Why We Do What We Do

I Chronicles 25:5 - And God gave to Heman fourteen sons and three daughters.
6All these were under the hands of their father for song in the house of the LORD, with cymbals, psalteries, and harps,
for the service of the house of God, according to the king’s order to Asaph, Jeduthun,and Heman. 7So the number of them, with their brethren that were instructed in the songs of the LORD,
even all that were cunning, was two hundred fourscore and eight.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Terrific Tuesdays and Sundays


Tuesday is my "big" piano teaching day.  It's the day for all of my elementary age students.  Because of safety reasons I go to the classrooms and walk the students to and from their piano lessons.  Not only do I get some great exercise, we have some great time for fellowship.
We just finished our Homecoming Revival and I'm planning on taking the momentum from the revival and working it into the next few lessons.  Our pastor led the singing throughout the meeting, so that meant....transposing each hymn into a lower key!!! Praise the Lord, we had time to make copies of the selected hymns and Mrs. Amy Robinson graciously wrote in the chord symbols for each song.  For an "old dog" who is used to playing "Victory in Jesus" in Ab, I actually had to think a little about staying in the key of G.
So, for advanced students the emphasis will be transposing and embellishing hymns they have already mastered.  The beginner/intermediate students will put the "pedal to the metal" on their left hand hymn technique.  We fundamental, independent Baptists may not play at Carnegie Hall but we should be the hands down experts at hymn playing! I do believe I'll enter the next "American Ideal Baptist Pianist" competition. :)
How's your hymn playing?
If you are bored with your hymn "style", your listeners are probably in a daze, too.  Here are some things that have helped me throughout the years.
1. Pick up the tempo on your preludes and postludes.  Nothing kills a hymn more than "dragging" it to death.
2. Practice your scales regularly and try to incorporate at least one in a song each Sunday.
3. Pay attention to your technique - sloppy? weak? lazy? too fast? too loud? painful?  Any of these problems can combine and kill the message of the song, plus injure your hands and wrists.  Change up your dynamics, attack, "touch", and check your posture.
4. Do something different on each verse of each hymn, don't repeat the same old, same old, same old - it becomes a "drone" - almost hypnotic.
5. Sing along with the hymns and pay attention to the message of the song, "breathe" with the singers, watch the song leader, be involved emotionally and spiritually.
6. Listen to Rudy Atwood play.  He is not a banger, he is strong, but controlled.  Every note is clear, precise, and there on purpose.
7. Practice the intros for the hymns.  These set the mood, tempo, and put the congregation on the right key!  Be clear and precise!
8.  Enjoy playing and smile!
Let's be the best for the Lord's work - it's the greatest venue in the world for musicians!

Monday, September 13, 2010

How's it Going?

Hello Fellow Teachers and Musicians!
How's it going?  If your schedule is anything like mine you're beginning to get in the "rhythm" of teaching lessons and classes.  At this point it is helpful to "shake up" your teaching routine a little so that it doesn't get into a "rut".  "Ruts" are great, they keep you on track and keep you focused - it's just helpful to add spice to your teaching so that you don't get bored, too!
I've started bringing a digital recorder to lessons.  When a student does a great job on a piece I'll record it.  My goal is to give the parents a CD of their students progress throughout the year.  It benefits me, too.  I want them to have at least six good pieces on the CD and that takes work and motivation.
I have already given each of my grade school students their Christmas pieces.  I am planning to have a Christmas Party Recital at my house.  We'll have refreshments, pictures, and take turns playing our pieces.  I plan on having duets, classic Christmas pieces, Classical pieces, and a LOT of fun.  This will be out of the ordinary and I'm planning on having a music-themed tree in the living room for the event.  We'll make memories and have a sweet time.
These past few years we have decided to make the hymnal our ultimate goal and objective.  No lesson will go past without working on a hymn.  The focus this month is "invitation" songs. How many times have you been called to play an invitation without notice?  I want my students to be ready at any time, so we're getting invitations, offertories, and preludes ready.
I just got a new book that will be helpful for fun pieces, wedding preludes, and motivation for your students - Lyric Moments Volume Three by Catherine Rollins (Alfred Publishing).  You'll enjoy playing from this, too!

