Tumgik
#piano pedagogy
oconnormusicstudio · 10 months
Text
Dr. Maurice Hinson
  I have always respected Dr. Hinson’s work and his music.  So much so that I went to Connecticut to take a class on Piano Pedagogy with him several years ago.  I have also attended several local piano teacher workshops with him.  At one of them, he claimed to remember me from that Connecticut class.  Whether true or not, I treasure that comment and the signature on a piano book he gave me. We…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
Text
The way I can comfortably sight read requiem reductions and to some level Alban berg but failed to read a RCM prep A piece
1 note · View note
shewhoworshipscarlin · 7 months
Text
Walter Franklin Anderson
Tumblr media
The grandson of formerly enslaved people, Walter Franklin Anderson, classical pianist, organist, composer, jazz musician, community activist, and academician, was born on May 12, 1915, in segregated Zanesville, Ohio. Walter was the sixth of nine children of humble beginnings.
Information regarding his parents is not available. Anderson, a child prodigy, began piano studies at age seven, and by 12, he was playing piano and organ professionally while still in elementary school. He was the only Black student to graduate from William D. Lash High School in Zanesville in 1932. Although a talented musician, Anderson was not a member of any of the school’s music ensembles, including the Glee Club or orchestra. Afterward, he enrolled in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio, 100 miles north of his hometown, and received a Bachelor of Music in piano and organ in 1936. Anderson continued his studies at Berkshire (Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra) and the Cleveland Institute of Music in Cleveland, Ohio.
From 1939 to 1942, Anderson taught Applied Piano, Voice Pedagogy, and music theory at the Kentucky State College for Negroes (now Kentucky State University) in Frankfort. In 1943, Anderson married Dorothy Eleanor Ross (Cheeks) from Atlanta, Georgia. They parented two children, Sandra Elaine Anderson Mastin and David Ross Anderson, before the marriage ended in a divorce in 1945.
In 1946, Anderson was appointed the head of the music department at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, thus becoming the first African American named to chair a department outside of the nation’s historically black colleges. Two years later, Anderson was a Rosenwald Fellow in composition from 1948 to 1949, where his variations on the Negro Spiritual, “Lord, Lord, Lord,” was performed by the Cleveland Orchestra. Moreover, John Sebastian, the conductor of the Orchestra, commissioned him to write “Concerto for Harmonica and Orchestra” for a performance with the same orchestra. In 1950, Anderson’s composition, “D-Day Prayer Cantata,” for the sixth anniversary of the World War II invasion, was performed on a national CBS telecast. In 1952, Anderson received the equivalent of a doctoral degree as a fellow of the American Guild of Organists. He left his administrative post at Antioch College in 1965.
In 1969, Anderson was named director of music programs at the National Endowment for the Arts, where he created model funding guidelines and pioneered the concept of the challenge grant. In addition, he spearheaded numerous projects and developed ideas at the then-new agency for supporting music creation and performance, specifically for orchestras, operas, jazz, and choral ensembles and conservatories.
Anderson was the recipient of four honorary doctorates in music over his professional career, including one from Berea College in Berea, Kentucky, in 1970. He retired from NEA in 1983. During this period, he became a presidential fellow at the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and a recipient of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Distinguished Service to the Arts. In 1993, the American Symphony Orchestra League recognized Anderson as one of 50 people whose talents and efforts significantly touched the lives of numerous musicians and orchestras. He was also a member of the Advisory Council to the Institute of the Black World at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center.
https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/people-african-american-history/walter-franklin-anderson-1915-2003/
25 notes · View notes
Text
SO MY LITTLE COUSIN’S PIANO TEACHER NEVER BOTHERED TO TEACH HIM WHAT A TIME SIGNATURE WAS. NO WONDER HE RUSHES. HE DOESN’T KNOW THAT THERE ARE A NUMBER OF BEATS PER MEASURE. sorry for shouting just WHAT THE HELL? is this a common thing in music pedagogy of children? because i was doing theory pretty much right away when i did piano and it’s not like he’s too young to understand he is TEN and i was doing theory years before him. also why the hell does this teacher let him advance when he CAN’T KEEP A CONSISTENT BEAT? my god. my fucking god
15 notes · View notes
lboogie1906 · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Maestro Dr. Walter Franklin Anderson (May 12, 1915 - November 24, 2003) the grandson of enslaved people was a classical pianist, organist, composer, jazz musician, community activist, and academician, was born in segregated Zanesville, Ohio. He was the sixth of nine children.
