Birds of a Feather Lesson Plan Now Available!

Now available for purchase in the Shop is the last lesson plan in the Mighty Musicians Piano Camp – Birds of a Feather!

For those not familiar with the Mighty Musicians class, it is written specifically for children ages 5 and 6 – they are a little bit older than the preschoolers, so they have a little bit longer attention spans but oodles of energy and creativity! This class is perfect for them because it is a nice introduction to piano lessons in a fun and active group setting. At each class, students learn to play a simple pre-staff notation piece on the piano. We also focus a lot on creative composition in this class, and at each lesson children will compose their own song! It is tons of fun.

I love this lesson! Using seven feathered friends, students are introduced to the musical alphabet and the names of the white keys on the piano.

Children will enjoy a creative listening activity and movement and dancing to Tchaikovsky’s “Swan Lake;” will sing a song, and learn a poem all about birds to help remember the notes on the piano; will be introduced to Johann Strauss’s famous “Blue Danube Waltz” and will learn some fun lyrics about our feathered friends; will decorate their own duck craft and have fun making it “quack” to the music; will play a pre-staff notation piece on the piano using the newly-learned notes on the keyboard; will compose their own creative piano piece; and will have fun learning all about the musical alphabet through song, play, movement, listening and art.

As always, it includes a printable take-home book to send home with each student. I love these take-home books! They include full-color graphics, overviews of concepts covered, lyrics to songs learned at class (so parents can sing along at home!), a pre-staff notation piece for the students to play on the piano, and more!

Here are a few little sneak peeks of what is included:

It is a fun class, that’s for sure! I hope you enjoy it! As always, you can purchase it in The Teaching Studio Store, or at the bottom of this post.

 

Includes a student Take-Home Book! 70 pages. Book is in downloadable e-book format.

This lesson plan is number 4 and the final lesson in our five-week Mighty Musicians piano class (or Day 4 in a week-long camp).

Birds of a Feather Lesson Plan

Old Friends & New Acquaintances

Today as I unpacked my music room I found some old friends and new acquaintances. It was so good to see them and they sure inspired me to practice! Meet some of them….

Shostakovich Preludes & Fugues. LOVE these. I played the E minor ones in college and they are so gorgeous. Lots of good gems in this book!

Jeux d’Eau – ahhhh I love this piece. Sadly it has been a long, long time since I have played it. Time to get it back out, I believe!

Debussy! Reminds me of when I sight read this whole book for my Summer Sightreading Challenge. Some gorgeous pieces here.

CHOPIN – enough said!! Lots of favorites here, many I have studied and learned really well, others I have just begun or played for fun. My music room would not be complete without these guys…

One I haven’t really played but takes me back to college. I’m thinking I need to play some Schumann again! He is one of my faves.

Well this looks fun! A fairly new volume that has not been played much.

Annnnnnnd…some jazz keyboard tunes. I was never super great at these but sure loved playing from this fakebook! It’s fun to get it out again…

And for now many of our favorites (my husband plays, too!) will be living here next to the piano. Welcome, friends!

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Advice for New Teachers

I have often been asked what advice I have for new piano teachers just starting out. Today I’d like to share four basic suggestions that will help get your studio on its way!

1. Be Professional

When you present yourself and your studio more professionally, people take you more seriously. You are running a business! You are providing your expertise and knowledge to your students as a service; you have so much experience and knowledge to offer and you should present yourself as such. Here are some of the most important things your piano studio needs:

Have a studio policy!!

I cannot emphasize this enough. In the very least, your students and their parents need to know what you expect as far as when tuition is due, if you require late fees, what your make-up policy is, and that you don’t want them to show up at their lesson with a contagious illness. Type up all of your rules and policies, print it out on some colorful paper and distribute it to new students.

Studio contract

Along with my studio policy I always have my new students and their parents sign a studio contract. This basically states that they will abide by the rules and policies of the studio, and that when they sign up for lessons they are committing to that lesson time (including the payment of tuition for that lesson time) for the entire semester. This protects you and helps keep your income more reliable. Do it.

Learn to say “no”

Ok, so I started teaching when I was fifteen. It’s easy when you’re young and inexperienced to let people sort of walk all over you, but you’ve got to just remember that this is a business and you need to run it as such. You will have students who don’t show up to lessons, and they will want to not pay you for that no-show lesson. (Don’t let them do that! Have them pay upfront each month.) You will have people who want make-up lesson after make-up lesson, taking up all your non-teaching time. You will have people who don’t pay you on time. You will have people who want to argue your policies. Over the years I have come a long way in my dealings with students and parents. You just have to decide what your policies are going to be and stick to them.

