Enjoy! :-)
Thursday, 8 June 2017
Saturday, 3 June 2017
Friday, 13 November 2015
The Practice Nest
Many a-time when the subject of 'music practice' is brought up, the immediate focus is on the frequency and time spent on this activity; for parents, it's almost always on how to get actively involved and how to include it in their children’s daily schedules.
This time round, the focus will be on the Practice Nest J - an environment that is conducive to regular, and (this is
key!) enjoyable home practice.
I love the term “nest” because it
immediately brings to my mind a cosy area in the house where I enjoy spending
time.
Below are 4 tips I came across (on the teachpianotoday website) which
can help us achieve this, especially for our children: -
1. When
choosing a location for your piano, select a space that
is lived-in, welcoming, and well-lit. Keep it close to “the action” but not in
the action. Your children will gravitate to the piano more often if it is in a
central place in your home. Avoid bedrooms, basements and other “put away”
places. Feeling shut-off from the family while practicing will inevitably lead
to a reluctance to spend time on the piano.
Consider the noise factor – not only
from the piano, but also from your family’s day-to-day activities. Your
children want to be close by, but not competing with the Tv, dishwashers and
washing machines. J
2. Make
the space warm and welcoming. Your children will be encouraged to spend upwards of 30
minutes every day in this space. Is it a happy place to be for this amount of
time? Is it a cheerful and welcoming space that will encourage your child to
visit the piano often for their own enjoyment? Small adjustments can make a
world of difference e.g. adequate lighting, a comfortable bench at the
correct height, flowers…
3. Ensure
your children have all required materials at hand. If
the practice notes are away from the piano, chances are that’s where they will
remain J Help
your children put together a small basket or bin of everything they may need
for home practice – pens, pencils, highlighters, post-it notes, stickers. These
will give the children a sense of organization that will spill over into their
practice habits. Clear out old sheet music and books they no longer use.
Minimize knickknacks and other distractions from the top of the piano. Having
the books your children need at their fingertips reliably ensures that no time is spent searching
for lost or crumpled music. Get into the habit of placing the piano books here
immediately after each piano lesson so they are ready and waiting.
4. Make
the “Practice Nest” a communal space. Children of any age appreciate company while they practice.
Having a chair, couch, beanbag chair or pillows nearby where family members
will be inclined to sit, listen and enjoy the music immediately sets the tone
for happy time on the piano. Encourage siblings to stop by and listen quietly,
and allow yourself even just 5 minutes to sit and listen with undivided
attention each time your children practice. Many memorable moments of laughter
will be found in this “nest.”
Plus one more! J Adding small surprises to your children’s practice nest
(flowers, a hand-written note of encouragement, a small treat, a new sticker
pad, a special pen, etc) helps to show that you value the time they are
spending on the piano and that you appreciate their effort and dedication.
One giant step towards making the
piano a vital part of your children’s day-to-day life (and not a requirement)
is making the piano area a place your child looks forward to visiting.
My own apartment has limited space but
my digital piano space is my favourite area, and even if I weren’t a
piano teacher, I would never have to think twice about “visiting” and spending
time in that corner J
Cheers!
Lola :-)
Saturday, 28 February 2015
Legato Singing - EMG Reed
Legato Singing
Everyone has enough natural
feeling and imagination, if they are not afraid to use them in a song.
Sing the words as if you meant
them; sing the melody as if you loved it, rising with it in a crescendo as it
rises, and falling with it as it falls. Sincerity and simplicity, not
performance!
In a good melody all the notes
are equally important; each one must tell; it’s no use giving yourself up to
the notes you like best and leaving the rest to look after themselves J So observe the notes
which are given to small syllables. It is the neglect of these which lets a
melody down. Now, it is the vowels which carry the melody: therefore sing on your vowels and through your consonants. The consonants must not stop the melody.
Be very particular that final m’s, n’s and ng’s are not made into stoppages.
You see, vowels are the sounds we sing on, and consonants are interruptions.
(If you doubt it, pick out the vowel sounds of each word in a song, and sing
the tune to those only, in a continuous stream, omitting all the consonants.
Then try to sing to the consonant sounds only, and see what happens! J )
Apply legato singing with diligence to every song for a long time to
come, for it is the foundation of all good singing. J
Tuesday, 20 January 2015
Breathing In Singing ~ Music and Youth
Breathing in Singing
Nature meant everyone to sing
well, so the first point to remember about singing is that it is a natural
thing, like speaking. Sing naturally and easily always, and you will be on the
road to good singing. Allow yourself to become artificial, stiff,
uncomfortable, and you are on the road to bad singing.
But even speech, which seems
natural to us, needs practice if it is to be understood by other people. We
have all to learn to control our tongue, our lips, and so on, although that
control may come to us unconsciously. Other things which are natural still need
practice. It is a very natural thing to hit the floor with a hammer or a stick,
but it needs considerable practice before we can hit an exact spot or a special
nail with a hammer. It is not greater force, greater effort that we want. It is
just the knowledge of how to control and manage the power we have.
How Breathing Helps Expression
Have you never noticed that when
you feel more strongly than usual, whether it is joy, indignation, sympathy, or
surprise, you take a deeper breath than usual, and that you voice becomes at
once more expressive than it ordinarily is, and that it expresses just those things which you were feeling
when you took the breath?
Well, that’s just what should
happen when you sing. You must enter
into the feelings which the poet and the composer have expressed, and take in a
deep breath as if you yourself were in that very place or moment expressed in
the song.
Breath in singing is not only the
motive power that keeps the voice in action, but the power which makes it
expressive. If you feel, and breathe as you feel, your voice will express what
you feel to all who hear you. J
Thursday, 15 January 2015
ONCE UPON A TIME ~ Music and Youth
ONCE UPON A TIME - A Little Tale with a Big Meaning
Once upon a time a man who loved books came across a story which
charmed him very much. So much did it appeal to him that he wanted all his
friends to know about it and to share his delight. He invited them to his house
and asked them to listen to the story whilst he read it.
But somehow or other the charm of the story was lost, for his
friends showed no enthusiasm whatsoever.
And the reason for his failure was that he could not speak properly
and distinctly. Some of the words he pronounced wrongly, sometimes he ran the
words and sentences into each other, sometimes he spoiled the meaning of the
phrases by confusing the punctuation marks, and his voice was unmusical and
expressionless.
As soon as the man realised what was lacking he started learning
the art of Elocution, and in due time he called his friends together and read
the story to them again. This time they shared his enthusiasm and the story
lived in their memories :-)
♫ ♫ ♫
How
many students can see their own image in the likeness of the man just
described? J
Again
and again we meet young musicians who are quick to appreciate the beauty of a
piece of music, but their enjoyment is marred by the fact that they do not
bring out the poetry of the work.
The
notes are inaccurate, phrasing done poorly, the beauty blurred by thoughtless
pedalling, and neither is the touch varied so as to give beauty and expression
to the music. Consequently the playing has neither life nor rhythm and the
listener is unable to appreciate the music at its true value.
To
make the mind and the fingers work together in perfect concord needs careful
exercise and practice of little details, for it is the little details that make
all the difference between good and bad playing. J J
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