Whether learning a musical instrument is due to pursuing a career or for personal fulfillment and recreation, one to one tuition will greatly benefit a new music student.
Working with a private tutor can help a student keep up with peers in a group setting. Each child learns at a different pause and because of the different aspects of performing an instrument, children will progress at varied paces, which is why one to one tuition can be the way forward.
Private lessons can also help minimise frustration when learning. Some may give up learning an instrument because of frustrations, however, with one to one tuition, the teacher will be patient and is there to guide the learner through every step of the way.
Children will learn more quickly the fundamentals of playing. Solid foundations are built for the child to continue learning, playing and succeeding. They will build confidence and, ultimately, won't give up.
They will also learn how to practise and perfect their new found skill - something which will be vital in later life. It is important they practise at home so they are progressing much quicker rather than coming back to private tuitions and possibly forgetting what they have learned if there are gaps between lessons.
Lastly, it's easier to stay motivated with private tuitions. Instructors are knowledgeable about different music literature and styles and can help the student discover what new music to learn and what goal to pursue next.
The regular news and update information site from Birmingham's brand new Music Centre, Progress Music Academy. 1-2-1 Drum Lessons, Guitar Lessons, Keyboard Lessons, Recording Studio Lessons and Vocal Lessons from our newly renovated studio complex in Birmingham!
Showing posts with label learning to play a musical instrument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learning to play a musical instrument. Show all posts
Wednesday, 31 August 2016
Wednesday, 20 April 2016
How Do I Choose Which Musical Instrument to Learn?
Learning to play a musical instrument will be one of the greatest things you could ever do for your mind, as well as for yourself. Regardless if you are a beginner, playing in a band, or are a skilled individual, the process is incredibly rewarding and a lot of fun!
If you're starting a clean slate and do not know what you want to play, it is good to know that anything is possible
Choosing a variety
The instrument that is a popular choice for beginners is the piano. This is mostly because it is really simple to see the music. It is also featured in many different cultures and styles of music, both piano and keyboard.
Piano variations you may be able to add to your skills include:
If you're starting a clean slate and do not know what you want to play, it is good to know that anything is possible
Choosing a variety
The instrument that is a popular choice for beginners is the piano. This is mostly because it is really simple to see the music. It is also featured in many different cultures and styles of music, both piano and keyboard.
Piano variations you may be able to add to your skills include:
- Accordion
- Harpsichord
- Organ
- Synthesizer
Guitar can vary from classical to death metal, learning to play the guitar can open up many doors into different musical styles. The guitar is another popular choice amongst budding musicians and first-timers. Pinning down the basics of guitar can lead you onto other instruments to add to your six-string canon:
- Banjo
- Bass guitar
- Dulcimer
- Harp
- Mandolin
Mastering percussion is all about keeping the time of most music groups. In most bands, this will come in the form of a kit drum, whereas there are other combos which will feature widely in a variety of instrument that can be hit on with mallets, sticks or hands.
Other percussion instruments include:
- Bells and Cymbals
- Congas and Bongos
- Drum set
- Glockenspiel
- Timpani
- Vibraphone
Friday, 4 December 2015
Is Our Favourite Music Genre Linked to Our Personality?
Could our preferred genre of music really link to our personality?
A study conducted by Professor Adrian North of Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK, believes that our musical tastes and personality types do, in fact, link. Professor North carried out extensive research on the social and applied psychology of music, specifically the relationship between pop music culture and deviant behavior in young adults, music and consumer behavior and musical preference in everyday life.
The study was conducted over a course of three years where the Professor asked over 36,000 people in more than 60 countries to rate a wide range of musical styles in order of preference - there was also a questionnaire that measured certain aspects of personality.
The results showed:
A study conducted by Professor Adrian North of Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK, believes that our musical tastes and personality types do, in fact, link. Professor North carried out extensive research on the social and applied psychology of music, specifically the relationship between pop music culture and deviant behavior in young adults, music and consumer behavior and musical preference in everyday life.
The study was conducted over a course of three years where the Professor asked over 36,000 people in more than 60 countries to rate a wide range of musical styles in order of preference - there was also a questionnaire that measured certain aspects of personality.