Professional teaching environment

Keep your studio nice and clean and quiet! It’s not fair to the student if your children are in the room demanding your attention, or if it’s noisy and cluttered and hard to concentrate.

Dress the part

Admittedly I have taught many-a-lesson in jeans and bare feet. It’s not a huge deal. But think of the respect you will have from your students as you make the effort to dress a little nicer. A professional appearance and attitude will go a long way in a lesson.

2. Be Creative

Piano teaching today isn’t what you may remember from when you were a child. Piano teaching does not (or should not) consist merely of picking a piano method book and methodically going through each and every page and reading through and teaching each concept as it is presented. Use some creativity! Put some ingenuity and fresh ideas into your lessons to make your students want to come back! Pick and choose exciting and motivating challenge pieces for your students to learn to supplement whatever book they are using. Teach new concepts before they are introduced in the book if it is something that will excite their imagination and get them to love to play. Encourage creativity in your studio by having composition recitals and teaching students to play from a fakebook. Have a memorization or a sight reading competition. Allow more advanced students to mentor younger beginners in a class setting using creative games and songs. Create a star student wall in your studio and honor the best practicer of the week. Use your imagination!

3. Be Yourself

Use your strengths and individual background to enhance your piano teaching. Have a background in math teaching? Great! Use that knowledge to amp up your studio’s music theory and rhythm skills. Love to dance? Perfect! Get those students moving to the music as you teach meter, beat, rhythm, expression. Got skills in gourmet cooking? Amazing. Your students and parents who attend your recitals, group classes or end-of-semester parties will thank you! Maybe you are classically-trained. Maybe your favorite tunes to play on the piano are show tunes or pop songs that you can sing along with. Use these strengths to your advantage as you find your niche in teaching and as you guide your students to be well-rounded musicians.

4. Be Encouraging

Last of all, I think that positivity and encouragement are super important. Don’t forget to tell your students what they are doing amazing at! Of course you’re going to critique and teach and guide them to fix their mistakes and to improve, but don’t forget that a happy attitude and thoughtful compliments can go a long way in affecting the overall experience the student has with piano lessons – and that could have life-long consequences, good or bad!

What tips of advice would you give to new piano teachers?
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My Evolving Studio

My life as a pianist and piano teacher has had many different seasons. One of the wonderful things about my job is that I can shape it to be the job I want; not only can I do it in my home and on my own time schedule, but I can use my creative ideas to change it, enhance it and sort of evolve it as my life changes, as my interests shift and as my own children grow. I am a piano teacher for life, but what that job description looks like at any given point in my life, at least up until now, has changed and gone through several different stages. And I love that! As I have taught piano through the years, I have constantly thought of things I would like to change and do differently. With each student and each passing semester I learn things. I hope that I am a better teacher than I was 1 or 3 or 5 years ago, and I hope that I will be better still in the coming years. I have found a fun little niche in my teaching with my preschool piano classes. But I still love working with adults and teenagers. I love teaching privately, but wonder about the possibilities of group lessons. I love my preschool classes, but lately have been exploring ideas in private preschool lessons. I love that there are so many possibilities!

I recently have been reading an excellent and sort of mind-blowing and thought-provoking book about changing up music lessons, about not sticking with the status quo of traditional lessons but constantly evolving your studio and your teaching by adding fresh ideas into your studio. The Dynamic Studio: How to keep students, dazzle parents, and build the music studio everyone wants to get into
by Philip Johnston is worth a read by any teacher hoping to breathe some new life into their teaching, retain more students and become a better music teacher. More about that in a later post.

Lots of changes have happened for me in the past couple of months – my husband graduated from school in San Antonio, Texas. We packed up our house and our three children and drove 2,000 miles across the country to our new home in Farr West, Utah. We are starting a new season of life – it’s great to be done with school and to settle in a new place. I have yet to decide and discover what my piano teaching will look like in this stage of life. I will probably continue teaching my preschool classes once I get settled (my daughter is about to turn three, after all!). I will probably be teaching my children piano. I may accept a select few motivated private students. We shall see! One thing is certain – I have a lot of new things up my sleeve that I will be sharing on The Teaching Studio! Stay tuned!

