; the two aren't mutually exclusive. Developing your talents leads to satisfaction and success. We can commemorate and support those we're proud of. Music makes us happy, and it's important to have it in our lives. When the bear plays, he dreams of strange and wonderful lands. Listen to a piece of piano music and draw / write / describe what it makes you dream of.