Information regarding his parents is not available. He began piano studies at age seven, and by 12, he was playing piano and organ professionally while still in elementary school. He was not a member of any of the school’s music ensembles, including the Glee Club or orchestra. He enrolled in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and received a BSM in Piano and Organ. He continued his studies at Berkshire and the Cleveland Institute of Music.
He taught Applied Piano, Voice Pedagogy, and music theory at the Kentucky State College for Negroes. He married Dorothy Eleanor Ross (Cheeks) (1943-1945). They had two children.
He was appointed the head of the music department at Antioch College, becoming the first African American named to chair a department outside of an HBCU. He was a Rosenwald Fellow in composition, where his variations on the Negro Spiritual, “Lord, Lord, Lord,” was performed by the Cleveland Orchestra. The conductor of the Orchestra commissioned him to write “Concerto for Harmonica and Orchestra”. His composition, “D-Day Prayer Cantata,” was performed on a national CBS telecast. He received the equivalent of a Ph.D. as a fellow of the American Guild of Organists.
He was named director of music programs at the National Endowment for the Arts. He was the recipient of four honorary doctorates in music over his professional career. He retired from NEA in 1983. He became a presidential fellow at the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and a recipient of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Distinguished Service to the Arts. The American Symphony Orchestra League recognized him as one of 50 people whose talents and efforts touched the lives of numerous musicians and orchestras. He was a member of the Advisory Council of the Institute of the Black World at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
3 notes · View notes
lunashifts · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
DR Self 🌙💖
🌙LUNA LILY WAYNE💫
- nickname(s): little moon, moonbeam, lunes (mostly tim and the girls), lulu (mostly childhood)
- alias: baby/little bat
- birthday: 17. October
- age: 20
- height: 163cm
- hometown: gotham
- race: human
- sexuality: straight
- pronouns: she/her
- gender: female
- hair color: blonde (natural), pastel pink (dyed)
- eye color: blue (Bruce's eyes)
- occupation: studies pedagogy at gotham University
- language(s): English, French, German, Japanese
- s/o: Jason Todd
- positive traits:
very kind, always tries to help, very empathetic and compassionate, is more bubbly and fun when she knows the people around, creative, introverted
- negative traits:
little shy, stubborn, naive sometimes, trusts too fast, insecure sometimes, definitely (a little?) spoiled and coddled
- likes: books, movies, superheroes and vigilantes, fall, rain, night time, boba tea, the color pink, dogs, cats
- dislikes: too hot weather, waking up early, thunderstorms, if other people are sad/hurt, insects
- hobbies: reading, dancing, watching movies, journaling, video games, painting, piano, baking, Horse riding (mostly as teen/kid)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I'm the daughter of Bruce Wayne and Maria Claire Windfield, a random fling he had. She didn't tell him she was pregnant until one day when I was four years old she just showed up at the Manor and handed me over to him and then left Gotham. From that day on I grew up in the Manor.
Dick was only there a few months when I showed up but he helped me settle in and always played with me even though I was much younger than him. Then a few years later Jason came along and the three of us became inseparable. I always had kind of a crush on them but like more of a little girl crush because I admired them and loved spending time with them.
After Jason's death, Dick helped me a lot and I tried to help him too. We grew even closer through it all. It was a really hard time and I never like talking or thinking about it. I even had some therapy sessions with Leslie about it.
When Jason came back it was like the best day of my life. Even though he was angry and changed a lot I still saw Jason in him and was just so happy he was back. That's also why I went behind everyone's back to meet him because I just needed to see him with my own eyes.
The second best day of my life was when Jason returned from being away with the Outlaws after two years and rejoined the Batfamily. Then slowly but surely dick, jason and I became our inseparable trio again.