For now, we are super excited about our new music room! What do you think?

I love it so much. It is actually kind of neat because it really reminds me of my high school piano teacher’s home. She had the same pink carpet, the same size/shape of room with her pianos at the end, on a sort of stage area. She had a chandelier hanging in the piano room above the teaching area. 

I can just picture a grand piano in this room….someday!

We obviously still need to do some unpacking, organizing of music books, and acquiring some new furniture, but so far we love it!

In the mean time, we are immensely enjoying a brand new addition to the music room….my kids think it is the neatest thing ever. My husband and I have to agree!

So what are some ways that your studio has evolved over time? Any thoughts on moving your studio and your teaching to a new city? Any amazing ideas for my new music room? 🙂

Now Available: Mountains & Hills – Mighty Musicians lesson plan!

Well, happy weekend everyone! I am super duper proud of myself for posting TWICE in one week (yay!), and excited to have yet another new lesson plan available! It is all thanks to the fact that we are MOVING in about three weeks, and I am trying to get things done before we pack up and go. My awesome husband is graduating from optometry school, and he got a job in Ogden, Utah. So, it seems all too appropriate that this next lesson plan to become available is all about mountains.

This lesson is part of our Mighty Musicians class, written especially for 5 and 6-year-olds. I really love these classes. It is a ton of fun, and this age group is amazing – they love to have fun and play and move to the music, they have a little bit better attention spans than those younger preschoolers, and they also are getting to that stage where they are ready for actual piano lessons! In fact, the Mighty Musicians class is a perfect introduction to piano lessons, and is a great way to determine which kids are actually ready for one-on-one lessons.

Each Mighty Musicians lesson includes a variety of activities to help teach the concepts in different fun ways. The format of each class is as follows:

Welcome – children sing the “Mighty Musicians” theme song and are introduced to the theme of the lesson!
Guided Listening – children are introduced to some great works of classical music and do various listening activities
Musical Concepts – musical concepts are taught in fun and hands-on ways
Sing & Move – children sing and move to classical music
Piano Primer – each child has an opportunity to play a pre-staff notation song on the piano
Creative Composition – children combine composition and art to use the concepts learned to write their own piece
Composition Performance – students have a chance to perform their composition for one another!

In this lesson plan, students learn that notes move up and down on the staff. Children will enjoy climbing their own “musical mountain” while learning how notes move up and down on the staff; will be introduced to Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” through fun listening and movement activities; will love singing and moving to “Simple Gifts;” will play a five-finger scale on the piano; will compose their own piece with notes moving up and down; and will have fun learning all about notes on the staff through song, play, movement, listening and art.

Here are a few previews of what this fun lesson plan includes:

Mountains & Hills is now available in The Teaching Studio Store under Lesson Plans For Sale. It may also be purchased in this post.




Mountains & Hills Lesson Plan:
Notes Move Up & Down
Digital download, includes student Take-Home book!
38 pages
Price: $10.00

Don’t forget to check out our other Mighty Musicians lesson plans we have available! I am hoping to have the final lesson plan of the 5-day camp, “Birds of a Feather,” up and available soon as well!

Now Available: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Preschool Piano Camp!

Well guys, I am very excited to announce that we finally have our Early Explorers: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp available for purchase! It’s been a long time coming. Many of you have already purchased and taught our Spring, Autumn and Winter lesson plans and have probably been wondering when our Summer plan would be available. Well we finally have it up and ready to go, and we think you are going to love it! We are offering all four lesson plans, along with some camp-planning extras, in one nifty bundle.

 

If you are looking for a fun summer music camp for preschoolers, look no further. This Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Piano Camp will introduce your young students to a year of music, going through each season from Spring through Winter. It works perfectly as a week-long, four-day camp, or as a month-long once-a-week class. This camp includes the following lesson plans: Spectacular Spring, Sizzling Summer, Amazing Autumn and Wondrous Winter.
Students will explore the four seasons through song, play, stories, movement, listening and art. Musical concepts covered in this four-lesson camp include: high and low, introduction to the keyboard, introduction to the musical staff, solfege, fast and slow, composition, beat, rhythm, one note versus many notes (chords), and more! Students will learn some music terminology (lento, largo, vivace, andante, tempo, staff, keyboard, etc.). They will make and take home several fun crafts (a springtime scene, paper flower hats, wearable fairy wings and turtle shells, a homemade drum and a snowman craft).
Children will be introduced to several pieces of classical music, including Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter from Antonio Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons; To Spring by Edvard Grieg; Summertime by George Gershwin; Summer Fairy by Sergei Prokofiev; Tortoises from Carnival of the Animals by Camille Saint-Saens; Flying Leaves by Carl Kolling; and Troika by Sergei Prokofiev.
Most importantly, students will play, jump, dance, sing, move, explore, listen, create, and have a blast as they experience and discover the joy of music!

