Posts in Playing Tips & Technique
Creating a Musical Home: Tips for Supporting Your Child’s Musical Journey

Building a Home Environment That Nurtures Musical Growth

Your child has a new instrument and is eager to learn.  You are not a musician and perhaps have only a limited understanding of the journey s/he is about to begin. How do you create a home environment that really encourages the music, the playing, experimentation.

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Your Instruments Are Fragile. Handle Them With Care!

What Should I Do If I am Travelling with My Instrument? Tips for Safe Travels!

Are you moving across country? Going on a long-distance vacation? Can’t bear to be without your trusted violin or cello? Taking your instrument to a new place can be fraught and nerve-wracking, but with some care and precaution, travelling can be perfectly safe.

We travel routinely with our instruments: we rarely step onto an airplane without a violin or cello. But we take care to make sure that our precious cargo arrives safely. Here are some carefully considered tips.

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Evaluating if your child can, should, or wants to continue with strings??

Developmental Differences and Why Your Kid Is Doing Fine

Parenting a young musician is as much of a commitment as being one. As the school year wraps up, many parents are evaluating if their child can, should, or wants to continue with strings. These questions may be further convoluted by doubt in a child’s abilities or motivation. Why won’t my kid practice? Why do other kids sound better? Should we throw in the towel? To shed light on such matters, it helps to look at where music education fits in to general childhood development. I’ll spoil the end before I get there; your kid is doing fine. We’ll get to those individual questions in future editions of this column.

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Practice Tips For Violin Students

7 Tips to Get Your Child to Practice

You’ve just picked up your child’s new instrument, everyone is smiling, your child promises to practice, everything is great! Two weeks later, the instrument is collecting dust, and the word practice brings tears and tantrums. What went wrong???

Keep it simple & small:

Take 1-2 measures, or a line, and have them play it carefully 5 times. Reward, then move on to another small piece and repeat.

Routine – same time and place each…

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Audition Tips For Musicians

Kathy's Audition Tips

Many events and organizations require auditions for would-be attenders. Our local orchestras, All-State and All-New Englands require auditions as do many summer camps…and of course music colleges and advanced programs for our high school seniors. Some teachers ask for auditions to admit students into their studios.

Auditions can be scary! But there are a lot of things you can do to prepare yourself for the best experience. You can learn a lot about yourself and your playing by performing an audition. It can and should be a good experience.

Remember: not all auditions are “screeners”. There is no failing these auditions: your seat in an orchestra, for example, might be allocated according to the audition (not whether you get a seat) and it is an opportunity for the Music Director to get a sense of your capacities as he makes musical decisions about repertoire and seating. You want to get an appropriate seat: being placed beyond your capacities, or below, can be a bummer.

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