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Damn good questions, popcorn, let me know if you find the answers :)
I got my daughter music she liked playing and pointed out all the neat clarinet playing on Van Morrion's albums ( whom she likes a lot ). Dunno about the results yet, but she did elect to continue clarinet into the second year.
Additionally, I'd expose the kid to clarinet music and see how he/she responds. Alot of times, the kid may have mis-chosen the instrument that they wanted to play, too. In Monroe, there is a 6-week mini-course at the 7th grade school that lets students pick up any instrument they wish for 6-weeks. The real trick to make music fun. If its not fun, they won't like to continue and they won't want to practice or take lessons. They can get serious later, when they're better musicians. In the early stages, its gotta be fun to keep their attention. back to the experimentation: they might also find that although they are good at the instrument they play, they ENJOY playing another more. If they're sour no matter what they do, maybe they really don't like it. Encourage extra-curricular group-playing: marching band, jazz band, pep bands, etc. The social content is much higher and it makes playing ALOT more fun. I've played sax for 13 years now (oh my god!) and those things all worked collectively for me. Now I *did* take to it really quickly, so it was never difficult for me to play the instrument, but I was always kept interested, and I think that's the important part. it was always fun. By the way, if anyone's free on Tuesday, July 27.... The Monroe Big Band (& me) will be performing a freebie in St. Mary's park starting at 7pm, going until the bugs carry us away. We play 40's style big band stuff with everything since then thrown in for variety. Bring a lawn chair or blanket and some bug spray. Corner of Elm and Monroe street (m-125) in Monroe. [end of shameless plug]
Our daughter joined the instrument lottery at Pattengill in 5th grade, and got a flute, though she wanted violin. She made it through 5th grade blowing the flute and announced that she was quitting. We never forced her to practice - I'm not entirely sure that practice would really make a big difference - so it has been up to her. I have helped, however, by now and then showing her a little (like, a half note is twice as long as a quarter note), which appears to help. This summer the school system offered a couple of weeks of band practice, so she borrowed the school flute, and she goes off (9-10 am) to morning practice. We'd like her to continue, but are applying almost no pressure - just encouragement. (Unfortunately, neither of us an play an instrument.) So, my recommendations are to stay "loose", offer encouragement, listen to any performances she offers you, applaud, and grit your teeth when necessary.
I would say, start the child early, before the child is particularly concerned about performance. (e.g., with the Suzuki method for the violin, which children can begin as young as three.) Don't make practices a chore or punishment. Allow the child to experiment with different instruments, if the child so desires, including those you may find revolting or deafening (e.g., bagpipes or drums). Don't expect a virtuoso, and remember that it is your child who is learning to play the instrument. (Don't force your own desire to play an instrument upon the child, vicariously.) I would guess that, especially where the parents don't play instruments, it takes a great deal of luck or parenting skill to instill instrumental desires in a child.
Friends sometime do. I have a son who also grew up in an instrumentless family but who suddenly, at age ca. 17, met people that were into banjos. He not only learned the banjo - "frailing", no less - but plays for square and other dancing, etc, as a side line. Its nice that not all talents arise in childhood.
I tried to like my piano and clarinet lessons, but my mom tends to get carried away an take over the piano. Her biggest saying... "don't look for it.". Even though I can play very few tunes on the piano, I am better at tuning the darn thing rather than playing it, and no, you don't have to know how to play to tune, only to be able to hear the beats of the different notes.
First off, you mentioned a friend who is raising 3 talented musicians and you're wondering how she did it. I believe that alot of people are born with a talent for music. The basic instinct is there and they will find it. So she may not have had to do anything "right", she just may have gotten lucky. Second, I think one of your Mom's biggest mistakes was to force you away from what *you* wanted to play, and making you plan the written pieces. Someone learning to play should be allowed to explore the sounds that please them, not the instructor. Third, and this is highly subjective from my own experience, don't force it on the student. I *hated* music class because it was something that didn't interest me at the time but I was forced to take it. My sister had a guitar and I plinked on it once or twice, but I was so turned off by the school system's approach that I was never interested. Later, when I was 22, I decided to try to learn guitar. I've been playing for 12 years now, but there are people who have learned to play better than me in 3. I believe that if I had been exposed to it at a much younger age, I would probably be alot better. If you make it a chore, something he *has* to do, the child will be turned off. Here's an idea: Play him alot of different music, solos of as many different instruments until you find one that grabs his interest. If you can find music that really seems to capture the child and convince him that he can learn to make music like the music that interests him, then he will *want* to learn to play.