 

The bundle includes a Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner packet, chock-full of forms and documents to help you plan and organize your class. It includes registration forms, participant rosters, flyers, certificates of completion and more. We’ve done all the work for you to make your summer preschool music camp planning a breeze.

For those who purchase the lesson plans separately, the Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner will also be available for separate purchase.

For more information on each individual lesson plan, please visit the Lesson Plans page of The Teaching Studio Store!

But first, can I tell you about our summer lesson plan? Because it is so much fun! We call it Sizzling Summer!

In this lesson, children learn all about fast and slow in music. We use Vivaldi’s Summer to tell and act out a story about Tempo Forest and the fairies and forest animals who live there. We meet lots of fun animals that move fast and slow!
We do some fun summertime movement activities to help us learn about fast and slow in music. The children are introduced to Gershwin’s Summertime and we learn and sing some new words that help us remember a musical word for slow!
We make and decorate some adorable fairy wings and turtle shells that students get to wear and take home! And if your students are anything like my daughter, they will not want to ever take them off…..
(The lesson plan includes printable templates with full instructions on how to assemble the fairy wings and turtle shells.)
And what is summertime without a lemonade stand? Our Musical Lemonade Stand activity teaches about fast and slow rhythms in music, composition and listening.
Here are a few sample pages from the lesson plan so you can get a better idea of what it includes:
I hope you enjoy our Sizzling Summer lesson plan, and the complete Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Preschool Piano Camp! They would make an awesome addition to your summer teaching plans. Purchase in the Shop.
Early Explorers: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons
Preschool Piano Camp
Includes: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner
Spectacular Spring!
Sizzling Summer!
Amazing Autumn!
and
Wondrous Winter!
Price: $38.00
Digital download

 

Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner
19 pages of forms & documents
to help plan your Early Explorers camp
Includes: registration forms, participant rosters, flyers,
certificates of completion and more!
Price: $5.00
Digital download
Sizzling Summer! Lesson Plan

187 pages, Digital download
Price: $10.00

piano teaching Q&A: Early Explorers

Hi Jenny, I’ve recently been searching the internet for ideas for preschool music classes. While I’ve enjoyed getting familiar with all the different methods out there, I have often thought about putting in the time/ effort to just create my own curriculum. And then I came across Early Explorers.

Holy Moly. This is fantastic! The thing I love most? I wouldn’t have to charge parents a materials fee (which I feel is a big factor!) I have a couple of questions for you about how you do your preschool classes.

1. Are they weekly? Bi-monthly? Monthly? Or do you just do preschool music camps as they fit into your schedule?

2. How many children have you found to be ideal in a group setting like this?

I feel like I have more questions, but don’t even know what to ask. I look forward to spending more time checking out your lesson plans before my own little one wakes from his nap! Thanks!

Thanks for the great questions! Early Explorers has turned into such a fun and wonderful way to bring that preschool-aged group of kids into my teaching schedule. The kids always have a blast and so do the teachers!

There are several ways you could format this class.

We have done several weekly Early Explorers classes during regular fall or spring semesters. We have also taught week-long 5-day “camps” during the summer or during spring break.

Both formats work great and have their advantages – some parents like the weekly format as it gives their preschoolers something fun to do each week. As they come each week they know what to expect as each class has a similar routine and schedule. Many parents like to go over the take-home materials with their children during the week, and so the kiddos retain more and learn better in this format. Other parents LOVE our week-long camps, as it is sometimes easier for scheduling – they only have to come for one week and not be available on the same day each week for the length of the class. The week-long camps are an awesome opportunity for the kids to jump in and get a great introduction to the joy of music! They are a TON of fun.

