Let’s Make Music! Classroom Recorder Method Try it for free! At the successful conclusion of this course, your students can show proficiency in/at: Demonstrating ‘resting’ and ‘playing’ positions. Following the conductor while playing the recorder. Being a good audience member. The proper care and maintenance of a musical instrument. Playing the following notes on the […]
Search Results for: Notes for Success
Handwritten Input in iOS/Android Notation: NotateMe
Last time I wrote about StaffPad, a new Windows 8 notation program that works on pen input to allow users to handwrite a score into the computer. While StaffPad is a very exciting product, it’s not the first viable handwriting notation program, and more people are interested in mobile device solutions than ones which require […]
Conference Morsel: Are Models Mentors?
(An excerpt from the interest session “Models and Mentors: Leadership Development for Choral Conductors,” presented by Hilary Apfelstadt during the 2015 ACDA National Conference.) As conductors, we fulfill multiple roles – musicians, scholars, educators, leaders, models and mentors. All mentors are models, but all models are not mentors. Historically, concepts of leadership […]
Building Skills 12
More from Daniel Coyle: Tip #16 – Each Day, Try to Build One Perfect Chunk Coyle notes, “In our busy lives, it’s sometimes tempting to regard merely practicing as success. . . But the real goal isn’t practice, it’s progress. As John Wooden put it, ‘Never mistake mere activity for accomplishment.’” He then […]
Improving Skills 3
From Daniel Coyle’s The Little Book of Talent: Tip #5 – Be willing to be stupid. The point, of course, isn’t to be stupid, but to be willing to fail, to take risks. Coyle uses the example of Wayne Gretzky falling in practice and says, “As skilled as he was, Gretzky was determined to […]
Books Worth Your Time VII
For this blog series I started out with the idea of alternating books on music with books on other subjects. But I've realized that most of the great music books are fairly well known or are are so specific that they might have limited interest (maybe I'll combine some in a post later). So […]

