That is a good point, M4U. I am in the process of collecting that information for my own purposes and I don't know that I would decide to use my students for that, but I get your point. There is always continuous learning, and there is a lot that needs to be learned and have come together. It is difficult to capture all of that in a set of videos at specific points in time. There are pros that I see to what you do, but I don't necessarily see that what is happening for your students is any better than what is happening for mine.
If somebody from today, July 19 of 2008 is going to criticize these videos, first he/she suppose to prove me wrong by placing their own students and lessons on display.
I guess the thing is, M4U, I have to say that I absolutely work my A$$ off with what I do (nobody will ever know exactly how much, aside from me (though my husband has a pretty good sense of it)). I have to work my A$$ off for us to make a living and pay the mortgage, and don't you think that if I saw something that seemed to promise me more money and better results, that I would jump at the chance ? I am questioning these strategies in earnest because I care most about what kind of musician I am raising. That is one of the whole reasons I am in this business. Don't you see that for me to take you seriously, I need you to take me seriously ?Right now, softmozart is just not the first thing on my list as far as better music education. I have some other ideas that I am wanting to try first. Maybe someday it will be, but I can assure it is not going to be because of you telling me that I don't care about music education and that I am not a good teacher. You just really have no idea about that at all. And, what people are endorsing on your behalf and on behalf of the program, well, that doesn't live my life for me, now does it ! I know you have worked hard, too, and I sincerely respect that as far as I can from what I know of you and your work. Unfortunately, most of what I know of you are your comments here about "people like me," when you really have no idea who I am. You are not the only person taking these things seriously, M4U, and living in some cloud, thinking that you are is just plain ignorance and delusion. If you can't "get" that, then that is your own, personal problem, hell, and burden to live with, not mine.
You may create a whill as much as you want, but like one well known educator stated on Ukranian TV - music education HAS NO ALTERNATIVE, THE ONLY WAY IS - SOFT MOZART.
That's the part which scares me the most...
Well this is a video of one of my students who has really learned to take care of the sound and not only of the notes.
Well this is a video of one of my students who has really learned to take care of the sound and not only of the notes. I am very careful with publishing videos of my students, this one I have put on youtube only after making sure that she and her mom agrees, it's not my usual habit.
Well, what should I say? I don't hear music - I hear a lot of pedal and enforced 'character' that girl don't feel because has no developed music mindThe piece was learned for several months or yearI see bordom in playing, no sparcletechnique is very poor and hands are not free
Perception is an odd thing, isn't it? I saw rapt attention instead of "boredom." I heard the young lady sustaining a relective mood over the entire range of the piece. The pedalling, as applied by the student, obviously supported the mood and was anything but excessive.I saw a beautiful hand position. Quiet, close to the keys, tension-free. Exactly what is required to be "free" at the keyboard. Her performance, which was solid, is the result of real musicality and a well-trained technique that enables her to achieve both the composer's and her goals.Flailing hands and fingers -- as I see in your students -- breeds inaccuracy and unpleasant tone on acoustic instruments.I can't imagine that you can't see this as an accomplished performance by a young artist.
but I'm starting to personally hate her. She deserves a ban for spam and trying to sell a PRODUCT that is at best a GAME and a LOSS OF TIME over a forum dedicated to MUSIC.
Well I respect your opinion, of course. Just to say, the pedalling is mostly used as the composer has written in the score. And I know for sure that there's a difference between boredom and atmosphere
"It's not a product, I'm not selling pizza here. It's a very important breaktrough in music education."LMFAO
M4U, you have the little boy learning minor chords, and you give him the imagery of the mother, child and father. Next you have 5 year old girl. Is she doing the next step after what the boy has done? Did she come to the idea of humming the ABC's melody by herself, or was that part of the teaching at some point?KP
Yes, I was thinking about this today. In some way I actually think M4U is correct and in some ways if she really believes that to the bone, I think she is absolutely fooling herself (and apparently others). What is not a product, and what I believe her actual purpose is in developing the system, are the principles of learning that she claims to be the backbone of her mission. There are some good points in her approach to learning in general, and I think they are points that every teacher can be honestly considering and asking themselves if they agree and if they are achieving them should they agree. However, the software and the program is indeed a product, even if it is built to support the principles of learning which are not. Where she is very wrong about it is that it is not the only way to support nor build from the principles of learning that she is supposedly advocating, and what ends up happening is that she winds up pedalling a product, based on principles that every teacher "should" and probably already is considering. What is dangerous, I think, in life, is to become fastened so tightly to one paritcular thing that it becomes a limitation rather than an aid to progress. No matter what, even if everybody in the world were hooked on this product, it would eventually be outgrown as society progressses. In that respect, I actually feel kind of badly for M4U since it seems all of her apples are in a basket that is sure to have a limited success.I agree with her that working on one piece for months is not ultimately productive, and I agree that the "standard" lesson formats are in many, many cases, not effecient. I agree that learning should/can be cognitive (though I do not experience it as a straight line by any means), and I agree that maintaining a point of focus is important. I also agree that any performance can be picked apart, as a matter of fact, almost anything that any of us do and say can be picked apart, but what's the point if we don't find an alternative ? What I do not agree on is that her points should be ignored just because of her approach to "discussing" them, and I do not agree that softmozart is thee way to achieve all of the points she mentions as being the purpose of the product.For me personally, I would like to be considering what are the points and how do we go about having alternatives to something we do not agree with. That is what is missing from these conversations, and in that respect, I would not blame M4U to keep pushing. In my opinion, how society is functioning and how music is being respected are indeed not good enough. At some point(s), somebody, some people do have to decide "okay, what are the alternatives" -- I just happen to think it should be an elastically fantastic solution, and not something that ends up binding a person to it for a certain amount of time.
