Piano Teacher York Offer Lower Piano Lesson Prices
Piano Teacher York Offer Lower Piano Lesson Prices - Lower Than Our Competitors!
 
We incourage you to read about some of the benefits that kids and adults will gain from taking piano lessons below.
 
Taking piano lessons actually help to develop your motor skills, plus hand and eye coordination skills while improving your self confidence.
 
Another wonderful benefit of learning to play piano is its ability to help create $$ sources of income as your piano playing abilities improve.
 
"I earn thousands of dollars every year just from playing piano and you can do it too!"
 
As you shop around, you'll discover that our piano lesson prices are lower than our competitors!
There are many benefits that kids and adults will gain from taking piano lessons:
 
1. Taking piano lessons can increase hand to eye coordination as the student learns to use both hands in harmony.
 
2. Piano lessons help children and adults develop motor skills and dexterity which is a great benefit later on in piano student's life.
 
3. Kids and adults can learn to play piano at any age much like kindergardeners learning to write, or older kids developing their writing skills while moving up through each grade level.
 
4. Piano Lessons improve mental concentration. Kids and adults learning to play the piano will discover that their mental focusing ability will increase because of the concentration it take to operate the use of both hands independently.
 
5. Students who learn to read sheet music find that it also takes considerable amounts of mental concentration and focus to translate the music notations into music while using correct tempo and rhythm.
 
6. Students who take music lessons often improve in school performance. Piano students learn concepts and principles behind science, engineering and math.
 
7. Anyone taking piano lessons usually develop a cross genre of music appreciation. As the piano student develops his or her understanding of music through the music learning process, they learn to recognize similiar music notes played in other genres they haven't even practiced on through association.
 
8. Many piano students move on to play other musical instruments as they develop their understanding of music compositions and the individual notes or chords that make up a  composition. The process draws the piano student in a deeper understanding of the complexity of music.
 
9. There have been lots of former piano students who went on to become music teachers, record label execs, musicians, performing artists, etc. Many students will find lessons that will benefit them the rest of their lives.
 
10. Developing musical skills offer students the opportunity to enjoy a fun and rewarding carreer. Most students fortunate enough to grow up learning to play piano won't become a concert pianists or high salaried musician but will however, end up with carreer choices or hobbies add to the well-rounded developed personality.
 
10. There is a boost of self confidence and self-esteem that comes with the mastery of any musical instrument.
 
11. Some of the kids and adults who take piano lessons today may become the next big thing in the music industry according to how hard they are willing to work at it and according to the network they attach themselves to in the industry.
 
Summary:
Piano Lessons can help a student excel in many areas while helping them feel good about themselves.
 
For more information contact the author at Piano Lessons On DVDs located online at www.pianolessonsondvds.com or email him at bernette_williams@yahoo.com (864) 525-7381
 

the fastest way to learn piano by ear
 
This may be of interest only to the piano teacher, but I have the feeling it may be of use to parents who are wondering why their kids are having a bad time with piano lessons.
 
First of all, if your child does not enjoy piano lessons, something is very wrong. Having taught an almost encyclopedic roster of kids, I can tell you that a creative piano teacher can teach ANY child, if the teacher is prepared to be patient enough.
 
There may be many reasons why a child is uncomfortable with piano lessons.
 
The primary reason is usually the teacher. Almost all piano teachers of young children are too strict and not creative enough to interest the child in the piano. It's as simple as that. There are a lot of bad piano teachers out there, and a lot of impatient kids.
 
The age of the child may demand a different approach than the teacher is prepared to give, or is capable of giving. The reason for this is that there are a wide variety of personalities in children and gifts in terms of piano, but only one accepted methodology of introducing children to the piano.
 
You're headed for Carnegie hall, and if you don't make the grade, you're a failure: that's the mindset of the conventional piano teacher. Do you want to expose your child to this competitive teaching racket, or do you wisely simply want them to enjoy music and play it as well as they can?
 
Each child is an individual and needs to be treated as such. But the piano teaching business has in essence not changed since Carl Czerny in the early 1800's: you put this finger here, you play it now. For all their colored pages and big notes, modern piano methods are not unlike the early ones. The problems of teaching children the piano have not changed at all since the great J.S. Bach taught his kids in 1700: you have five fingers, so we'll use them as a group. Easy to say, but not so easy for a 5 or 6 year old to do.
 
Consider the manner of the piano teacher. Are they patient, warm and humorous? Or are they gruff, demanding and stingy on praise? It's one thing to be demanding of a child that has shown promise and WANTS to be driven harder. It's quite another to apply that expectation and standard to a child of lesser but still respectable gifts. The truth is that every child deserves to learn and be taught the piano within their limits, at their pace, and in such a way that increases their self esteem no matter how small their honest efforts might be.
 
In fact, let us draw up a hypothetical BILL OF RIGHTS for a child's piano lesson.
 
A child has a right to an interesting, entertaining experience at the piano. A child is not there to meet the piano teacher's expectation, but rather to fulfill their own talents in the best way they can. It's the teacher's job to be creative enough to allow ANY child to achieve that.
 
A child has the right to play music that interests them. A teacher has to be creative enough to find out how to teach a child the musical principles based on what the CHILD can understand. There are many ways to skin a cat: you can just as easily use music the child knows and enjoys (Star Wars, for example) rather than the dry-as-dust exercise pieces with which even the best piano methods are loaded. They're not all bad, but kids are turned off by endless repetition of "pretend music." Let them play what they want. It will make repetition easier and more rewarding. It is the teacher's job to forge that material into a musical education, and if you're a halfway decent musician, you'll be able to do it with style!
 