Currently I still live in the Manor and study pedagogy at gotham University. I help out around the cave the first hours of the night and the whole night on weekends.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
Text
tuesday again 2/7/23
feeling sort of neutral to apathetic about a lot of media this week! two pics of my cat tho to make up for it
listening
NOT feeling neutral or apathetic about the tuesdaysong, pont alexandre iii off the 1998 album Noir by alexander lasarenko. this is a sort of fun little film score exercise by a composer who did a lot of tv work, including PBS' NATURE. the drum fill does sound like it’s from 1998 and i mean that as a compliment. bond movies are emphathetically not noir although they occasionally borrow some visuals, but this piece reminds me of early daniel craig bond movies with the sleek synthy orchestra and subdued horns. they both have the same fuckin uhhhh. the british exotic location travelogue strings. the piano makes me think point and click mystery game.
youtube
-
reading
Tumblr media
star wars: yoda dark rendezvous by sean stewart. i am about halfway through but this reread is reviving memories of my last reread in uhhhhh. summer 2011 probably. this feels like it was half a concept for a middle grade book about a padawan finding her confidence and ability after losing her master very early in the clone wars, and half a concept for an adult book about the deep sorrow and loss between the treacherous count dooku and his former master, yoda. and in the background of all this ventress (ventress my worstie i love her) is begging and pleading to be made an apprentice while dooku flatly refuses. a generous reading would be “this is all history that rhymes and points to how the master/padawan relationship is not a good pedagogy method for either side and is deeply fucked up” but i think this idea is quite muddied in the middle of this book. it does not always feel deliberate that everyone at once is having trouble managing either their padawans' or their masters' emotions.
the tonal whiplash between the first few chapters is absolutely bonkers. like it's star wars, you couldn't Really show torture on screen or on the page in this specific storytelling era, but it's certainly implied. and then we get a fun field games day for the padawans in the next chapter!!! you don't really consume any star wars media for the prose, but the prose here occasionally gets in the way of itself. it does take a few chapters to find its footing but it is, as i remember, a snappy and fast read. one of the most goth settings in the starred wars imo. the soft plush moss that will start to dissolve your skin if you take a nap in the blood forest has stuck in my brain in the. idk, decade plus since i read this book.
-
watching
Tumblr media
The Big Sleep (1946, dir. Hawks) is just as good the third time around. i still have a great deal of difficulty following the plot, but this is a movie that first and foremost Looks incredibly good. shoutout to physical media once again bc this 2005 dvd from the turner classic media co. has solid, reliable, properly timed subtitles. none of the pirate streaming sites i like can boast the same for this particular movie.
in other news new felix colgrave short dropped and it is a bizarre perfect delight
youtube
-
playing
beat wolfenstein: the new order on the babiest level and it still took me like forty minutes to sit through the cutscenes. it does such a good job of presenting you with all these very fun environments to run through that you manage to forget that you are very much on rails and it's essentially a boomer shooter (over the top maximalist first person shooter) cramming itself into hallways until the last level in the castle, which feels like endless corridors. im also cranky they showed me so many airships but never let me walk around on an airship. or throw a nazi off an airship.
Tumblr media
might wanna get that tesla coil on fire checked out. like i know it's my fault but someone should be alerted about this
i don't really know that this game stuck the landing, for me. i think the last castle level really dragged, and the courtyard arena + the last hallway arena with the catwalks felt very same-y. it's also annoying to me that they give me a sniper rifle but there's no real way to use it as part of a stealth run. there aren't a lot of opportunities for stealth in the back half of this game. it is too much of a shooter and not enough of a narrative/rpg for my tastes, i think. i don't think i'll be continuing on with the series bc i'm not terribly attached to blazkowicz.
this and fallout are like The big AAA alt-history tentpoles, but it's a very small tent. this game was fun for what is was, which was a self-contained and fairly short shooter you're meant to play through twice to get two slightly different narrative routes. it reviewed well at the time and i think the reviews are pretty fair, i had a normal amount of fun aside from the sharp glee of the moon exhibit ramps and crawling through vents in the moon base, i liked it a normal amount and will not be integrating it into my personality. so it fuckin goes sometimes.
