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Featured Flute Teachers Near Philadelphia, PA

4320   5 STAR Musika Reviews

Here are just a few of the many teachers offering Flute lessons in Philadelphia . Whether you are looking for beginner guitar lessons for your kids, or are an adult wanting to improve your skills, the instructors in our network are ready to help you now!

Danielle G

Instruments: Piano Guitar Voice Flute Harmonica Music Keyboard Electric Guitar Acoustic Guitar

I enjoy tailoring my lesson plans and materials for each individual student. For beginning students, a like to start with a beginning method book tailored to the student's interests. I find that learning and memorizing songs and simple repertoire is an effective way for beginning and intermediate students to advance, and that following students interest goes a long way for the learning process! I like to also offer repertoire options that are among the most famous and well known for the instrument. Read More

Cindy M

Instruments: Piano Flute

I teach half hour lessons and instruct the student on good reading habits, how to practice and perform, encouraging them to bring in any supplemental music they are working on at school or on the internet. The importance of practice cannot be over emphasized, nor can the encouragement (nagging!!) Of an interested parent. A student cannot learn an instrument just by coming to lessons. The teacher's role is to guide, correct and instruct the student on what to do at home to truly become a musician. Read More

Jocelyn C

Instruments: Flute

I graduated from Temple University initially in 2011, but was drawn back several years later to complete my Master's Degree, which ended in 2015. I have performed all across the state of Pennsylvania, in Connecticut, New York, Delaware, and as far away as Italy. I have played with youth, collegiate, and community orchestras and bands and as a soloist. I love playing with community and church members as often as I can. Read More

David P

Instruments: Piano Guitar Saxophone Flute Clarinet Synthesizer Piccolo Mallet Percussion Orchestral Percussion Oboe Bassoon English Horn Acoustic Guitar

I love the learning process and to see students progress through the stages of learning an instrument. I taught myself to play the piano before I started formal lessons. I began playing the saxophone at the same time I took up the piano. I entered my undergraduate program in 1992, majoring in music education with the saxophone and piano as my principle instruments. During my studies at the University of South Alabama, a new program was started in MIDI and I attended an extra year to master digital audio. Read More

Kathryn R

Instruments: Piano Voice Flute

I began teaching during my undergraduate studies, initially starting out as a double major in performance and education. In a short time, I realized how deeply I loved working one on one with students, which led me to pursue performance full time and teach in my private studio. Once I moved to California, I began expanding my teaching to music schools (Yamaha) and have continued to work with students in a diverse array of settings (private studio, music schools, high schools, university). Read More

Brigid S

Instruments: Piano Trumpet Trombone Saxophone Flute Clarinet Acoustic Guitar

I have been teaching Prek- 8th Grade general music, choir, drama and instrumental lessons for the past 5 years. I am a 2009 graduate of Rutgers University with a BA in Music and a 2011 graduate of Teachers College, Columbia University with an MA in Music Education. My primary instrument is trumpet and I have played in a variety of bands and sung in a variety of choruses of the years. I began giving private trumpet lessons in 2004 and began giving piano and voice lessons in college. Read More

Audrey E

Instruments: Flute Recorder Piccolo Music

For beginners, I start with the basics of sound production, and move onto reading music and basic songs shortly after. I try to teach things both visually and by ear, so that the student does not feel that they have to wait to play fun music until they are advanced enough. I believe in a strong base of music theory (scales, arpeggios, understanding intervals), so that the student can use their musical knowledge in many subject areas. Read More

Teacher In Spotlight

Jonathan S

Instruments: Flute

What advice do you have about practicing effectively?
Practice with purpose and intent. Play difficult passages slowly and build speed gradually. Time is not the sole determiner, as people can put in the time but practice mistakes, errors, or unhelpful posture and finger positioning given physical demands of playing. Best to rest after one half hour for about 10 minutes. Take a break or walk away if frustration sets in. Clear the mind and then continue playing.

How do I know if my child is ready to start lessons?
Interest is first. Does your child sing songs, preferably with relative pitch? Do they show a sense of rhythm, repeating tapped patterns they hear. Do they talk about music, move to music, indicate a particular instrument or song preference?

When will I start to see results?
Depends, but should be heard right away with application at home noticeable. Results begin with interest. After the lesson and preparing before the next lesson, does your child put in time playing?

Did you have a teacher that inspired you to go into music? How did they inspire you?
Frances Blaisdell: Ms. Frances Blaisdell was a world class flutist and teacher. I started lessons with her when I was 12, at which time my family then moved to France for a couple of years. Lessons resumed when I was 14, up to my senior year of high school, when we moved to Hawaii, and again on and off while in college at Syracuse and after until Miss Blaisdell moved to California. There she taught flute at Stanford University for the next 35 years. She would send her many students a yearly holiday family newsletter that always had a personal note in it. This was throughout my adult life. Miss Blaisdell best personified what is best in the student teacher relationship. She was a model of what it means to be a truly remarkable teacher and musician where excellence was the expectation, her belief that it was attainable in her students, and her very specific content knowledge and instructional strategies to bring out our excellence. She was modest, kind, specific, encouraging, realistic, and inspiring. Her great dignity was/is rooted in her simple (and yet profound) respect for everyone she knew or met. Miss Blaisdell was also a trailblazer who touched countless thousands and yet she always gave you her full attention when she was with you. She is relatively well known as a teacher and musician, with information about her on Google. Ted Dunbar: Ted Dunbar, a jazz guitarist and educator, was one of the founders of the jazz studies department at Rutgers University, now part of the Mason Gross School of the Arts. I took classes in jazz improvisation at Rutgers when I was in my mid 20s. Ted was also a registered pharmacist. Pharmacy became part time when he devoted his life to performance and teaching. While at Rutgers, Ted played with some frequency at major NYC venues and in Broadway pit bands. Ted was that kind of teacher that was above all inspiring. He also was an interesting role model in that underneath his great creativity was his studious nature and a systematic and sustained knowledge of jazz pedagogy. He was not only a master teacher and improviser but was able to articulate ways that we, his students, could specifically improve. Ted helped not only increase our understanding of jazz improvisation and history, but also sought to help us grow in our understanding of the creative process. He was also a teacher about life choices and suggested philosophers and thinkers that we should read. Ted was imposing and humorous, at times demanding, and other times kind and supportive. My father had passed a couple of years before I started classes with Ted – in some way, although I never told Ted, he helped to fill some of that void I felt in my life. John Frascatore: Mr. Frascatore was my fifth grade teacher. There are several moments that I continue to remember, such as writing to classical music (“La Mer” by Debussy), or putting on plays (“The King and His Creampuffs”), and his reading aloud to us. What I remember most is the sense of community that existed in his classroom and the individual care and attention I sensed even then that Mr. Frascatore showed for every student. For me, a particular memory was a block I had learning long division. I could not have been more frustrated and thought I would never learn how to do this. This, though, was not an option for Mr. Frascatore. I can remember Mr. Frascatore patiently and supportively working with me one on one until I started to understand. With me, and other students, failure was not an option. This was his gentle gift and example in many different ways. I learned later that he had become a principal and director of curriculum and instruction. I did not know until I checked years later that Mr. Frascatore was an Army Air Force World War II veteran, flying 34 missions as a bombardier fighter pilot.

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