The results showed:
- Blues fans: have high self-esteem, are outgoing, creative, gentle and mostly at ease
- Jazz fans: have high self-esteem, are creative, outgoing and at ease
- Classic music fans: have high self-esteem, are creative, introverted and at ease
- Rap fans: have high self-esteem and are outgoing
- Opera fans: have high self-esteem, are creative and gentle
- Country and western fans: hardworking and outgoing
- Reggae fans: have high self-esteem, are creative, outgoing, gentle and at ease, but not hardworking
- Dance fans: creative and outgoing, but not gentle
- Indie fans: have low self-esteem and are creative, but aren't hardworking or gentle
- Bollywood fans: creative and outgoing
- Chart pop fans: have high self-esteem, are hardworking, outgoing and gentle, but not at ease or creative
- Soul fans: have high self-esteem, are outgoing, creative, gentle and at ease
Professor North said that his objective was to study why music was such a significant part of people's identity.
He said, "People do actually define themselves through music and relate to other people through it but we haven't known in detail how music is connected to identity. We have always suspected a link between music taste and personality. This is the first time that we've been able to look at it in real detail. No one has ever done this on this scale before."
Sourced from: http://psychcentral.com/lib/preferred-music-style-is-tied-to-personality/
Friday, 25 September 2015
Learning to play music can help your hearing
Did you know playing music can improve your ability to discern certain sounds?
Nina Kraus, a neuroscientist from Chicago has found still more positive effects on adults that received early musical training - in the realm of communicating and hearing. Kraus measured the activity in the auditory brainstems of 40+ adults, between the ages of 50 and 76 tested on their response to the speech syllable 'da'.
The subjects hadn't touched a musical instrument in roughly 40 years, however those that had trained for a long period of time (between four and fourteen years) responded faster than others.
Kraus says this is 'significant'. Our hearing does decline as we get older, and with it the ability to distinguish consonants - a crucial skill for the participation and understand of a conversation.
Nina Kraus says, "If your nervous system is not keeping up with the timing necessary for encoding consonants - did you say pill or fill, hat or that - eve if the vowel part is understood," you are likely to lose out the flow and meaning of the conversation at hand, possibly leading to an individual feeling socially isolated.
Her hypothesis is that musical training allows the individual to focus on accurate connections between a sound and a meaning. Learners are able to focus on the note in front of them and link it to the sound it represents, continuing to be able to recognise which sounds do and don't go together, on passages that are played when associated with a specific emotion. Furthermore, the students will be using their motor system to create the sounds through their fingers.
There are also other possible benefits to a person's listening skills and hearing skills when playing music, she says, "Musicians throughout their lives, and as they age, hear better in noisy environments. Difficulty in hearing words against a noisy background is a common complaint amongst people as they get older."
Learn to play a musical instrument the right way with Progress Music Academy!
Nina Kraus, a neuroscientist from Chicago has found still more positive effects on adults that received early musical training - in the realm of communicating and hearing. Kraus measured the activity in the auditory brainstems of 40+ adults, between the ages of 50 and 76 tested on their response to the speech syllable 'da'.
The subjects hadn't touched a musical instrument in roughly 40 years, however those that had trained for a long period of time (between four and fourteen years) responded faster than others.
Kraus says this is 'significant'. Our hearing does decline as we get older, and with it the ability to distinguish consonants - a crucial skill for the participation and understand of a conversation.
Nina Kraus says, "If your nervous system is not keeping up with the timing necessary for encoding consonants - did you say pill or fill, hat or that - eve if the vowel part is understood," you are likely to lose out the flow and meaning of the conversation at hand, possibly leading to an individual feeling socially isolated.
Her hypothesis is that musical training allows the individual to focus on accurate connections between a sound and a meaning. Learners are able to focus on the note in front of them and link it to the sound it represents, continuing to be able to recognise which sounds do and don't go together, on passages that are played when associated with a specific emotion. Furthermore, the students will be using their motor system to create the sounds through their fingers.
There are also other possible benefits to a person's listening skills and hearing skills when playing music, she says, "Musicians throughout their lives, and as they age, hear better in noisy environments. Difficulty in hearing words against a noisy background is a common complaint amongst people as they get older."
Learn to play a musical instrument the right way with Progress Music Academy!