As far as number of children per class, it all depends! My friend and colleague Nichole (who wrote this curriculum with me) and I co-teach our Early Explorers classes, but you could easily do it on your own if you don’t have too many little ones to handle. We have had as few as 3 and up to 8 or 9 children in a class with both of us teaching and it has worked great in that range. We could probably handle at least a couple more with both of us teaching. If you do not have another teacher helping, I would probably recommend 5 or 6 at the most, but it entirely depends upon the kids in your class. Some at that age will be more mature and will sit and listen better, and some may be all over the place! Our lesson plans are designed to have a variety of short activities scheduled to keep little attention spans engaged.

Another idea is that you could have one of your more advanced teenage students help as a co-teacher for a larger class, or you could always invite parents to come and stay for the class. You should also consider the ages of the children signed up for your class. I would feel more confident in handling a larger group of 4-year-olds than a larger group of 3-year-olds! Use your judgement and think about the ages and maturity level of your students.

Each hour-long lesson focuses on a basic music concept (such as high/low, fast/slow, loud/soft, the musical alphabet, etc.). The lesson plans are not in any particular order, so you can “mix and match” them as you wish and put them in any order! Some of the concepts overlap from lesson to lesson to help reinforce what the children are learning.

One of the great things about this curriculum is that each plan comes with a printable take-home book to print out and staple together to send home with each child. These are also great for coloring if you have extra time! You will need a few materials for crafts, some studio supplies/equipment (like a piano of course, and some lesson plans use some rhythm instruments, etc.), and there will be a little prep work for some of the printable teaching aids and such, but once you teach the class once you will have all of those teaching aids ready for next time, and then it will just be a matter of printing out and assembling the books for each child!

We usually do charge a very minimal materials fee (which is also a deposit that secures the students’ spot in the class – we have found this is important because it helps to ensure against “no-shows”) at the beginning of the class to help cover the cost of the paper/printing, and sometimes we do make t-shirts for the kids to wear on the last day, so that is also included in that fee. But, you can set up the fees in any way you’d like! The great thing is that it’s all printable – once you buy the lesson plan, you can print as many copies as needed for your own studio.

There are several more plans that will be available to purchase in the coming weeks, so stay tuned!

Come visit The Teaching Studio Store to learn more about and to purchase our fun preschool music class lesson plans! And don’t forget to also check out our “Mighty Musicians” curriculum, which is similar to “Early Explorers” but geared toward 5- and 6-year-olds.

Now Available: Muscle Builder Pack 1 with Extras!

Now available in the Teaching Studio store is the Muscle Builder Pack 1 with Extras! This pack includes My Muscle Builder Books 1 through 4 (at a discounted rate when you buy them together), as well as some extras to go along with each level. One thing that readers have been wanting to go with the Muscle Builder books are some scale reference sheets that students can keep in their binders for a quick reminder of the notes in each scale. I have created reference sheets for each level, as well as some “At a Glance” sheets listing each exercise in each level – great for keeping track of each of your students’ progress through the Muscle Builder books! Here is what the Muscle Builder Pack 1 includes:

Contents:

Book 1
My Muscle Builder Book 1
Book 1 Extras: Book 1 at a Glance; Major 5-Finger Scales Reference Sheet

Book 2
My Muscle Builder Book 2
Book 2 Extras: Book 2 at a Glance; Major & Minor 5-Finger Scales
Reference Sheet; Chord Inversion Reference Sheet

Book 3
My Muscle Builder Book 3
Book 3 Extras: Book 3 at a Glance, includes Tonic & Dominant Chords
Reference Sheet

Book 4
My Muscle Builder Book 4
Book 4 Extras: Book 4 at a Glance; Black Key 5-Finger Scales

If you have already purchased the books and are interested in downloading the extras, they will be available for individual download shortly! (Like, once my children are napping – ha!)

For those of you who are new to the Muscle Builder books, here is a little description of these fun technique books!

My Muscle Builder Books are illustrated, step-by-step piano technique booklets
designed to help even your youngest students learn correct piano techniques and
become fluent in playing chords and scales all over the keyboard. Emphasis is placed on
playing the exercises with a musical purpose, and many articulations and techniques are
introduced. Each scale or exercise is clearly illustrated using colorful circles on a
keyboard, making it possible for young students to use the books beginning at their very
first lesson! The booklets are attractive and colorful and include spaces to pass off each
exercise with a sticker. These booklets will give students a sound foundation in their
piano technique and their understanding of keyboard fundamentals.

