But of course. My first teacher was my Mother. She had a couple of years of lessons from J Schaum books and Schmitt exercises when she bought the piano before I was born, then she moved to the mine camp where Dad was employed and all that stopped.
However, in the third grade Mother said people (probably my 3rd grade teacher, Mrs. Richardson) had noticed that I didn't use my injured right finger three. When I did use it i pushed it with the fourth finger. Mother asked me if I wanted to learn to use my right hand. Yes, I said. She got me up on the piano bench, quite a stretch in those days. I was about 36" tall and 42 pounds and had never even fantasized about playing the piano. Mother played the piano at the elementary school for holidays, that was the routine, and I played the Bozo the Clown record player on the floor. But I climbed up on the bench and learned "Putt Putt Putt goes my motorboat" and subsequent Schaum "classics". Plus, I did a Schmitt exercises for the right hand and one for the left every week. The deal, Mother would teach me if I practiced 30 minutes every school day. A big Westclocks Big Ben alarm clock was set on the piano so I would know when I could stop. Just sitting up there was a sign I was getting bigger. Forget the boys at school that made me the umpire when they played ball at recess and teacher said I had to go with the boys.
It took me several weeks to get 1-2-3-4-5 schmitt exercises #1 down for the right hand. But I did get it, and became convinced my right finger 3 wasn't really crippled, just neglected and a bit short. After we got going, I learned a Schmitt exercise every week, and a Schaum piece every week or two. The Schaum pieces weren't all that good, but Mother would play Donald The Dinosaur Boogie Woogie or Early in the Morning Down at the Station sometimes, and I was inspired that I could learn to play these someday. At Christmas Mother played Christmas songs out of the drycleaner's folder, and I loved to sing those. maybe I could do those some day. Maybe even Sleeping Beauty, I loved that record!
At the beginning of fourth grade, with me making decent progress, Mother asked people at the PTA meetings and found me a lady with an art degree, Mrs. Hinkle. Mrs. Hinkle taught me two weeks then decided I needed a college trained teacher, Mrs. Nikki Jelson. Mother had to drive me to Mrs. Jelson's house it was so far away, but she had a car now and a driver's license even, (age 32) so off we went. Mrs. Jelson gave me pieces that weren't by John W. Schaum, and actually sounded good. And there were recitals, and by second year she was taking me to Piano Guild group recitals. Wow, people liked me! All I had to do was practice 30 minutes a day, or after a couple of years, an hour. You kids that practice 8 hours a day, I had no idea anybody was even supposed to do that. I always had a lot of homework, I was in K classes (college track) from 3rd grade. But with my measly hour practice, I made a lot of progress in the six years lessons I had. I quit because the high school band director thought I should concentrate on that expensive bassoon the school had lent me. I agreed with him, with up to four hours of homework a night age 16, practicing both instruments was getting a bit much. I did get to go to TMEA All-State band my senior year, not too bad for a kid who paid for his own bassoon lessons from the local union hall stringer in double reeds.
Dad and Mother let me play the AM radio in my room starting age 7 and I got to learn rock and roll and pop songs by listening. I lost interest in 1959, the year Rock and Roll died (Pat Boone, yuck!). Then they bought an FM radio when i was 12, and we discovered the classical genre together with KLEF-FM. Wow, I loved all that stuff. i didn't play much of it on piano, but we did in high school band, lots of classics. Now I'm retired I'm playing stuff I never dreamed you could play on the piano when I was a kid. I'm finishing Pictures at an Exhibition, churning through Passacaglia & Fugue in Cmin and debating whether to try Liszt transcriptions of Beethoven symphonies next, or may that lovely morning piece from Pier Gynt I heard on piano on the radio this morning. And Tchaikovski! I'm not hearing Sleeping Beauty on piano in my head, but I'm doing Nutcracker excerpts on the Hammond Theatre organ by ear! Music is a fun toy and a piano is the toy that fits in your room and works even when the electricity has been knocked off.