Tuesday, 18 August 2015
Why it's never too late to learn a musical instrument
There is an art to learning to play an instrument; some would say it's passion, others may say dedication or discipline.
What has not been said is needing experience. This because it is never too late to begin playing a musical instrument, Whether you favour string instruments or brass, drums or piano, music lessons can be taken at any age.
There could be tons of reasons why you're starting lessons when you're starting; maybe when you were younger it wasn't the right time, you were too busy, or you couldn't find suitable music teacher. Either way, if you've wanted to learn to play guitar, you can do so today:
Easy beginnings - Guitar lessons begin fairly easy and within a few weeks, you should be able to play a couple of songs. The more practise means you can play more challenging pieces.
Fun - Learning to play an instrument can be extremely fun, but there is a lot of dedication that is needed. You will be expected to practise, but this will only lead to more fun when you begin to familiarise yourself with the instrument.
Experience - As we age, we gain a lot of life experiences which can lend themselves to our playing abilities and even songwriting. Through expression, you can play unique pieces that will impact others.
Socialising - Bringing up that you ar learning to play an instrument can be a great way to socialise. You can meet other learners, those with experience and take advice and tips from them.
Benefits wellbeing - Learning to play an instrument can actually uplift your spirits. We understand that different types of music can make us feel different emotions, so learning to play an instrument can only heighten those emotions and relieve stress and tension!
For further information about Progress Academy's music lessons in Birmingham, please visit our website!
What has not been said is needing experience. This because it is never too late to begin playing a musical instrument, Whether you favour string instruments or brass, drums or piano, music lessons can be taken at any age.
There could be tons of reasons why you're starting lessons when you're starting; maybe when you were younger it wasn't the right time, you were too busy, or you couldn't find suitable music teacher. Either way, if you've wanted to learn to play guitar, you can do so today:
Easy beginnings - Guitar lessons begin fairly easy and within a few weeks, you should be able to play a couple of songs. The more practise means you can play more challenging pieces.
Fun - Learning to play an instrument can be extremely fun, but there is a lot of dedication that is needed. You will be expected to practise, but this will only lead to more fun when you begin to familiarise yourself with the instrument.
Experience - As we age, we gain a lot of life experiences which can lend themselves to our playing abilities and even songwriting. Through expression, you can play unique pieces that will impact others.
Socialising - Bringing up that you ar learning to play an instrument can be a great way to socialise. You can meet other learners, those with experience and take advice and tips from them.
Benefits wellbeing - Learning to play an instrument can actually uplift your spirits. We understand that different types of music can make us feel different emotions, so learning to play an instrument can only heighten those emotions and relieve stress and tension!
For further information about Progress Academy's music lessons in Birmingham, please visit our website!
Tuesday, 26 May 2015
Half Term at Progress Academy
Progress Academy is opening its doors this half term for a week of music and fun.
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You could have a chance to play on our Natal Drum Kit! |
If you didn't know, every half term Progress Academy in the Birmingham Jewellery Quarter open its doors for children everywhere to come and use the equipment and produce videos using the instruments. We host song recordings and video production for them to watch and potentially take home.
It's a great opportunity for children to learn about musical instruments, music and develop their technical skills - no matter the experience, and most importantly have fun.
You can find Progress Academy at 35 Northampton Street in the Jewellery Quarter, B18 6DU.
For further information about Progress Academy and if you're interesting in developing your musical skills, please visit the website!
Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Musical Instrument Facts
Brass horn
The oldest brass instruments can be dated back to 500 BC, and have been found preserved in bogs across Scandinavia. The instruments were called lurs, essentially a long, elegantly curved brass trumpet and had been recovered in batches of two.
Lurs have been used for the crest of Lurpak butter.
The word remains in the Swedish language as something that broadcasts sound, hÖrlurar meaning headphones, along with a mobile phone frequently called a lur.
Stone horn
The precise use of an ancient bronze lur remains a mystery, however, according to the Icelandic sagas the lurs’ later wooden relatives (lurar) had been used for the gathering of troops and scare away the enemy. The Saxons did not require an instrument, they simply used a sizable stone.
The Blowing Stone, at Kingston Lisle, is a large sarsen boulder with a number of holes in it. Blowing into the correct hole creates a loud, penetrating note. Alfred the Great had used said stone to gather his troops prior to the battle of Ashdown.