Print out the books in booklet form and staple or spiral-bind and distribute to the
students in your own private studio for a fun way to learn, practice, and pass off piano
technique exercises. Students and parents will appreciate the simple, step-by-step
instructions included on each page that will ensure your students are practicing
correctly at home. Also included in this pack are some extras to go along with each level.
You may want to print out the “At a Glance” sheets to keep in your teaching binder to
keep track of each individual student’s progress, and the scale reference sheets are great
for your students’ binders as quick reminders of the notes in each scale.

Purchase the Muscle Builder Pack 1 here, or on the Muscle Builder page. Happy scale-playing, y’all!

My Muscle Builders – Pack 1 (Books 1 through 4 plus extras)
Price: $27

*Post Edit: Extras are now available for Books 1 through 4!

Book 1 Extras 
(Includes Book 1 At a Glance and 5-Finger Scale Reference Sheet. 3 Pages.)
Price: FREE
Download here

Book 2 Extras
(Includes Major/Minor 5-Finger Scale Reference Sheet, a Chord Inversion Reference Sheet, and Book 2 At a Glance. 5 Pages.)
Price: $1.99

Book 3 Extras
(Includes Book 3 At a Glance and a Tonic & Dominant Chords Reference Sheet. 1 Page.)
Price: $1.99






Book 4 Extras
(Includes Major Black-Key 5-Finger Scale Reference Sheet and Book 4 At a Glance. 2 Pages.)
Price: $1.99

Classical Christmas Piano Music



‘Tis the season for Christmas music!

Piano students in studios all over are getting out their favorite seasonal carols and songs to play. Over the next several weeks, piano teachers will hear rendition after rendition of “Jingle Bells,” “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and “The Twelve Days of Christmas” (with all 12 verses!). I love this time of year, I love playing Christmas music, and I love that added excitement and motivation that comes to many students when they play these wonderful songs that are familiar to them and that they love.

I’ve been thinking though. As pianists we have such a rich and wonderful collection of great literature to play and perform. I love the traditional Christmas carols just as much as the next person (if not more!). But how cool would it be to hold a Christmas recital (with your more advanced students in your studio) consisting not of arrangement after arrangement of our favorite popular carols and Christmas songs of today, but of challenging, beautiful and virtuosic classical pieces that reference the Christmas season! I have been on the hunt for classical Christmas pieces lately and am so excited about all of the amazing pieces I have discovered! I hope you can use some of these in your studio or even just in your own playing this Christmas season. Merry Christmas! Now get practicing!


Busoni – Elegy No. 4 – Turandots Frauengemach, Intermezzo

This neat piece is based on Greensleeves. I am in love with it! It combines a traditional Christmas tune with some great virtuosic techniques to make for an awesome classical Christmas recital piece for an advanced pianist.

Sheet music is found in this book of Busoni piano works
, or online in the Petrucci Music Library. Here is John Ogdon performing the piece.

Percy Grainger – Sussex Mummer’s Carol for solo piano
I was unfamiliar with this song before finding this arrangement, but what a gorgeous piece! The harmonies are lovely. This would be a unique and gorgeous piece for a student to perform at Christmastime.

Sheet music found here or in this book of classical piano Christmas music. Take a listen!

Max Reger – Silent Night
A nice classical arrangement of the traditional Christmas carol. Find the sheet music here or in this book of classical piano Christmas music
.

Busoni – Nuit de Noel (Christmas Night), BV 251
This fascinating piano sketch includes some quite modern harmonies, evoking a darker holiday mood. The darkness is broken with the sounds of Christmas bells throughout and the familiar Christmas carol O Sanctissima.
Sheet music may be found on jwpepper.com or in the Petrucci Music Library. Listen to this great piece!
Busoni – Sonatina In diem nativitatis Christi MCMXVII BV 274
Like his Nuit de Noel, Busoni’s 4th Sonatina is also quite modern in harmony and also evokes bells. Composed right before Christmas in 1917, it is a gorgeous work – but definitely not your typical holiday piece! This would be a unique and different choice for an advanced pianist’s holiday recital :)Sheet music can be found in the same book as the Elegy listed above
, or online here.

 
Franck – Christmas Carol from Anjou
Simple and lovely and light, this little piece is beautiful.
Sheet music found here.
Liszt – Weihenachtsbaum (Christmas Tree)
Who knew that Liszt wrote a twelve-movement piece entitled “Christmas Tree?” Not I! This is a fun little discovery. Movement 3, The Shepherds at the Manger, is a light and beautiful transcription of In dulce jubilo.