-
making
a baby (not mine) blanket, which will absolutely not be ready for the baby (again not mine) in a month and a half. this is going to end up about 40" square and is this pattern off ravelry. it is some flavor of caron baby yarn (i cannot currently find the ballband) on 4mm bamboo circs bc u cannot make a delicate baby blanket. what's the point. its going to go through the wettest hell you can imagine bc a baby's one job is to make fluids.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
this pattern is just spicy enough that it's hard to watch TV and count stitches at the same time so i am BURNING through podcasts. slowly but surely getting caught up on A More Civilized Age and their three hour discussions of each star wars episode of Andor. five star podcast five star runtime
31 notes · View notes
dustedmagazine · 7 months
Text
Reverso — Shooting Star-Étoile Filante (self-released)
Tumblr media
On previous recordings, Reverso has explored the music of French composers Gabriel Fauré and Maurice Ravel, linchpins of the early 20th century classical repertoire. Here, the trio of trombonist Ryan Keberle, pianist Frank Woeste, and cellist Vincent Courtois are inspired by another French composer, Lili Boulanger (1893-1918), the short-lived but prodigiously talented artist who was the first female to win the Prix de Rome. Such was the grief of her sister Nadia that she gave up her own promising composition career, devoting herself to pedagogy, a teacher to many Europeans and a raft of American expats. Reverso titles the recording Shooting Star as an acknowledgement of Lili’s extraordinary gifts. While the composer would likely have heard little jazz, her work serves as an excellent starting point for the original tunes written in response to it by Reverso. One wonders about balance issues a trio with this complement might encounter, but it never seems to be an issue, with Reverso careful to make every note heard.
“La Muse '' opens the album with liquid ostinatos from Woeste and legato melodies traded between Keberly and Courtois. “Obstination '' has a syncopated Iberian cast that recalls the craze for Spanish traditional music among the Impressionists. The solos use distinct registers, with Courtois flying high and Keberle playing resonant pedal tones. Woeste’s solo is a modal post-bop excursion that celebrates the off-kilter rhythms of the piece. Likewise, “Resilience” explores rhythmic variety, with alternations between quick polyrhythms and solos that vary it. A slow tune serves as an overarching motif. There is a bridge where small, repetitive segments take over before a return to the opening material, Keberle playing the main tune in octaves with Courtois.
The “Nocturne” is a venerable form, usually for solo piano. Reverso captures the mood with sculpted delicacy. A repeated tenor note in the piano underscores a chromatic bass-line alongside melancholy chords, as well as corruscating melodies between trombone and cello. Woeste brings out a filigreed soprano register melody in the bridge before returning to harmonies from the opening. Doubling of the melody by Keberle and Courtois gives way to another varied duet between them, culminating in a high trombone cry and a quick outro of repeated passagework. “Ma Jolie” has a bluesy trombone solo that is repeated with the cello playing liberal slides. The central section is led by Woeste, playing a zesty bit of cabaret music. Keberly returns to his solo while Courtois plays a pizzicato bass-line. The piano drops in with tasty harmonic fills. The quick cabaret music returns, and the piano and cello provide a sinuous take on the main tune to close.
“En Avant” deftly channels the texture and melodic approach of Impressionism, a style that, while not encompassing, appeared in Lili’s music. Courtois’s solo features Eastern sliding tone. Gamelan and other non-Western artists fascinated French musicians, notably Debussy, at the 1889 Paris Exhibition, and they continued to incorporate its signatures for decades. Keberle’s solo, on the other hand, is a more raucous affair, and Woeste plays dexterous small cells and a repeated stepwise progression. The close returns to referencing Impressionism and ends with halting utterances.
“Requiem” is a touching memento mori for Lili, with a haunting minor key melody that is deftly varied in its doublings. “Shine” too has a melancholy cast. However, the somber mood doesn’t prevail. “Lili’s Blues” imagines an introduction of Lili to “Le Jazz Hot,” with a plethora of glissandos and rollicking swing.
The recording closes with “Dernier Moteur” (“The Final Action”) in which bucolic riffs and mysterious, angular melodies are played by Woeste, Courtois adds a sumptuous solo, and Keberly provides countermelodies with slow glissandos that distress the crispness of the rest of the proceedings. A denouement is completed surprisingly, with the piano simply stopping to conclude the piece.