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Getting Ready for Fall

Are you ready for a new school year and a new start for your piano students?   I have to admit I just got my fall letter out last week.  Who reminded me? Some of my students!  You know you're behind when your students ask, "Do you have our piano information yet?"
This is the letter I've sent to my parents and students.




August 2010

Dear Parents and Piano Students –
I am looking forward to school starting, candy selling ending, and cooler weather!  I am also excited about getting back to piano lessons and seeing my students every week.  I hope you’re ready to learn some new songs and hymnplaying techniques.
Piano lessons will begin the first full week of September.  The tuition will be $360.00 for the entire year (September through April 2011), or $45.00 per month.   If paid in full at the beginning of the year the cost is $320.00.  Lessons will be scheduled according to the Temple Baptist Schools’ calendar.  Lessons may be scheduled during study hall times, recess times, or you may schedule an after-school lesson at my home, if needed.
Thank you for putting a value on music education.  We are seeing the results of this effort in every ministry of our church.  The Lord has blessed and I’m praying for another wonderful year with great achievements. 
Students will have a Classical Christmas recital at my home during December, along with refreshments and caroling.  Our Church-wide Spring recital will focus on hymnplaying of every type - preludes, offertories, invitations, special services, and accompaniment. 
We have some exciting ideas and plans for the students this year.  I hope to hear from you soon!
In His Service,

Mrs. Jennifer Petticoffer
Ps. 40:1-3



Piano Student Registration Form – Fall 2010/Spring 2011
Name            _______________________________           
Date            ______________
Address            _____________________________
Phone            ______________________         
Cell            ________________________
Date of Birth            _______________           
Grade in school            _______________
Preferred lesson day(s)            Tuesday            Thursday           
Preferred lesson time(s)            Study Hall            Recess       After School
Preferred payment plan            Monthly            Entire Year
Current Lesson Book (main curriculum)            ____________________ 
What type of piano/keyboard student owns or uses to practice:
Is this tuned/in good condition?
Student/parent practice goal for this year:            Circle all that apply
Number of Days:            
Six days a week            Five days a week            
Four days a week           Three days a week
Time per day:      1 hour per day                        45-minutes per day            
30-minutes per day   15 – minutes per day        Other - ______________

Personal goals for the student: Check all that apply
q Improved note reading                         
q Improved sight-reading
q Hymn playing                                      
q Classical music and technique
q Accompanying soloists/groups            
q Performance/memorization
q Scales, technique                                 
q Theory and composition
q Practice, application, character             
q Improved rhythm and even tempo

Monday, July 5, 2010

Summer Contacts

During the summer months it is important to make contact with your students.  Just a quick "Hello" and "How are you doing?" can be good, but they may need a bit more.  I usually like to have some sheet music or books for each student to help "perk" their interest in piano study.
It doesn't have to be related to their current piano curriculum, it can be very different.  I have found that some of my most masculine piano students like the most sentimental tunes.  Some of my most feminine students love songs that are loud, fast, and booming.  Think about what motivated you at their age and level and try the same music.
Here are some pieces that motivated me to learn...
1. age 9 - "Toccata" by Jack Butler
2. age 11 - "Tell Me the Old, Old Story" arr. by Rudy Atwood
3. age 12 - "My Tribute" arr. by Dino Kartsonokis
4. age 13 - "How Rich I Am!" arr. by Harold DeCou
5. age 15 - "Rhapsody in Blue" by George Gershwin
6. age 15 - "Clair de Lune", "First Arabesque" - Claude Debussey
7. age 16 - Congregational hymns, choir specials - for church
8. age 17 - "Revolutionary Etude" - by F. Chopin
9. age 18 - "My Heavenly Father Watches Over Me" - just to play for a soloist
I learned many other pieces but these were above and beyond what my teacher required of me.  I wanted to learn these pieces desperately just to play them for myself.  
Think about each of your students, pray for them, go through some of your old music and see what name comes to mind with each piece.  Watch their eyes light up when you hand them a new piece to practice!




Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Stay Sharp!


This is the beginning of summer.  Maybe you are teaching enough to stay "on top" of your skills or maybe you're like me, reducing your schedule drastically to take care of home or church duties.  My teacher used to say, "Go one week without practice and you'll know it.  Go two weeks without practice and others will know it."  
As a teacher you are the one that inspires and motivates your students.  You have to inspire and motivate yourself by remembering that your playing influences others.  Some of my best memories of piano lessons were listening to my different teachers play.  If I was early I would sometimes catch them practicing.  I would just wait quietly outside of the door and listen and wish I could play the same way.  I'll share some of my teacher memories with you.
  • Pat Wold (Chinese) - my first teacher - would play all kinds of classical music and let me watch and listen before I started my lesson.  She would come to my house to teach me, after she got her piano Mom would drive me to her home at Devernia Apartments - one block from Nelson Street in South Longview.
  • Carrie Erickstad - our church pianist - For church she would play Harold DeCou offertories, which I still love today.  She played at our recitals too!  What made the biggest impact was when we had our recital at the church and she played Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue".
  • Charolotte Huffhines - lived on the next block.  I was allowed to leave high school study hall to go to lessons.  She didn't play for me, just demonstrated parts of songs.  I don't believe she knew how to motivate me, or I was just not used to her teaching style.  She is a great teacher and is one of the best in Longview.
  • Pamela Veach Valentine -  She and her husband were training at LeTourneau College to be missionaries.  She would play for me and let me listen to her college recital reel-to-reel tapes!  Wow!  She demonstrated Debussey, choral music, twos-against-threes, and memory work.  I memorized more for her than for any teacher.
  • Jo Hovind - LBT music coordinator and church organist.  I didn't take formal lessons from her but she taught me so much.  Playing duets was the best tool to help me with my rhythm and accuracy. I couldn't just skip parts of songs, improvise, slow down, speed up, etc...  It took months and months for me to learn duets because I had some bad habits that I needed to break.  We also practiced for hours and hours for each piano/organ duet.  Nothing came easy when we first started. I'll do an entire article on Jo Hovind and I'll still not be able to translate how much she taught me.
  • Joyce Kiefer - LBT pianist and group leader.  I didn't take formal lessons from Mrs. Kiefer but I learned so much about congregational piano playing just by listening during the services.  She would play wonderful Rudy Atwood offertories on a regular basis.  She always looked so confident when she played and she was always ready to play.
  • Esther House (French) - After Jessica and Alyssa were born I was busier than ever and couldn't find the time or drive to practice the piano.  I got the courage to call the Longview Piano Teachers' Association and ask for a teacher who specialized in teaching teachers.  They recommended Mrs. Esther House.  She had a heavy French accent and had many stories to tell.  She inspired me so much.  I'll have a blog article just about her one day, too.  I would sometimes be late just to hear her play Chopin.  I would be so excited about my lessons that I forgot my music more than once!
Think about the times you were inspired, encouraged, or just dared to be better.  To stay sharp here are some "pointers" that help me.
  1. Leave music open on your piano that you need to practice.  
  2. Leave a stack of music close to your piano that you would like to learn.
  3. Memorize your warm-up routine and when you have a minute or while you're waiting on a singing group or student, play it.
  4. Be aware of your playing at all times.  Notice weaknesses, repeated mistakes, problems with eye-hand coordination.  My left hand tells all, when it goes "weak" I have to step up the Chopin practice and the minor third arpeggio practices.  Record yourself and listen at a later time, this may be an encouragement to practice or just a plain encouragement!
  5. Play through a piano lesson book, go to the next level and play through it, etc...
  6. Buy a piano solo book with an accompaniment CD and have fun learning songs and playing them with the accompaniment.
  7. Hanon and Czerny are good friends.  You don't have to play the entire book, but the first twelve to fourteen exercises in each will help tremendously.
  8. Playing and practicing are different.  Practicing is...
  • studying and marking the music, either on the page or in your mind
  • LH alone, section A, master it, then...
  • RH alone, section A, master it, then...
  • HT slowly, section A
  • HT up tempo, section A
  • Then to section B...
It tries your patience, but just put yourself into your students' shoes!  You'll stay sharp!!!