Tonica, Subdominant and Dominant could be in Major and MinorThe lesson with boy was recorded for explenation point and the girl was recorded during her practice aloneAll my students play different pieces in different keys and the ABC piece was in the list, that the girl was following.
I don't think you understood my question. I was trying to follow the pedagogy. You have given the boy certain principles and ideas, and you are also teaching some things about patterns in music in a picturesque manner. The girl is playing the same kinds of musical patterns. I was wondering whether there was a sequence to this and we were seeing it in sequence, or it was just a coincidence. I am not interested in the pieces per se - they are vehicle for learning. I am interested in the fact that there are different concepts and aspects of music being conveyed. The girl looks like she is at a further stage, since she is now practicing independently, while the boy was having things introduced.Not that it matters, but I thought that the dominant is always in Major, since in a minor key the 7th (middle note) gets sharped.KPDear Keypeg, ALL music based on 3 functions: T S D. Other chords are just modification of these 3 functions and in our system we have elementary level (when student plays these 3 functions in sertain position) in order to be able to pich left hand for any melody in future. The boy is doing the same thing at home or in classroom like the girl. First kids learn to play 'shell chords' in major : C, F, G, D, B-flat, A, E-flat (this is what boy already passed) and then they play shell chords in Minor : A, E, D, G, B, Fa-sharp, CAfter that students learn how to pick by ear full chords in all these keys. The story about T, S and D are just a little 'cherry on the cake', because the students mostly have to do it and catch the harmonic function intuitevely.
You don't give up, don't you, still posting some "reviews", which do yourself more harm than good and creating even more resistance...Sorry, but one or the other (or both together)--whether you are not straight again, or you indeed don't understand something. I judged enough competitions for kids (for many years about 3 or 4 a year) and seen hundreds and hundreds to have enough experience to know how kids play piano and to see behind their playing pedagogical work and teacher's priorities.
When we talk about kids performances from the point of vew of pedagogical work, we do not evaluate interpretation as with Richter or Glenn Gould, but talk about what it is in a teacher's conciousness, what teacher's general priorities. What teacher pays attention working with kids. Unmistakenably you can see a good pedagogical work and if you are such a professional as you say, you would agree there is ALWAYS a tendency in every teacher's work, regardless if the kid is a good student or not. From this point of view your "before criticising show me your work" sounds somewhat childish and not as professional, as you might think. Besides, this is not WE who need to prove ourselves, but somehow it seems this is YOU who trys so hard to do it.
Now regarding the latest videos you have posted:Khachaturian--there is something wrong with this video, it seems the young lady plays completely different piece. In any case, to me the "performance" sounds like a MIDI, so I won't even bother talking about it.
Prokofiev March--it seems the only thing that girl is concerned is to play right notes. There is no any counciousness about dynamics whatsoever (no piano whatsoever, no those surprising accents, most kids get so excited about, no sense of creschendo--that spreading, associated with winning new foreign lands, etc.etc.), the articulation is wrong (for some unexplainable reason all the slurs are omitted--kinda very funny limpings), there is no any conciousness about playing MUSIC, and no any conciousness that as a matter of fact, this piece is a some kind of very interesting "story", with different characters and moods--something what good teachers foster from the very first steps of taking lessons.
Whatever years old learning chords--that's the main objection of mine--any normal kid is capable of instant "grabbing" of those chords concepts, without computer aid. For me the most essential in the music is sound image, which comes first. Listening for a minute or so of that ugly computer sound made me literally sick and trust me--this is not the kind of "sound image" I want my kids to have in their ears from the very beginning, which is the MOST important and crucial moment in starting learning such a beautiful thing as piano and music. And here is the main tendency I see in your system--most of the kids you posted sound like MIDI. Sorry, personally I am not interested in this kind of teaching, however "revolutionary" it is. This is not what I was taught about music, and this is not what I teach myself, value, or appreciate.