Creating “new standards” of early twentieth century music would be a far less imaginative choice than the approach taken on Shooting Star, where Lili Boulanger’s biography is as much an inspiration as her music. Reverso inhabits a musical space both of homage and innovation.
Christian Carey
3 notes · View notes
miss-shirley · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
25.02.23 - Day 53/103
I actually feel really accomplished today even though I didn't even do that much work, but somehow I hit that elusive sweet spot of balance in productivity and relaxation that makes you end the day not burnt out!
talked through another practice problem with my friend
finished my lesson materials
tidied some more
cooked a really nice Japanese curry
practised piano
studied for my pedagogy exam
24 notes · View notes
uservalentine · 11 months
Text
thank you for tagging me marit (@rebel-ezra) <3
name: bente
sign: gemini
time: 15:55
last movie: barbie?? just realised i haven’t watched a movie in ages omg, but i’m seeing the new fnaf with my brother next monday!
last show: started watching the new seasons of disenchantment & sex education but i didn’t get far since i’m really busy with school atm :’)
when i created this blog: somewhere in 2018
other blogs: @ruelgifs but i lowkey abandoned it, sorry ruel love you
do i get asks/ may you send me asks: haven’t been that active recently so i don’t get that many asks, although i usually get them when people have feelings about my gifs :’) and people may send me asks, for sure!
average hours of sleep: when i actually need a good nights of sleep and force myself to go to bed; 7 or 8 hours, otherwise; 5 or 6
instruments: some piano when i have those little youtube to play them, i can’t read sheet music for the life of me
what i’m wearing: jeans with embroidered flowers, an oversized sweater and fluffy socks cause it’s COLD
dream job: pedagogical youth care worker, school social worker or some other position where i can put my pedagogy degree to good use lol
tagging, only if you want to of course: @hemmohoran @calumthoodshands @daydadahlias @burstingsunrise @ashtonsunshine
4 notes · View notes
thevalleyisjolly · 1 year
Text
One side effect of studying piano pedagogy is that whenever I watch a show or movie or video where someone is sitting at the piano and they're supposed to be a relatively experienced musician, I am obligated to be insufferable about their hand and body position. Girl, how are you going to get the range of motion to play octave chords fortissimo when your elbows are glued to the side of your ribs. It's your knees that are supposed to be just under the edge of the keyboard, not your bench. Those fingers are just too flat for the scale passages that the soundtrack says you're playing. Is that a slouch-
5 notes · View notes
miasanmuller · 2 years
Text
Dear @gxtzeizm​ tagged me a couple days ago and I finally have time to do this one. Thanks for tagging me Iz!!
Nickname: Well Ander is already a nickname so idk my boyfriend sometimes call me Andy lol
Sign: Pisces
Height: 183 cm, no idea how much is that in feet or whatever
Last thing I googled: Where I could rent social clothes to wear at my friends wedding this weekend bc the only place in town I knew closed lmao in the end I couldn’t find it so I had to spend the money I don’t have to buy said clothes... i want to die
Song stuck in my head: This amazing cover o Kylie Minogue’s Can’t Get You Out of My Head
Numbers of followers: 1005  but like... 900 or something are inactive and 80% of the rest is probably bots I forgot to flag lmao
Amount of sleep: Usually something between 6 and 7 hours
Lucky numbers: Don’t think I have one?
Dream job: Being rich
Wearing: A striped purple/wine shirt which I love and black shorts
Movies/books that summarise me: "O Tempo e o Vento” (The Time and The Wind) by Erico Verissimo (particularly the last volume of the trilogy, O Arquipélago - The Archipelago). There must be more but this is the first one that come into mind
Favourite songs: Listen my spotify wrappeds have been consistently like 80% the same since 2018 and that’s because I love a lot of songs so dearly that I listen to them non-stop so I honestly don’t know what to put here lol
Favourite instrument: To listen to? Guitar, piano, harmonica. To play? None lol
Aesthetic: Night sky, stars, sunflowers, ravens, warm colors, wine, wood
Favourite author(s): I used to love Sidney Sheldon when I was 17
Currently reading: None
Fav colour: Red is usually the answer but pink and purple are lowering their distance towards the 1st place so who knows really
Fav animal noise: My cat gently asking to be petted in the middle of the night before she has a snack
Last song: Culpa do Cupido by Pabllo Vittar...............
