Month: October 2017

Happy Birthday Franz Liszt!

Biography

Franz Liszt was born on October 22, 1811, a little over 200 years ago in a country called Hungary. His father, Adam, was a musician in service to a Prince, so Franz was introduced to many famous composers at a young age.

When he grew up, he saw Niccolo Paganini play violin, and was inspired to compose music that sounded like Paganini, and imitate his style. Liszt worked hard and practiced until he could play piano like no other. He was a virtuoso! He became friends with Clara Schumann and her husband composer Robert Schumann, and travelled all over Europe playing and composing music.

Here is a link to one of Franz Liszt’s most famous pieces Hungarian Rhapsody #2. (Parents: This is a very long piece. The flashiest playing starts around 5:07, and the most recognizable part of the theme is around 2:30. This is the portion that Tom plays in the well-known Tom and Jerry cartoon, the Cat Concerto).

Some questions you might also ask:

Who has inspired me to try something new?

Whose music do I prefer, Clara Schumann’s, or Franz Liszt’s?

Vocabulary:

Inspire: If someone inspires you, they make you want to be just like them.

Virtuoso: Someone is very, very good at playing an instrument–so good, that only a very few people can compare.

Preschool Piano at Home — Off the Bench

Preschool piano students are between the ages of 3 and 5, gaining their first experience at the piano. It’s a key moment in their musical development, that has the potential to shape their view of lessons for years to come. That’s why it’s important that piano is FUN, and that fun transfers over to the home in form of practice.

Practice can be a scary word, conjuring images of rote memorization, incomprehensible drills and arguments with parents when we’d really all rather be outside playing in the sun. That sort of discipline can be helpful, but at preschool and primary ages, it’s harmful.

Instead, here are some ideas for FUN piano practice, that doesn’t even look like piano practice.  Try building in some of these activities with your kids a couple times a week and watch them develop. Remember, practice does not make perfect. Practice makes progress, and that should always be the goal.

Fun piano practice off the bench

1. Finding patterns. Patterns can be made out of anything, from toys to coins to clothes to dinner. Pattern recognition helps students learn their music more quickly, and aids in eventual memorization. It also helps lay the groundwork for mathematical understanding as the kids grow up and start in school.

2. Putting coins or tokens in a jar. Games like Operation may be too challenging for these ages, but there are many easier variants that can be made at home. Using an old kleenex box, tweezers (large plastic ones can be found in toy stores) and plastic toys, make a game of putting the toys in the box. Traditional toy cash registers with the coin slot can be used the same way. These sorts of games make the child use their pincher grip, which in turn strengthens the muscles in the hand and forearm, improving finger independence for piano. These same skills also show up in school when holding a pencil or paintbrush.

3. Playdoh, or other similar dough. Squeezing, rolling and cutting coloured doh may seem like the furthest thing from piano practice, but again, it all helps to develop the muscles of the hand and forearm. Younger students might be encouraged to press the playdoh with each finger in turn (using Wunderkeys names to enforce the link), while older preschool students might try making a quarter note. Different colours can also be used to make patterns.

4. Ear training. One of the most common mix-ups in terminology among this age group is high/short and low/long. It seems strange to most adults, but kids frequently believe low sounds are always long, and high notes are always short. Simply a habit of mentioning sounds qualities to your child when heard can help to clear this confusion, as can making a game out of it using animal noises. Other ear training ideas are already available on this blog.

These activities are just a few ideas of how to make piano practice fun with off-bench activities in the home, but they are by no means the final word! They can also be used as a way to include siblings who aren’t in lessons, even if those siblings are too young for formal instruction.

The new Wunderkeys primer is here!

I cheated a little and ordered a bunch from the United States, because these books aren’t even going to be published in Canada for another few weeks, but I really couldn’t wait. So I now have a little glossy pile of Primers waiting for their owners, with a copy having already gone to 6-yr-old Alex. And as I was recently able to confirm with the creator of this series, Andrea Dow of British Columbia, Alex is officially the first kid in all of Canada to be taught from this book. So congratulations to Alex!

But really, why AM I so excited about a Wunderkeys Primer?

It’s exciting because it’s the first piano primer to target kids younger than six as well as those who are six and up. Before, Wunderkeys kids were graduating the program knowing and counting quarter, half and whole notes, and being able to read a bit directionally as well, yet traditional primers were starting them back from scratch, not even identifying quarter notes for weeks or months. As well, traditional primers assume the students can write and maybe read a little, but a child of four generally will not have the fine muscle control or knowledge to complete the workbook exercises that accompany a primer.

Wunderkeys, on the other hand, takes this into account and has developed a primer that is age-appropriate for the youngest preschool graduates, that is also engaging for older students. Over the course of 10 to 12 weeks, primer students can go from no keyboard knowledge to sightreading short pieces on the Grand Staff. That’s real piano music, in a very short time, and my favourite part of teaching–the moment when a student realizes they can now play any song they want with a little practice. It’s an amazing thing, well worth sharing.