    Tuesday, May 18, 2010

    So, you're a piano teacher?

    (pictured: Miss DeAnna Gray, student and also a teacher of several students)
    Part I
     "Do you teach piano lessons?"
    "I can't wait until Genevieve is old enough to take lessons!"
    "Look at my baby's long fingers, a natural pianist!"
    "Honey, we need extra money, why don't you teach piano lessons?"

    If you are a pianist in a Baptist church you have probably heard these statements.  Maybe you feel the pressure of teaching piano lessons or it is a requirement on your list of church duties.  In whatever position you may find yourself, teaching piano lessons is something that will take some prayer, forethought, counsel, and planning.  There is nothing wrong with teaching piano to help "make ends meet", but to be fair to your students  you still must allow your greater purpose to overshadow the money making.
    1. Define your objective - training musicians for God's glory?  money only?  civic competitions or training for secular performance only?
    2. Define your schedule - I am not all-knowledgeable in the area of music teaching.  I do have thirty years of experience and am still learning.  Scheduling is a KEY element in being prepared, focused, and happy in your teaching.  Thinking that you can put all of your beginner lessons on one day, starting at 8:00 a.m. and working until 4:00 p.m. is insane!  If you do this, more power to you, but please think about your mental health.  I've learned to think of my time in blocks, a block of two or three of the same type of lessons in a row, then switch to a different block with different types of students.  Example: Block A =  first year students, Block B = advanced students.  Some years I start and finish the day with top-notch students - so I look forward to starting the day and keep going toward the last lesson without quitting early!  Yes, I have gone home early one or two times...was it for your lesson former students? I will never tell...
    3. Define your standard - What type of behavior will you tolerate?  How much laziness is too much? How long will you go without being paid?  When is a book too old or worn out to use?  You must be professional from the start.  Let your parents and students know your practice requirements, tuition due dates, music book requirements, and teaching objectives.
    4. Define your teaching style(s) - I have a teaching style, but I try to adapt to each student's need and musical level.  Be a friend, but be firm in your guidance and correction.  Ask a lot of questions to make sure they comprehend what is on the page in front of them.  Perform for them on occasion - they need to be inspired.  Praise at any sign of improvement, quietly encourage when times are rough.  Speak with the parents when there is a concern or a praise.
    5. Define what inspires and enthuses you. - You need this!   Attitudes are "caught" not taught.  When you are "moved" they will be moved, when you are enthusiastic it catches like wild fire.  Give them CD's to listen to or suggest new music books for inspiration. Play duets with the students or have the students play duets together.  Go to the music store with another music "junkie" so you can stay more than ten minutes. (my kids would groan and moan and sit under the music racks until I left!)
    Ideas are flowing through my mind quicker than I can type.  I am barely scratching the surface, but I know that if you do not regularly do some of the the above, your studio and piano teaching ministry will digress.
    I don't plan for this blog to last forever, I may repeat some entries and points, but I find that as a piano teacher I need encouragement at the beginning, middle, and end of every piano teaching term - and sometimes every day.
    God bless you dear piano teacher friend. Keep on going and enjoy every minute!

    Psalm 115:1
    Not unto us, O LORD, not unto us,
    but unto thy name give glory,
    for thy mercy, and for thy truth’s sake.