Last Movie: Don’t remember bc I lost the habit of watching movies
Random: I’m getting really into pedagogy and theories of education and teaching so I’m almost picking up a few books on the subject to read... what is happening with me?
I have no idea who already did this before so please ignore me if you already did/already been tagged/simply don’t feel like doing this. I tag @fabioquartararhoe @clowningbayern @leongolretzka @byeeern and @miss-i-ship-it
9 notes · View notes
recapitulation · 2 years
Note
Tumblr media Tumblr media
[ID: a picture of a collection of Florence Price art songs sitting on a piano and a picture of a brown tabby cat snuggled up in a pile of clothes and stuffed animals. End ID.]
Hiiiiii lexi here's a picture of the book of songs I'm singing out of in my sort-of-pretend voice lessons (they're with my friend for his vocal pedagogy class but also he's really good at teaching so they're real) and also Charlie "watching" taskmaster with me!! I hope you have a happy shen wei saturday!!!!
hi tam!!!!!! 💌💌💌💌💌 lessons with a friend sounds SO fun if I ever move back to chicago (and I hope I will) I'm def reaching out to one of my music teacher friends who are just now starting their careers...as much as sightsinging was one of the hardest and most frustrating classes I ever took I miss it sooooo much
HI CHARLIE MWAH MWAH omg that looks so cozy 🥺🥺🥺🥺 here are some cozy spork and spatch pics in return 🤲🤲
Tumblr media Tumblr media
[ID: two pictures of Spork and Spatula on a cat tree pushed up against a window. They are both lounging casually in the first and looking out the window in the second. Spork is in the top basket while Spatula sits below him. /end ID]
6 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA) announces the Centre Stage Festival, a two-day cultural spectacle on December 8th and 9th, 2023 at Sunder Nursery. Featuring five young performers from the world of dance and music, the festival promises to be a vibrant celebration of creativity and cultural expression. Through this festival, KNMA honours India’s rich and abundant cultural traditions and serves as a platform to showcase and nurture these extraordinary artists.
The Centre Stage festival is set to unfold as a cultural highlight, presenting the exceptional talents of young and emerging artists reshaping the cultural landscape. Aniruddh Aithal, a 25-year-old Hindustani classical vocalist, will captivate the audiences with his soulful renditions, while 13-year-old Bharatanatyam dancer, Akshatha Viswanath exudes incredible energy, displaying a mastery in Bharatanatyam that transcends her age. In the genre of Western classical music enthusiasts can anticipate a mesmerizing performance by Anuvrat Choudhary, an accomplished musician with accolades in national-level piano competitions and a rich background in music education and pedagogy. Anuvrat will be performing two duets featuring 14-year-old Martina Charles, a violin prodigy known for completing all 8 grades in violin from Trinity College London and achieving the Fellowship of Trinity College London (FTCL), a rare accomplishment as the youngest in India and the first in Kerala. The second duet will be with Eera Gupta, a dancer, trained in jazz, contemporary and modern dance.
0 notes
lboogie1906 · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Tia Fuller (born March 27, 1976) is a saxophonist, composer, and educator, and a member of the all-female band touring with Beyoncé. She is a faculty member in the ensembles department at Berklee College of Music. She was a Featured Jazz Musician in Soul. She plays an alto saxophone with a Vandoren mouthpiece for the character Dorothea Williams. The appearance of Dorothea Williams is influenced by her.
She was born in Aurora, Colorado to jazz musicians Fred and Elthopia Fuller. Her father plays bass and her mother sings. Her sister, Shamie is a jazz musician and educator. She grew up listening to her parents rehearse in the basement of their home, as well as to the music of John Coltrane, Sarah Vaughan, and Charlie Parker.
She began playing saxophone at Gateway High School, after which she continued her musical education at Spelman College. She performed with Ray Charles and in Atlanta’s jazz clubs. She graduated magna cum laude with a BA in Music and went on to complete her MA in Jazz Pedagogy and Performance from the University of Colorado at Boulder.
