5 Tips for Helping Your Child Choose an Instrument Consider Your Child's Unique Personality. ... Engage in Musical Activities with Your Child. ... Take the Time to Shop Around for a Music Teacher. ... Help Your Child Identify a Musical Role Model. ... Discuss Long-Term Activities Related to the Instrument. ... Bottom Line.
Hendrix's use of a guitar pick was one of the defining aspects of his playing style. Hendrix favored thin picks, which he used to create a range of...
Read More »Music can raise someone's mood, get them excited, or make them calm and relaxed. Music also - and this is important - allows us to feel nearly or...
Read More »Incorporating music into your child’s education is bound to be an exciting endeavor. Music opens up an array of new opportunities and allows your child to nurture his or her creative side. Research has also shown that benefits of learning an instrument include strengthening discipline, developing confidence and enhancing cognitive functions related to verbal and reading skills. In a recent TED-Ed lesson, educator Anita Collins explained how playing an instrument benefits the brain. According to Collins, playing an instrument is the equivalent of a full-body workout, in the sense that it engages essentially every area of the brain at the same time, and practicing an instrument continues to strengthen functions of the brain. So there’s no question that music education will bring many benefits to your child’s life. But once you’ve decided to pick up an instrument, how do you go about choosing which instrument to play? Here are five of our top tips on how to help your child choose an instrument.
Jumping is a coordinated, heavy work activity that promotes motor planning, balance, muscle development, coordination and improves bone density!...
Read More »Plucking the piano's strings is very easy to do! Depress the damper pedal or hold down keys to raise the dampers off of the strings you want to...
Read More »Another way to help your child choose an instrument is to identify a role model that your child can look up to. If a child admires and respects a certain figure, he or she is more likely to aspire to become more like that role model by doing what it takes to get there (aka practice). Do some research and identify some musicians that your child may relate to, either on a personal or professional level, and have your child read about and watch videos of those musicians. When facing difficulties and frustrations with practicing down the road (and there will be some), your child can draw inspiration and encouragement from his or her musical role model.
For a beginner, 66 keys are sufficient for learning to play, and you can play most music on a 72-key instrument. For anyone interested in playing...
Read More »Despite her four-octave range, Grande has had no formal vocal training. Jul 9, 2019
Read More »Pianoforall is one of the most popular online piano courses online and has helped over 450,000 students around the world achieve their dream of playing beautiful piano for over a decade.
Learn More »“She is a mezzo soprano and sings in her vocal sweet spots. A lot of singers can sing many notes, but never really learn what their sweet spot...
Read More »Imagine a piano. The distance from B to C is a half step because no other notes fall between them. The distance from A to B, however, is a whole...
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