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How To Take Lessons

This document provides tips for getting the most out of music lessons. It recommends thoroughly preparing for lessons by practicing technical elements like key signatures and rhythms until the teacher only provides musical suggestions. Students should take notes during lessons, be on time and warmed up, and come with questions. The goal is for the student to become an independent musician through doing the hard work, with the teacher acting as a coach.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

How To Take Lessons

This document provides tips for getting the most out of music lessons. It recommends thoroughly preparing for lessons by practicing technical elements like key signatures and rhythms until the teacher only provides musical suggestions. Students should take notes during lessons, be on time and warmed up, and come with questions. The goal is for the student to become an independent musician through doing the hard work, with the teacher acting as a coach.

Uploaded by

tapson
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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“How to Take Lessons

(& get the most from them)”


Richard Begel - www.richbegel.com

You’ve just had your lesson and received new assignments for the next one
in 7 days. What should you do now?
Prepare. You should be working harder than your teacher for your lessons.

Prepare so that you don’t pay someone to tell you what you already know. (key signature,
time signature, rhythm, etc.)

Prepare so that you don’t pay someone to tell you what you could have known. In other
words, record yourself.

Take notes on the important points of your recording of the lesson or from your memory
of the lesson if you were unable to record it.

Always have high standards, trying to achieve that point where there is nothing technical
(wrong notes, wrong rhythms) left for your teacher to correct, and only musical
suggestions remain. Then, if your teacher does find something to change, it will be new
information for you.

At the lesson, were you


On time?
Warmed-up?
Ready with your recorder or tape or CD?
Ready with questions?

Other Points:
“Make a Statement, don’t ask a question.” -Arnold Jacobs
Good advice, even for playing in lessons. Jacobs also said “when the horn comes up, be
a storyteller.”

Express the atmosphere that the composer was aiming for. It is as important as playing
the right notes, maybe even more important. After all, if one word in a book is smudged,
you can still understand the book.

You and your teacher are a team, helping you to become an independent musician.
Rather, your teacher is like the coach of the team and you have to do the work, build the
muscle, and score the goals.

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