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Music Lessons, Piano Lessons
Why Pieces are Like Puzzles
Some jigsaws are too easy, and some just too big and time-consuming. This is what it’s like when you are learning a piano piece.
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Some jigsaws are too easy, and some just too big and time-consuming. This is what it’s like when you are learning a piano piece.
Being a good pianist does not mean that you have general music skills that last for life. Do you identify more with Student A or Student B?
Like all experienced teachers, my skills have evolved over the years. But my ability to teach composition has more than evolved… it has transformed every other part of my skill set! So, how did this happen? Read on to learn more.
Off we will go on our Spanish Soundscape adventure — it’s about featuring pieces that explore sounds that are quintessentially Spanish, and discovering the music theory behind what makes them sound this way
There are MANY things we teach by rote when we give a piano lesson: technique, expression, posture. Does Rote Teaching Work? Read on and find out.
Like many teachers around the world I have run the 40 piece challenge. This year I came up with a bit of a twist. Read more about it here.
Find out how this piano teacher found new ways to getting her students spot the difference with their ears instead of their eyes.
Performance-readiness is like peak physical fitness: it must be maintained, or it disappears. That’s because rehearsing and performing, in and of itself, does not develop any of the skills required for retaining long-term piano skills. Here are three ways of playing that are essential for keeping piano skills for life.
I will simply be delighted to have my students in the same room with me again. Whilst online teaching is an excellent option when in-person teaching is not practical, it most definitely has its limits, and most of my students are hankering to come back.
Like everyone else, I have experienced a very steep learning curve by embracing online teaching. I have developed skills I never thought I’d have: camera use, audio adjustment, screen-sharing – the list goes on! Teachers have been SO generous in sharing their insights, discoveries and expertise with each other that I think I have actually become a bit overwhelmed with all the information.
So this short post is about the ONE thing I have found to be most useful in online teaching.