When there is interesting story and meaning behind music, when every note, every phrase is a BIG EVENT, there is no chance the kid is going to quit, so excuse me, but your stories about "naive parents" is a goofy BS.
I understand the reason for you being so unflexable in your discussion--apparently it is so obvious everything should be directed to serve one purpose--spread whatever you believe "works". For this sake, for every argument you whether:
1) answer with something completely unrelated2) post some kind of goofy review or even worst--TV show, for which there is very little difference between talking about "revolutionary" Soft Mozart, or "revolutionary" Viagra. 3) prefer not to hear at all what's been said I see very little point in continuation of such discussions. Until you won't change your attitude I highly doubt you will find ANY cooperation here.
It is nice that people are willing to share their lessons online for others to see. I don't like the idea that it has been treated as a "throwing down of the gauntlet" to other teachers or fears that people will tear down the method of teaching. Why do we have to be so competitive? Certainly there are many correct ways of teaching music, however one method cannot be applied to all students, it just doesn't work.Certainly videos and audio of lessons can be interesting to view but usually the lesson is for the student not for the general public. It is not a master class, it is a personal lesson which is constructed personally for the student who sits with you. How you describe things to this student might be different to another. So to post a video and say, here this is how I teach all students, it is a little bit of a joke. Each student is treated differently like a doctor treats a patient.Also some people have posted online here for over 5 years, if they are all fake teachers and just taking us for a ride, it certainly is a long time to put up on act. Seriously.
Why then we teach ALL STUDENTS ABC in public schools and don't treat them differently (unless they are having some learning disability)?
Well, I judged many competitions myself and also have my ex-students teaching in different conservatories and winning different competitions. But I put on display my system and students and you didn't. So, whatever you say - it is fake 'till I will SEE your work and system.Of cause, I have to prove something, because I created something and share it with you and you didn't create anything and don't have to prove anything. This is problem of youtube. If you would bother to go to my site, you would see better video: Haily plays Khachaturian's "Masquerade Waltz" --https://--https://--https://-https://www.doremifasoft.com/events.htmlIt is very interesting how you suspect me being tricky and dishonest rather then trust... How sad. Hope, you would apologize.BS. Sorry! We are talking about a girl WHO PLAYS PIANO ONLY FOR 9 MONTH. If you remember, Artobolevskaya's philosophy: better play more pieces even though unperfect in order to build music mind. This is exactly what we are doing.BS#2 I checked the same exercise in Kharkov conservatory with students from theory department. They fail and said that they need the program to improve their feeling of chords. The same result with piano teachers in Canev (Ukraine). At first they had attitude like yours, but when they set at the keyboard with computer they changed their mind pretty quickly. BS#3 for parents. Hours and hours spent to perfect one piece? Making money from naive people? This is why we have less and less students and you - consert pianist - poor enough to TEACH, because you can't make living performing......I love to spend time here to sharpen my weapons against people likje you.
This is problem of youtube. If you would bother to go to my site, you would see better video: Haily plays Khachaturian's "Masquerade Waltz" --https://--https://--https://-https://www.doremifasoft.com/events.htmlIt is very interesting how you suspect me being tricky and dishonest rather then trust... How sad. Hope, you would apologize.
If you remember, Artobolevskaya's philosophy: better play more pieces even though unperfect in order to build music mind.
