Monday, January 25, 2016

Prepping Students for Recitals

It's that time of year when I'm preparing my students for our big Spring solo recital.  This is the biggest recital of the year for my students and a lot of preparation goes into getting ready.  I was excited to see an idea from an amazing piano teacher, Karen Hunter, who gave me a lot of great ideas for my violin students as well and I've asked her to write today's post:


The week my students choose their spring recital pieces is (by my students’ own admission) a highlight in my piano studio.  I teach 70 students in three teaching venues, so I begin the music “vetting” process in the summer.  Two of my three recitals have themes, so the selection process is slightly easier for those recitals.  Students spend much of their first lesson of the new year listening to me play recital piece options and, ultimately, they select one.

The Saturday morning before lessons resumed in 2016, I spent some time perusing piano teaching ideas on Pinterest.  Something I read triggered the thought that if students are to spend 12 l-o-n-g weeks working on a single song to perform at the spring recital, perhaps it would be beneficial to have the students get familiar with the song and its composer before learning to play it.

That thought morphed into the creation of the “Recital Piece Hunt” worksheet which students were to complete for the second lesson of the new year.  Reviewing students’ responses with them provided many teachable moments.  For example:
  • Younger students discovered that songs have a “form”—a kind of map of a piece.
  • Many students were reminded that a song without sharps or flats may not necessarily be in the Key of C Major.  This resulted in a review of relative major and minor scales.
  •  Students became acquainted with the various “articulations” used in their pieces.  What exactly is tenuto?
  • Students googled “rubato” and other unfamiliar performance instructions.
  • We discussed metronome markings and googled the definition of circa (as in ♪=ca.60).
  •  Younger students were skeptical that a quarter note could receive two beats (in 3/8 or 6/8 time). 
  • One student couldn’t wait to tell me that her composer (Robert Vandall) had a wife whose name was Karen!  Same as you, Mrs. Hunter!


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As my students proceed with learning their pieces, I’m confident that they have adequate background into their pieces and their composers.


To provide students with a “visual” of their progress in learning their pieces, I created “Scoops to a Great Performance” contest cards.  As students move from hands apart to hands together, from slow to performance tempo, to adding pedal and dynamics, I mark another scoop on their 7-scoop cone.  When the piece is performance-ready and (hopefully) memorized, the student receives a token for a free scoop of custard from our local custard stand.  Prepping a piece for performance is a step-by-step process.  I hope this contest encourages my students every step of the way!

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1 comment:

Unknown said...

Sometimes, for me, getting students the music they want entails me transcribing a particular pop song for them, that involves a lot of decisions for me about trying to be true to the original melody so the students can play along with the track (key, rhythm, register, etc) or transpose the piece to an easier key and with a simplified rhythm which will enable them to play it more easily. Sometimes giving them a very difficult transcription which is clearly beyond their current abilities is an excellent motivator, and sometimes it isnt, every student is a unique individual who responds to a wide range of positive or negative reinforcements- some will rise to the challenge and work their butts off to be able to conquer the piece and some will curl up in a little tearful ball and quit. One parent came up with an excellent motivator for her daughter (who was a very commercially minded girl), she paid her $5 for every day that she practiced on her own for 30 minutes or more- but at the end of the week the child had to pay for her lesson herself. Pretty quickly the student realized that if she practiced 7 days a week she would be turning a $10 profit weekly, and promptly doubled her efforts at home. Everyone is different, and part of our job as teachers is learning what makes each pupil tick, and helping them develop good discipline which will reward them with a wealth of achievements, both in music and life. This is the way we do it at my studio, http://www.nassaubaymusiclessons.com