Movement 4 is a gorgeous and rousing version of Adeste Fidelis (O Come, All Ye Faithful). I am loving this!

Sheet music can be found here.

Rebikov – The Christmas Tree, Op. 21
A simple, gorgeous minor waltz.

Sheet music can be found here.

Schubert-Liszt – Ave Maria
Liszt’s transcription of Schubert’s Ave Maria is gorgeous and looks very challenging! This would be so amazing at a Christmas recital.In searching for the sheet music, I did find it in this Dover collection
of Schubert-Liszt transcriptions, however it does not look like the best edition. Anyone know a better edition?

This is so beautiful! Take a listen.

Bach/Myra Hess – Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring
This transcription of Bach’s Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring by Myra Hess is beyond beautiful. I remember hearing Leon Fleisher play this at a recital and it was absolutely breathtaking.

This piece is so fitting for this wonderful holiday season when we celebrate the birth of our Savior. It sets an amazing tone for a Christmas recital or worship service, or just for playing to bring the spirit of this holiday into your home! I think I could listen to this piece all day long. I think I need to buy this music ASAP. 🙂

 

Bach/Egon Petri – Sheep May Safely Graze
At the same recital mentioned above, Leon Fleisher also played this transcription of Bach’s Sheep May Safely Graze and I was in love. I played this piece at my senior recital in college. While not as synonymous with the Christmas season as Jesu, this piece to me is wonderful for the holidays. Like Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring it sets a warm and peaceful tone for the season.

Purchase sheet music on Amazon.com

Tchaikovsky – The Nutcracker
What is Christmastime without Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker? This music, traditional to the Christmas season, is fun to play (as a solo or a fun and challenging piano duet) and audiences at your Christmas recitals will love it!

The Nutcracker Suite Op. 71a (which includes 8 selections from the Nutcracker ballet), arranged for solo piano by Tchaikovsky, is available on Amazon.com
, as is the Langer arrangement for piano duet
. You can also get the complete ballet for solo piano
arranged by Sergey Taneyev and revised by the composer himself.


Several different arrangements of The Nutcracker Suite Op. 71a as well as the complete ballet are all available online here and here.


Classical Piano Music for the Christmas Season
Alfred has available a neat collection of classical Christmas piano music, edited by Maurice Hinson. It includes several selections, including pieces by Liszt, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Tchaikovsky and more. A few of the pieces that I have mentioned in this post are included in this collection! I am excited to add this book to my own music library! There are several places you can purchase this book online:
Purchase on Amazon.com
Purchase on jwpepper.com
Purchase on sheetmusicplus.com

Looking for more classical piano pieces for a Christmas or winter recital? Why not try some of these winter-related pieces!

Frank Bridge – Winter Pastoral (listen) (sheet music)
Chopin – Etude Op. 25 No. 11 (Winter Wind Etude) (Sheet music)
Debussy – Des pas sur la neige (Footprints in the Snow) from Preludes, Book 1
Debussy – Children’s Corner No. 4 The Snow is Dancing (listen) (Sheet music)
Dohnanyi – Winterreigen (Winter Round Dances) Op. 13 (listen to No. 10) (Sheet music)
Charles Griffes – A Winter Landscape
Liszt Transcendental Etude No. 12 Chasse-Neige (or “Snow Storm”) (listen) (sheet music)
Prokofiev – Winter Fairy from Cinderella

What are some of your favorite classical piano pieces related to the Christmas season?
 

What are your favorite Christmas pieces?

It’s mid-October, and do you know what that means? I am pulling out my Christmas music, as I’m sure many of you are as well! Hooray!! It’s my favorite time of the year. As musicians we are lucky because since we need to practice, we get to start getting excited for Christmas sooner than other people! 😉 I love it.

So, I have some friends on Facebook discussing Christmas repertoire, and so I thought, why don’t we all collaborate and share some of our favorite Christmas pieces, and then I will compile a big old list for everyone to enjoy. I always love finding new Christmas pieces, so I’m excited! Here we go!

If you have a holiday favorite, fill out this quick form. Be sure to let us know what style it is in, and if it is more advanced (for all of us teachers or advanced students to enjoy playing) or more for younger students.

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