You understand nothing. Yuri Rozum - he understand. Karaseva from Moscow conservatory - yes. All professors of Kiev and Kharkov conservatory - yes. Couple of PHD, who already wrote a dissertation about Soft Mozart - yes. I have enough credentials to bother about YOUR understanding
Love and faith, musicrebel4u
Wow! I mean WOW!!! All those lyes, assumptions, twisting facts and what I have said... just for the sole reason to "sharpen your weapons"!!! How professional, what a nice way to create a basis for your science!!!--indeed, you are quite good and sharp in that, indeed, you are quite something! A few things to say:The only thing I commented on that part was there is something wrong with this video, it seems the young lady plays completely different piece. I had no idea what is going on, whether it is youtube malfunction or problem, or anything else. I gladly apologize if my message came accross as such, but by no means I meant you were tricky and dishonest, and as a matter of fact, I did not suspect anything and did not have any thinking of accusing you in any of those things. All I meant was her playing (AS SEEN ON YOUTUBE IN THE LINK YOU PROVIDED) seemed terribly out of synchronization to the point it seemed like completely different piece.Indeed, I said her playing sounded like a MIDI and as such, I refused to comment on her performance... just for sheer reason of not having enough words to express myself, but once again, it had nothing to do with the tricks or your honesty, it is just how that young lady was taught and think about music, regardless of how long she has been studying piano. a) I already wrote about the part about "more pieces even imperfect", which of course (big surprise), you conviniently ommit here.b) Please, don't tell me what Artobolevskaya said and stood for, and I won't tell you where you supposed to go. As I said earlier, I attended her lessons for years sometimes up to 3 times a week and modestly believe have little bit more knowledge about her philosophy than you ever dream to know.I cannot help, but notice, this is a direct path to:Who is not with us is against us!How beautiful!!!From history lessons we know quite well what were the consequences of this kind of attitude.After all the above, please don't preach about love and faith, unless you want me to tell you in quite an explicit and exquisite manner where and how you were supposed to go long ago, and what kind of embelishments to meet on the way.Good day, MP.S. And while we are on that, I have enough credentials not to bother about YOU bothering about MY understanding. For that matter, I have very little interest in knowing what they understand in Kiev, Kharkov, or even Moscow Conservatory. And for that matter (as I have already mentioned on numerous occasions) I don't give a rat tail for what teachers understand in Kanev, Zhmerinka, Kremenchuk, Belaya Tserkov', Zhitomir, or other городах и весях. All I know and understand is what my ears tell me and obviously, you are not the one to judge.
The way in which schools are teaching are archaic 100 year old methods. I teach a student of mine who is head professor of education at Murdoch University West Australia. She highlights the fact that schools usually highlight only one main way to learning something, this is not good enough but has been the way of teaching for hundreds of years. In fact students should learn not only from a book but more experience in the real world, finding them this experience is a personal journey for each person. When things are taught in a single method it restricts the method of learning. Certainly a greater % will understand a good single method almost immediately after it is taught, however a greater % of students will learn after the facts have been given to them. They test it out, work on it, fail and succeed themselves with it. The teacher should be interested in this process more than transferring knowledge.Certainly the system of teaching will not change any time soon, but application of knowledge rather than reading it in a book and learning a single way, that is the way to go. I find I can do this very easily with one on one lessons with students, group lessons are a different deal, it is hard to divide yourself to everyone. But given most of my piano lessons are one on one I can throw out all the old methods of teaching the mass and be more interested in the process of the application of knowledge through the individual student.
Marik, I am too busy to read all what you wrote.Can you, please, write all that in two words?Thank you!
I have been an innovator in education in the way I teach for the last few decades. I also don't teach in the system. Therefore these discusssions interest me. In exploring the right educational choices for my own children when they were small, I saw many different approaches even within the public school system in Canada. There is not one and only one way in which reading or anything else is taught.Is it not possible to explain the merits of your system, without shown outdated ways of teaching reading that I think stopped around 1945? The area of language learning, reading, is my field, and I have spent a lot of thought and studies here. What you explain is not all that there is to it. Having said that, I opted to homeschool my children for the first 8 years as an alternative to the existing system.M4U, last night I was reading about the Greek Memory Theatre system and your graphic images of apples, colours, doors and mirrors immediately came to mind.KP
Sorry, it is impossible to answer all your lies in two words, but if I had to, then direction you suppose to go would be it--exactly two words... or three, depending what language you prefer.Good day, M
I am more interested in seeing what you are doing with it at your end.I
Didn't understand
Yes it sounds quite a bit sectarian, doesn't it.
Translation: What you are doing in music interests me more than theories on the linguistics side. I will leave my expertise aside, and see what you are doing.Ponemaesh?KP
Ya tozhe ponemayu. Hm, my mind is even more on the Greek theatre memory system as I see your table.I can only go by my own experience of music, which is unconventional, so I cannot judge. I was untaught. I knew music as movable do solfege. I saw the patterns in my mind when I heard music. Then there was this piano in front of me, and old music of my grandmother's: Clementi, Mozart etc.The written notes for me came in groups - like neumes. A line sounded like a scale, little stairs sounded like arpeggios, a shape of clusters were chords that sounded a certain way and shaped themselves in my hand. When I look at music I hear an orchestra, and then I play the orchestra that I hear.Hearing this orchestra is not enough - I could be playing in the wrong key or octave, "accidental transposing". So I taught myself to be able to read from sheet to keys, the real notes, only recently. Essentially I am pulling together two different aspects of reading and playing music. You are also teaching different aspects - your table.However, I am not in the same place as these students, because I learned so differently. Therefore I am content to observe.
Video of your students?
music education HAS NO ALTERNATIVE, THE ONLY WAY IS - SOFT MOZART.