Sure, make practice a punishment, and the music in the soul dies a rapid, premature death. "I ahve to play this stuff cause I did something wrong. I am being punished." Dumb,dumb,dumb! So sorry to hear the typical refrain, it's so defeating. Imo, it needs to be configured the same as homework, with parental prodding (not practicing garners punishment) until there is a noticable change in the child's proficiency (or 'if') . When it becomes something 'desireable', then prohibiting the play cna be used as a negative to be avoided. A lot of activities can be cast into carrot-and-stick approaches, with the understanding that the roles are subject to +reversal+!
My own experience (as a former child, not as a parent): I hated practicing because (I think) I couldn't see that it mattered whether I practiced or not. My teachers failed to get through to me what effective practicing is (how & why) - for which I'm doubtless as much to blame as they are, since at least sometimes they *said* the right things. I think the biggest factor was that the only reinforcement was a half-hour- a-week formal lesson. I was never playing regularly for an audience of any kind. At 15 I picked up a guitar, started teaching myself (mostly), and made **extremely** slow progress. At 19 or 20 I found myself in a very, very informal weekly performance (sort of) situation - and my ability took off. There were other reasons, too, but the fact is that for me knowing that people are going to hear me make mistakes is the single most important factor determining whether I practice at all and whether I really practice or just go through the motions. I doubt that the traditional parents-sit-all-their-friends-down-to-listen approach would do much for this; but if kids are playing for people *they* want to impress, it's likely to help. For many kids, anyway. A good teacher *really* makes a lot of difference, too. The cases I know of where kids grew up excelling at piano (some of my cousins and one cousin's kids), the teachers were expensive but worth it. I believe that the parent was required to be present at the lessons and involved in the practicing as daily coach; my impression is that the teacher put a lot of effort into training the parent to be an effective coach. If your child shows talent & musical interest to make thoughts of becoming a professional musician a possibility, this probably makes sense. (We're talking about fairly young kids here, for the most part, I think.)
Tell them it is something they are too young to do. It is only for older children. Nope soorry, this insterment is mine. You cannot have it. What. you say you want to play. You think you are old enough. Well, you realize it means practicing every day. You do. Okay, I'll let you play, but only if you are sure it is waht you want. Now eat your broccoli.
Kids, bright kids, see through manipulative behavior pretty easily so I'd pretty much avoid anything along those lines. Once you've established yourself as dishonest you'll rightfully lose your child's respect. And it really does happen in small increments over time. From what I've heard of the Suzuki method it sounds pretty positive. Ideally, the child is very young and both a parent and the child take lessons together, both learning the instrument from scratch. It is something they share. They both struggle and make mistakes, work through the need to practice, and experience the pride of progress - together. Some lessons are taken jointly and some privately. But the absolute bottom line is that the experience builds self-esteem first and a good musician might follow.
#0: My parents grumbled about the expense of piano lessons. I told them that
everyone would be happier if the lessons were stopped. (They were pissed
as hell because the other Chinese they knew in Toronto had kids who
practiced six hours a day.)
What do you find distateful about some degree of up-front manupulation? Getting someone to do something "because" rather than "just for the sake of" is manipulation. At least there is no disguise, which is possibly what your objection is.
Manipulation is omnipresent, and "up-front" manipulation has its place in the parenting repertoire. What I'm commenting on is the type of manipulation where little lies are told (sometimes referred to politely as reverse psychology) in order to get something out of the child. Such tactics are inappropriate in adult interactions and they aren't any better pulled on kids.
I picked up a one of thoes cheap electronic pianos that makes 101 different sounds. I also have a couple of nice harmonicas my dad gave me as a kid. I let our kids, 2.75 & 4, play with these every now and then. They love it and we don't mind the "music" every now and then. My wife, a preschool for many years, was surprised to find that the kids who were taking the Suzuki classes really loved what they were donig! Would be interesting to hear about this method to find out why it appeals to children.
I tried clarinet in the 2nd grade. Dropped it soon after. I really can't remember why, other than "I didn't like it". A few years later I got a guitar as a birthday present. I didn't remember asking for it, but I gave it a shot. 15 years later, I'm still playing it. What was the motivation? You got me. Maybe it was all those KISS posters I had hanging in my room....
