Support Your Music Student

Purchasing an instrument for your child isn’t the only thing that you can do for him and his musical education. If you have your child enrolled in lessons, there are many ways to support him. You will find that your dollars are well spent if you follow these guidelines for supporting your music student.

  1. Provide a quite space where he can practice.
    If he plays the guitar or trumpet, he can practice anywhere as these instruments are portable. If his instrument is the drums or the piano, make sure that he has enough time to practice without interruption. Brothers, sisters, and their visiting friends, barking dogs, and curious cats may be a bother to a student who is willing to focus.
  2. Encourage your child to practice.
    Perhaps he needs a daily reminder. When the student has practiced, he will be prepared for his next lesson, play with confidence, and learn new material more easily. Both teachers and students recognize that a lesson has gone well if time flies. Only when the student has practiced his previous lessons will there be a good lesson.
  3. Be prepared for the lesson.
    This is not about practice but about being in a ready mindset. Make sure that he is not hungry nor thirsty, that he has rested a bit after school, that he doesn’t delay the lesson to change out of his school or sports clothes nor need to interrupt the lesson to use the water closet.

As his parent or regular caregiver, you may already know his patterns during the day, for example, when he may feel the most tired, if he is more attentive after dinner, etc. Take these into consideration when scheduling weekly lessons. Saturday mornings may not work for you, per se, but you may see that he is awake and energized just after breakfast.

 

 

Posted in Lessons, Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

Today in Music History, 1659

Today in music history, 1659: Baroque composer Henry Purcell was born in England. He wrote nearly seven hundred compositions including operas, anthems, theater music, and hymns. Purcell is regarded as the greatest English composer of his time.

This air is from a semi-opera The Tempest, composed c. 1695:

Posted in Birthdays, Music History | Leave a comment

Today in Music History, 1956

Today in music history, 1956: Elvis Presley makes his first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. He went on to appear on the show two more times within six months.

Posted in Music History | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Chrissie Hynde

Happy birthday to American musician Chrissie Hynde, b. 1951, best known as the lead singer and rhythm guitarist for the rock band The Pretenders. She and the band were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2005.

Enjoy this video from The Pretenders’ first album, Pretenders:

Posted in Birthdays | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Dolores O’Riordan

Happy birthday to Irish musician Dolores O’Riordan, b. 1971, best known as the lead singer for the rock band The Cranberries. She has released two studio albums as a solo artist.

Celebrate her birthday with the first single from The Cranberries’ first album, Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?:

Posted in Birthdays | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Brad Wilk

Happy birthday to American musician Brad Wilk, b. 1968, best known as drummer for rock band Rage Against the Machine. He recorded and toured with Audioslave and collaborated with Black Sabbath as a session drummer.

Enjoy this documentary clip from Black Sabbath’s recording sessions:

Posted in Birthdays | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Merald Knight

Happy birthday to American musician Merald “Bubba” Knight, b. 1942, best known as a member of Gladys Knight & The Pips. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.

Celebrate his birthday with a song written by him from their 1973 album Neither One of Us:

Posted in Birthdays | Leave a comment

Keys and Tips for Sight Reading

The more sight reading you do the better you become at it. The struggle is part of the process. Don’t worry if you sound terrible. Remember that expression, dynamics, and timing are more important than getting all the notes right.

Begin sight reading with a piece that you think is too easy for you. If you’ve never sight read before, you will find that it is more difficult than it looks! It should be a piece that you’ve never seen before, perhaps one that you found in a collection or compilation book. There are three things to remember when sight reading:

  1. Look at the key and time signature. How fast is the piece? What is its scale? Is it in major or minor? This is why you should work on chord studies and scales.
  2. Keep your eyes on the music. This allows you to look ahead and not to “get lost” by looking down at your hands and piano, then looking up at the music.
  3. Count aloud. Keep good time. If the music is too busy, you may just have to play the downbeats.

Other than practicing your sight reading everyday, you can do other things to make it better, the extra mile to give your sight reading a boost:

  • Play with other musicians, singers, percussionists, etc. This forces you to keep your eyes and hands going. Get together with a sibling or neighbor to work on your sight reading together.
  • Practice everyday with unfamiliar material. If you practice sight reading everyday with the same material, you are not sight reading but learning to play a new piece!
  • Begin at an elementary level and grow over time. The material should be a grade or two easier than your current level.

After two weeks of this practice, you will begin seeing results in your sight reading. Remember that the struggle is part of the process. If you are your worst critic, your music sounds great to everyone else!

Posted in Articles, Lessons | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Today in Music History, 1915

Today in music history, 1915: American musician Memphis Slim was born. He served a leader for numerous bands, recorded over 500 blues songs, and was posthumously inducted in to the Blues Hall of Fame.

Celebrate his life with this blues standard:

Posted in Birthdays, Music History | Leave a comment

Happy Birthday, Lars Frederiksen!

Happy birthday to American musician Lars Frederiksen, b. 1971, best known as guitarist for the punk band Rancid. He fronts two other punk bands, Lars Frederiksen and the Bastards and The Old Firm Casuals, and has produced albums for Agnostic Front, Dropkick Murphys, and others.

Celebrate his birthday with a song from Rancid’s fourth studio album Life Won’t Wait in which Frederiksen sings lead vocals.

Posted in Birthdays | Leave a comment