A child has the right to a bad day. We all do. I've seen over-pressured kids just wilt at the thought of even a modest additional amount of work. Let's face it, piano lessons are an elective. Be creative enough to know how to disguise repetition as a game, and the wisdom to know when to back off and simply play piano games.
 
A child has a right to a lesson that is not entirely concerned with reading music and fingering. Those two areas are all that most teachers do during a lesson. But what about listening, ear training, history, composition, finger games, counting games, and a thousand other playful ruses that can be used to interest a child in the piano? What about playing by ear, playing by chords, improvising, memorizing and a thousand other creative methods that might unlock the child's enthusiasm? There is not just one right way to teach all children, but there is one right way to teach an individual child. A teacher who uses the same approach for all students is a poor and lazy teacher.
 
A child has a right to a pace of work that does not exhaust them. Many teachers forget how deeply fatiguing reading music is for small children. It requires such abstract thought that most kids can bear it for a few minutes, but get very uncomfortable after that short period. Be creative enough to know when to move to something else, or you risk exhausting the child and their enthusiasm.
 
Never forget it is their piano lesson, not yours. It's not a platform to expound your knowledge and authority, and expose their ignorance. It's your opportunity to interest them in a fun activity that has great intellectual benefits for them.
 
About the Author
See the PIANO BY NUMBER series at http://www.pianoiseasy.com Teach Your Child Piano with the Free Online Course at http://www.americanpianoschool.com John Aschenbrenner is an Emmy Award Winning Composer and a leading children's music educator, book publisher, and the author of numerous fun piano method books in the series PIANO BY NUMBER for kids.
 
 
 
 

"Piano Lessons Can Be A Fun Activity For Kids And Adults"
says Bernette Williams, the owner of Religitech Records
 
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*Most teachers will only reveal a few of their piano playing secrets, spreading their trade secrets over a period of years.
 
*This routine of holding back information about piano lessons cost students over $1000 in piano tutoring fees every year!
 
This 17 DVD Piano teaching library is designed for beginners, intermediate and advance students.
 
It will teach you more about the piano than the most teachers will show you in 5 years!
 
Bernette Williams, (the instructor) has been playing piano keyboards for over 25 years. He played piano and wrote songs for International recording artist "Luther Barnes" during the 1980s.
 
He has played piano and composed music on 25 CD recording projects to date, performing on over 300 songs including his comedy CD releases.
 
To hear samples of him playing the piano go to www.cdbaby.com/all/bernette or view our video release at http://www.youtube.com/48blessed
 
"I've spent 25 years developing my piano playing techniques, learning to play piano, write compositions for piano, guitar, percussion, horns and string arrangements on 25 CD projects."
 
Pay only $77 during the last 2 weeks before Christmas for the intire 17 DVD program that includes our "Exclusive Secret Insider's Secrets" Video that reveals how to get access to over $15,000 in free music lessons! Click here to order
 
 
Finding the Best Piano Lessons by Ear on DVDs
For some people, the thought of piano lessons conjures up childhood memories of going to weekly lessons and endless hours of boredom practicing the basics.
 
For other people who are considering enrolling their own children in piano lessons, the logistics of taking kids to lessons and the expense involved may seem overwhelming. Adults who have always wished they could play the piano might feel silly signing up with an instructor who mainly teaches children.
 
Thankfully, as times have changed, so have the ways in which piano lessons are taught. In addition to traditional piano lessons, there are online piano lessons and even piano lessons by ear on DVDs.
 
For many people, learning to play piano by ear is an incredibly enriching and rewarding experience. Not only can they play piano for their own enjoyment, but they can also learn the chord progressions necessary to tackle jazz piano, gospel piano, and even contemporary music.
 
There are many advantages to buying a piano course on DVDs, the most obvious of which is that you can literally save thousands of dollars on piano lessons.
 
Moreover, you don't have to carve out the time to go to an instructor every week, or deal with the logistical hassles of taking kids too and from piano lessons. With DVDs, you can take the lessons at your own pace and at whatever time is most convenient for you.
 
If you're considering buying a piano course on DVD, it's important to select the right one. You should, for example, choose a course that will provide you with a year's worth of piano lessons. Similarly, one of the factors you should consider is how accessible the lessons are to the novice.
 
Music theory, for instance, should be explained in terms that are easy for both children and adults to understand. Terms that should be covered include the circle of 5ths, scale degrees, chord construction, chord families, chord inversions, chord alteration, harmonic direction, and ear-theory principles.
 
Of course, playing the piano is more than music theory. The DVD set you choose should feature an instructor who has years of experience both teaching and playing the piano.
 
Because the process of learning to read music can be an obstacle to those who would otherwise enjoy learning to play the piano, the lessons you choose should teach you how to play by ear by using hundreds of chording techniques.
 
If you select the right DVD set, and practice for a half hour each day, by the end of three months you should be able to play chord progressions, master the major scales, and understand how most songs are arranged.
 
You should also be able to play in a variety of musical styles, such as contemporary gospel, jazz, blues, country, pop, and ballads.
 
Learning to play the piano doesn't have to be a difficult process; indeed, it can be filled with enthusiasm and excitement. You just have to find the right piano lessons by ear on DVDs and let the music flow!
 
For more information and informative related articles and links about this subject matter and content, please visit Majon's Music directory: http://www.majon.com/directory/Music
 
About the Author
 
Chris Robertson is a published author of Majon International. All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2007 (Sun Feb 17 2008) Majon International. Majon International is one of the worlds MOST popular internet marketing and internet advertising companies on the web. Visit their main business resource web site at: http://majon.com
 
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