I'm a serious amateur musician -- piano and harpsichord. I used to do the violin and still like to noodle around on the recorder occasionally. Nowadays I play mainly for my own and (hopefully) the rest of the household's enjoyment, but over the years I've done a fair amount of ensemble playing, accompanying, and solo public performing. My musical training started around the age of four and I've managed to sustain my interest, so perhaps my experiences will provide some insights. My childhood home was full of music -- my mother played piano, we had an extensive classical record collection that got played a lot, there was a lot of radio listening. I think the musical atmosphere was an important factor. I was encouraged to noodle around on the keyboard from the age of three. My earliest experience with the piano was that it was a "fun" thing to do. That stuck. Formal lessons started at age four or five. Though my mother would get after me to learn my assignments, I was *never* discouraged from playing around on the keyboard, make up tunes, that kind of thing. During my late childhood and early adolescent years (ages 10-13, maybe), I tended to neglect practicing, my mother would get upset about that and nag, I'd resist -- the usual rebellious behavior that sets in at that age, I suppose. Perhaps I'd have made more progress if she'd not made it into a contest of wills, not set things up so that I could "win" by rebelling. Or maybe the push was what I needed to keep me involved at all during a critical period. Or maybe that didn't make any difference. Dunno. (Real insightful, eh?) In high school I made friends who were also into music, got involved with the school orchestra and other musical activities, and my interest became self-sustaining -- I didn't require the parental "stick" anymore. I do think that my early positive experiences with instrument-playing were of crucial importance in sustaining my interest in later years. I *knew* it could be fun; I'd experienced it that way at the beginning. The musical atmosphere in the home was also important. People are dealt different amounts of musical talent when they're conceived, and there's nothing they can do about it -- I happen to believe that too. But I think that lots of people, with a broad range of that particular commodity, can develop the capacity to enjoy making music and impart enjoyment to others, if the environment is right.
I envy you. I studied violin from age 8 to about 13, when rebelliousness or girls or whatever, led me to quit. There was no music in my childhood home except "big bands" on the radio. I came to appreciate classical music on college, and built a record collection, etc. I suppose the closest I came to overcoming the personal barrier to performance was when I built a harpsichord because it was my favorite instrument. I even played "at" it for several years, but without talent (or guidance) never got good at it, and it has fallen fallow (though it still occupies a corner of the living room). Now, I am involved in so many other things, I hardly notice this big symbol of my lack of success (which this discussion has more forcibly pointed out to me).
So, how much do you want to pay me to take that dust collector off your hands, Rane?
I can't part with it (it does get dusted biweekly). I've offered to accompany my daughter on her flute. I say, she is just learning, and playing things like the Victors, and In the Gloaming...I can wait a little. But now that this is being talked about, I may already be too late! So, what do I give up, to get time to practice? Grex?
My musical experience is similar to Remmers.
In some ways.
I grew up around music. My mom played piano (adequately), and guitar,
my sister played cello, we sang around the paino or guitar, There was
a lot of music on the radio or record player all the time - classical
, folk, big band, some jazz, pop, show tunes... Mom was a big Pete Seeger
fan who became one of my early idols.
I was always encouraged to sing and make music. Mom says I ran around
singing musicals at disgustingly cheerful high pitched tones early in
the morning... wonder how I survived? ;-)
My parents LET me take piano a lot but I quit a lot too. It tended to
bore me the way it was taught (lots of emphasis on playing stupid
songs I didn't want to learn). But it was always my decision.
I rented a sax and took sax in 5th grade, when I got to
6th grade I got into choral music in a big way and never looked back.
Though I still play lots of instruments adequately.
I think the biggest factors in my love of music are-
encouragement
support
parents who MADE music with me
exposure to a wide variety of music (and my parents actually listened to
my music too as I discovered things like the Beatles etc).
I can see how talent (a tricky concept) can certainly factor into
how frustrating it is to learn an instrument but I have
worked with a lot of people musically who honestly didn't think
they could sing - I've had very good success teaching them by starting
with BREAKING DOWN the years of evil teachers that said "You sing
as quietly as possible ok?" or "I think you should find something
other than music for a hobby." etc. That makes me FURIOUS!
There are very very few people who are genuinly tone deaf.
Most people CAN enjoy making music at least for fun.
The point about finding a good teacher is excellent too!
A music teacher for a child should be one they are comfortable
working with, one who can teach them but even more important in the
beginning- one who makes the music fun. (that is true for adults too!