Universal organ
Rewind to 2004 when astronomers at the University of Virginia measured background radiation from 400,000 years preceding the Big Bang and described the ‘music’ the universe made while it was being created.
“For the first 400,000 years it sounds like a scream declining to a dull roar,” explained Professor Mark Whittle. “And over the first million years the music of the cosmos changed from a bright major chord to a sombre minor one.”
Singing sand
Sand dunes can actually play a ‘tune’, or rather a loud, resonate note that can last for 15 minutes and heard from approximately 6 miles away.
Studies that have been conducted in the Sahara presented that the booms are caused by avalanches on the dunes, often occurring after rain, when the lower layers of a dune are still moist (sometime clumpy) and the top layers are dry. The falling sand makes vibrations in the same manner as the membrane of a loudspeaker.
Cello
An abbreviation of the correct name ‘violoncello’ – literal translation of ‘little big viola.
Cello would have been written with an apostrophe preceding it in the past.
Hard cases
Chicago gangsters wouldn’t have been partial to carrying around machine guns in violin cases. Rather they opted for a ‘hard case’ that resembled a musical instrument carrier. It would have been compartmentalised in order for it to hold various parts of the gun easily.
Harpo
Salvador Dalí, in the Christmas of 1936, sent Harpo Marx a harp that had barbed-wire strings to which Harpo sent back a photo of himself bearing his bandaged fingers.
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Friday, 20 March 2015
Why music is important
Not only dies every culture make music, but every past culture has had or made music too.
The musical instrument is amongst one of the oldest man-made objects ever discovered; as an example, there are some flutes today that are approximately 37,000 years old, possibly older.
Compared with reading and writing, the earliest recorded forms dating back about 3500 years - and there are presently some cultures in the world that cannot read or write.
Scientists have actually discovered, through research, music has an effect on different parts of the human brain quite deeply.
It's difficult to explain although a simpler way of understanding would be the emotions and memories and feelings felt when listening to a particular song or piece of music, whether it be from classical to heavy metal. You could ask yourself: "What do I feel when you listen to a Christmas song? Or when somebody is singing 'Happy Birthday'?"
Music can produce strong emotions and feelings; it is essentially a language a language that every human is capable of understanding, thus it is a form of communication.
In the year of 2009, November, the UK remembered two significant events; one being the passing of the generation of the soldiers who fought for the country during the first World War, the second the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall - both commemorated with music; in London, the Choir of Westminster Abbey sung 'For the Fallen' for the passing of the WWI generation; the 20th anniversary of the fall of Berlin Wall brought a free concert by U2.
Learning music could actually be considered a vital life skill as it is a form of universal communication - it's a form of expression without having to say anything.
Music is especially important for children as at their young age, their brain is constantly developing, thus giving them another form of communication they can use while they grow. The more music a child is exposed to, the more they will enjoy a variety of music when they are an adult.
Please visit our website if you'd like more information about the benefits of music lessons!
Tuesday, 17 February 2015
Music lessons: fun and stress relief
Finding a hobby can promote resiliency and is a great way of filling and enjoying your free time.
Learning to play an instrument opens up a lot of opportunities; playing an instrument could ultimately lead to joining a church music group, songwriting and even starting your own band.
It's a chance to build a career as a musician and have a little fun with it also.
If you're a person that enjoys learning and has an interest in music, learning to play an instrument could be the thing to do - Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix were self-taught, their careers evolving from the passion to pursue that love of music they both possessed.
How to get started:
Begin with the basics and then you can develop from there and enjoy playing for fun. Purchasing a guitar, and maybe an amplifier and some sound effect pedals will allow you to create a limitless amount of sounds and call it music.
Play along to songs that appeal to you; it'll be a great way of unwinding as well as learning how a song is constructed - the development of your talent lies at honing in the skills you are taught yourself, and helping them flourish, by taking lessons, which is where Progress Music Academy can help!
Playing a musical instrument is a brilliant stress reliever and way of having fun, you'll be fascinated with the music you can make.
Please visit our website for further details about the lessons and services we can offer you!
Please visit our website for further details about the lessons and services we can offer you!
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