Friday, May 25, 2012

Teaching Beginners the Recorder

Teaching the Recorder is very rewarding. It is a straightforward instrument and you reap the rewards when students make enlarge and are stimulated to move forward.

First of all the recorder is a woodwind instrument of old lineage made without a reed. It is a forerunner to the flute but is end blown straight through a whistle mouthpiece. It is very recommended as the instrument for children to set in motion formal music tuition on as its simplistic invent allows young students to devotee its basic technique with ease. Often population begin on the recorder before moving onto an additional one instrument. This makes studying that next instrument an easier task as the musical knowledge you learn on the recorder applies to whatever instrument you learn. The recorder comes in distinct sizes with the most common one being the descant recorder. Other recorders are the sopranino, treble (alto), tenor and bass.

Piano Concerto

As a trainer you need to:

1. Give the student regular lessons whether conspiratorially or in a small group eg a half hour weekly lesson.

2. Advise a favorable tutor book to learn from. There is a range of tutor books to select from so pick one to suit the age of the student. You can add other material as the need arises.

3. Show the following on how to play the recorder to the student:

a. A favorable standing and sitting posture whilst playing.

b. A good position for retention the recorder.

c. Where to put the mouth on the end piece to produce a good sound.

d. How to produce a good sound - many beginners blow too hard, thus producing a raucous and too very pitched sound.

e. The position of the hands - the left hand should be on top, just like other wind instruments.

f. Finger positions - fingers should be just above the holes- not any inches, or worse still, below the instrument.

g. The notes and how to finger them.

h. Tonguing the notes - each note should be tongued to give a clear starting to the sound. To tongue a
note you place the tongue on the roof of the mouth immediately above the back of the front teeth as in
pronouncing 'doo' or 'too'.

4. Teach the student musical law which includes

a. Musical notation

- treble clef sign: this is placed at the starting of every line of music you play.Some instruments like the recorder use this sign.

- stave: this is the 5 horizontal lines the music is written on.

- note names: a note is a sign to tell you what sound to finger and play.There are line and space notes.You teach the student how to read these notes on the page and the use of words to help remember them eg use F A C E for the 4 space notes and Every Good Boy Deserves Fruit for the 5 line note taking the first letter from each word as the notes of E G B D F. You tell students to start from the lowest and go up.

- note lengths: notes have distinct time lengths and students ordinarily learn them in the order of
(1, 2, 4, 3, 1/2, 1 1/2) counts or beats plus more as one progresses.

This can vary depending on the tutor book.

- bar lines: these are the vertical lines seen on the stave.

- double bar line: signifies end of piece.

- bar: this is area of music found between two bar lines.

- key signature: this is the sign shown by sharps, flats or nothing telling you the key of the piece.
Students start studying pieces in the key of C major (no sharps or flats) and the move onto pieces in G major (1 sharp) and F major (1 flat)

- time signature: this is the numbers found at the starting of the piece after the clef sign and key signature.

b. Musical terms

- dynamics (loud and soft playing): you teach the student to read the terms and to play them on the recorder

- speed indications like Allegro (fast), Andante (walking pace), Lento (slow) plus more

Please note 3 and 4 will be taught step by step following the tutor book and to meet the need of the student.

5. Inspire students of all levels (slow to fast learners) and studying styles (visual, auditory, kinesthetic) You can play duets with secret students and for groups tuition use duets, trios, quartets. Flashcards and games like dominos are moving too.

6.encourage group playing especially for the secret students. They may have friends who play an instrument.

7. Encourage regular practise starting with 5 minutes/day and addition it as more notes etc are learnt.

8. Encourage performance: the student can do this gently by performing to 1 someone first and then family and friends and then in a concert situation. Have an annual concert and couple with other teachers if you wish.

Teaching Beginners the Recorder

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