I always remind people that just like anything- you are a consumer
with a voice teacher, if they aren't helping you- find another teacher!
Also- one last important thing- get them a decent instrument.
When a child is very young- babies for example, or up to about 2-3,
they can enjoy banging on almost anything - so at that stage a
really cheap plastic guitar or uke or kitchen pan or whatever
is probably fine. But when they begin to show an interest
in actually trying to sit down and learn get a decent instrument.
That doesn't mean you need to spend a lot of money.
Go someplace like Elderly Instruments in lansing where reliable
salespeople can help you find something within your budget.
A bad isntrument makes learning very frustrating.
ok... I've rambled on enough... Hope that helps some Valerie.
This is a wonderful item, Valerie. Rane, I have no suggestions as to how you'd find the time for it but something that might again instill enthusiasm is if you were to now, as an adult, start taking weekly lessons with a good instructor. Something just for you - a fresh look at an old friend.
Do you know any harpsichord teachers that could put up with an "adult beginner" (the most difficult, recalcitrant, obdurate student, of the lot)?
re#23: Good teachers You hit on a very important point. Both my brother and I had a teacher that was more a friend of the family than a teacher. Now, I play in the big band with him as a peer and see him once a week. Having a teacher and a friend in one person is great for learning, and picking up a lifelong friend, regardless of the topic. Now granted, music lends itself to socializing after-academia better than most subjects, but nonetheless... Pick a good teacher that your kid likes.
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I think that probably music around the home is the most important thing.. my father used to (and still does) play the piano all the time, also the many other instruments we have around the house. I don't know if this was a factor, but the radio was always on classical music, my brother and I didn't even discover rock music 'till I was about in 4th grade. I always loved pretending to play things with my father on the piano, and made up my own songs, and had my father put the names of the notes on the keys of the piano. I was afraid to take lessons at first (had heard bad stories from my mother abo ut her piano teacher) and once I took them I felt like quitting sometimes, but found that when my mother got all upset and wanted me to keep on taking them I said I was going to quit, but when my father said "No, just let her quit if she really wants to. No use in taking them if she doesn't want to." I switched around and didn't want to quit anymore. So could just be an attention-getting thingy. I think that you may just have to work through that stage, but don't really make a fuss about things. Let the child know that it's their decision. Also, one thing that might inspire them to keep on working through the times when they want to quit is to make them tell the teacher themselves... if they' e too scared to make the move themselves, eventually they'll start liking it. Though you have to have something in the first place. I know people who are very determined to play well and work hard and so on but somehow they just don't have any musicality and it doesn't work. so, perhaps just letting the child decide whether or not they want to play the instrument is the important thing. And being forced to practice never works, unless you are able to stop forcing after a short time. Also getting a good instrument is VERY important. You won't enjoy playing music until you can make sounds you like.
Getting a good instrument is important because its very frustrating if you know you can do it but the instrument is the impediment. Tends to cut down on moral.
Getting a good instrument can also be a real drag if your child likes to be careless...that's how my cornet got all dented and scratched. 25 years of taking care of that instrument, keeping it clean and free from dents was all laid to waste in less than 6 months. All depends on the maturity of the child (and their propensity to be careless).
Re #30: So get the child a good instrument, but not *your* good instrument, or one that's going to make you cry if the child accidentally destroys it. This is rule #1 that cannot be over-emphasized: GET-A-GOOD-QUALITY-INSTRUMENT! The first mistake is: "Well I don't know if he's really going to like playing this thing, and I don't want to spend alot of money only to see the damn thing rot in a closet somewhere. So I'll just buy a cheapo one until we see if he has any talent." Wrong, wrong, wrong. There are some very gifted kids that will learn to play a cigar box with rubber bands stretched on it, but a bad or poorly made instrument will make it very hard for the student to produce anything that sounds good, that will *encourage* him to keep playing. If you are serious about this, spend the bucks to get a reasonable quality instrument. If he does give up, a decent instrument can ussually be resold for close to it's original cost, sometimes *more*. A cheapo instrument is just good for kindling. ,
I have some friends who, though they can be very musical and talented on the violin, have bad violins that sound like dying sheep _however_ you play them and so are ready to quit. It's a terrible discouragement not to be able to make beautiful sounds. I know that for a long time the only reason I kept on playing the violin was because I believed that once I learned how to do virbrato, I would like the soulnds I made. That was what motivated me. So really follow #31, because otherwise the point of making music will be defeated and so will any drive to make beautiful music, because it seems impossible.