She has performed with several jazz artists, including Esperanza Spalding, Terri Lyne Carrington, Ralph Peterson Septet, the T.S. Monk Septet, the Jon Faddis Jazz Orchestra, the Rufus Reid Septet, the Sean Jones Quintet, and the Nancy Wilson Jazz Orchestra.
She has led a quartet that includes Shamie Royston on piano, Kim Thompson on drums, and Miriam Sullivan on bass, and with whom she has recorded the albums Pillar of Strength (2005, Wambui), Healing Space (2007, Mack Avenue), and Decisive Steps (2010, Mack Avenue).
In 2012, she toured with Esperanza Spalding as leader of the Radio Music Society horn section, in which she played saxophone in dialogue with Spalding’s scat singing. She was nominated for a Grammy Award for her 2019 album Diamond Cut. She was an artist in residence at the Burlington Discover Jazz Festival. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence #womenhistorymonth
2 notes · View notes
tonalartmusic · 28 days
Text
Where to Find Violin Lessons for Kids That Inspire?
Encountering motivating violin lessons for children can significantly alter their musical trajectory. Look for private teachers who specialize in teaching young students or local music schools as a starting point. While laying a solid basis in technique and music theory, an inspiring teacher will prioritize making classes enjoyable and interesting. Take into account educators who foster creativity and integrate a range of musical genres. In adding to learning how to play the violin, your child will obtain an enduring love of music with the correct instruction.
Tumblr media
Examine Customized Music Instruction for Every Age Anyone can start a lifelong adventure in music, even if they are a toddler learning to play an instrument for the first time or an mature rediscovering a passion. All from adult violin classes near me to beginning saxophone lessons is obtainable to accommodate all eternities and ability levels. This is a guide to assist you in selecting the ideal music lessons for yourself or your family members.
Adult Violin Instruction Near Me Would you be interested in Violin Lessons For Adults Near Me? Education the violin is a never-ending endeavor. A lot of local music schools and private educators provide flexible scheduling to accommodate busy existences. The main topics of these classes usually include basic skills, reading music, and performing in a variety of styles, from classical to modern. Violin classes for adults near me provide you a nurturing setting to develop your musical talents, regardless of whether youÕre a total novice or picking up a past pastime.
NJ Piano Lessons Locating the greatest piano lesson NJ is vital if youÕre in New Jersey and want to learn how to play the instrument. All ability levels, from novices to proficient players, can advantage from piano instruction. Even if you want to learn how to play popular songs, achieve classical pieces, or even write your own music, NJ teachers frequently provide personalized sessions that are tailored to your individual wants. Seek out piano classes that include both online and in-person choices so you may select the setting that best suits your needs. Making beautiful music is something you can start doing in no time with the appropriate piano lesson NJ.
Lessons in Adult Music The admiration of adult music courses is rising as more and more grownups want to learn music or develop their musical aptitudes. Adult music lessons offer numerous advantages, such as stress relief, enhanced intellectual function, and a sense of accomplishment, regardless of even if youÕre starting out on an instrument or picking it up where you left off. These sequences are frequently created with elasticity in mind, with teachers adapting their pedagogy to fit the wants of adult learners. Through adult music lessons, you may explore your musical interests in a controlled and entertaining manner, even if youÕre playing the violin, piano, or another instrument.
Tumblr media
KidsÕ Violin Lessons finding a school that fosters a love of music in addition to teaching the basics is vital if youÕre looking for childrenÕs violin lessons. Seek for teachers who specialize in interacting through kids and provide engaging, informative classes. To keep young students attentive, games, interactive exercises, and a range of musical styles are often included in violin lessons for kids. A competent teacher will highlight developing a solid technical basis although encouraging your childÕs creativity and confidence in their musical ability.
Beginner Saxophone Lessons Saxophone Lessons For Beginners are an outstanding way for people who need to study this adaptable instrument to get started. Vital subjects including respiratory control, finger placement, and sheet music reading are typically covered in first sessions. Learner saxophone classes offer an organized method for learning the basics while maintaining a pleasurable learning experience, ideal for together young learners and motivated adults. As you advance, you will experiment through numerous genres Ñ from jazz to classical Ñ and hone your own style of playing.
0 notes