Don`t whatever you do say `Your going to wish you kept taking lessons someday' to a child who wants to quit. Mom said it and she was right but I had to try to prove her wrong, now I`m 30 yrs old and taking piano lessons. I agree that music around the house is important. I just love jazz Dad used to play good jazz on Sundays and now I hope to become a jazz singer.
Sometimes the best thing to do is to rent a good quality instrument for a year or so. A lot of good instrument shops will allow a percentage of the rental towards purchase if the child decides to keep playing and you want to buy it. If the child decides to drop lessons and no longer play you are not out the total cost of an expensive instrument. We did this for one of my sisters when she wanted to take saxaphone lessons. She only took them for a few months before she got frustrated and quit. Another sister and a brother took flute lessons, she still plays. Mom and Dad rented her flute for the first year before purchasing it. They did the same with my brother only they rented it for a little longer than the first year which proved to be a good idea since he had to choose between band and football in middle school and chose football. He never was as dedicated to the flute as my sister obviously was so they were out about 10% of the cost of the flute while he had fun with it for a while, rather than be out the total cost of it and having it sit unplayed. When I wanted to take clarinet lessons, we borrowed my uncle's for the two years I played (I mainly gave it up because my fingers were too small and kept getting caught in the keys and other interests began to take priority cause they didn't cause pain). STeve bought me a good quality recorder a few years ago that has the same fingering as the clarinet. I fully intend to find someone to give me lessons before too long. I haven't done much with it yet because the Christmas I got it was just before Kelly Troldahl died. We were going to learn to play together (she had one that she had put away) and I couldn't bear to look at it for quite a while after she died. I think I can handle it now and know that she wouldn't want me to give the idea up forever.
I strongly agree with those who suggest getting a good instrument for a beginner. True, it is a gamble spending a chunk of money on an unknown talent, but you're setting a child up to fail if you don't allow him or her access to something capable of good sound. Also, I've heard that good stringed instruments hold at least 100% resale value unless they've been trashed through carelessness. I don't know if this applies to the brass and woodwind instruments. Not too long ago I moved from the guitar to the cello. I had learned to play on a Martin guitar and knew what a difference it made in the learning curve. So when I went cello hunting I was looking for an instrument comparable to a Martin guitar. I also was not going to feel badly if I gave the cello a year and decided not to continue. Afterall, the worst that would happen is that the cello would be sold and I'd be a beginner again, on another instrument (tuba?). Who was it anyhow who said that trying something new but not sticking with it is "failing"? Most likely someone who confused being safe and being stagnant.
I loved playing the piano when I was child. Before I started piano lessons (sixth grade) I had spent several years fooling around with the old upright we owned, learning some songs (chopsticks, Heart & Soul), and making up my own compositions. My younger sister actually started piano lessons before I did, which made me somewhat jealous. By the time I had been taking lessons for three or four years, my mom started yelling at me for spending *too* much time playing the piano. She claimed I was using practicing as a way to get out of doing more housework. But then again, my mom had some really nutty ideas when I was in my teens... My story is probably not typical. I also played the flute and guitar in my early teens, and I started voice lessons when I was 16 (after having sung in choirs for several years). Now I'm considering becoming a voice teacher.
I wasn't at all implying that students should play priceless instruments, but they shouldn't have to deal with the frustrations of an instrument that doesn't function properly or doesn't play well. In saxophones, yamaha sets a good example. They sell 3 grades of saxes: student, intermediate and professional. Each is sucessively higher in price, performance and quality. Each plays and "feels" roughly the same, but the trend is for smoother, faster key action and a nicer sound and finish. The key action and sound is something that won't make a difference to a student, but the nicer laquer work will. the kid will live without the nice brightwork. As he/she gets better, you can "upgrade" to the next level. I went from the student to the pro and didn't really use the capabilities of the pro until late high school. You have to be really comfortable with your playing before you'll notice faster key action and you have to have very good control to hear any noticeable difference in the sound. *I* can out-play a student horn, but not many students can. Matter of fact, I played on a student horn until 10th grade when I started to "outrun" the keys and the darn things were slapping me on their way back up. The pro horns don't do that. Is that at all clear? There MUST be some peice of information in that pile of memorabilia. :)
Re #35: Let's get one thing straight -- you are NOT taking up the tuba.
Re 36 What piano student or player for that matter doesn't know Heart and Soul... I must have played that old thing *thousands* of times!!!
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