Christian Music Find the right marketing message for your children

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio Articles | Monday 2 August 2010 6:44 pm

Music has always been a great influence in human life of young people. Elvis, the Beatles, U2 and others have a mark on their generation. Unfortunately, this influence has not always been positive. As parents, we must constantly monitor what is happening in the minds and souls of our children. The music you hear is something that we need a very close one. What is your son iPod? What are downloading on your computer?

Christian radiofaith is a good way to guide your children and young people to make music with a message that will help to build it into the quality of Christian music and talent on rivals or exceeds many Christian radio stations are not Christian. Christian music is music past from Southern Gospel quartets and popular Christian music include Christian Hip Hop, Christian Rock, Christian Punk, Christian Latin, etc. Whatever the style, your children are to listen to Christian radio it plays.

The difference between radio and lay Christian radio is not the noise. The difference lies in the lyrics and overall lifestyle of the groups to sing the songs. This is important to understand. It may all sound the same to you, and people sang the music might look like something, but sing about what you're worlds. The difference is the message.

Christian rap rap sounds like> Music, Christian rock music sounds like rock, punk rock sounds like Christian music. The difference lies in the texts. A listener told me the following story to me. He was in his car on the road with his teenage daughter in a Saturday evening. The radio was tuned in our morning at the Christian radio station plays Southern gospel, the music. However, our program on the evening of Saturday, aimed at young people and is a mixture of Christian and Christian RockRap. While driving on the road, her daughter was enjoying the music and could not believe that her mother heard a rap music, "their music." After several miles the daughter asked what was the station and was surprised to learn, it is a Christian radio station in his mother. The daughter hears regularly. Not only is it spiritually as word texts, but the Ministry of the songs are given positive reinforcementwhat they are learning at home and in his youth group.

The story illustrates an important point: many of our children to listen to secular music by default. You do not know that there is a Christian alternative. You do not know who hear the same note, but to hear a different message. As parents we can to the point of listening to Christian music alternative to what they are. In this way we ensure that the music they listen to our linesChristian values and secular music not found in secular values.

How to find your sons Christian Music Will Listen

If you have a difficult time searching for Christian music that your teens and children are invited to listen or do not know where to start the station search, look in the phone book for a local Christian radio. You should be able to help you find what you're looking for. It could alsoVisit your local Christian bookstore. Usually sell a variety of music and be able to help. Another good source is the Internet.

An important point is that the music sounds like what the guys are already listening. So if you like the sound of what you hear now, probably do not like the sound of Christian alternative music. By a look, sound and forward the message that your children are with earSprouts!

So You Want To Be A Music Teacher?

Posted by Music Radio | Music Radio | Monday 15 February 2010 9:01 pm

I’ve overheard teenage musicians mention casually they are considering teaching music to make extra money. I am compelled to butt in, “Do you enjoy teaching?” the answer I interrupt with “Are you patient?” Their response: “Like, I play wicked, teaching will be an easy gig.”

My response: maniacal laughter.

Teens, let us hear the wise old violin teacher preaching a holy sermon from atop a glorious mountain of experience: Teaching music isn’t a luxurious life of sleeping in late, illuminating the unquestioning minds of flocking prodigies through 30-minute jam sessions and writing off all your music gear and fast food meals come tax time. Lord have mercy on our souls.

Simply put, teaching music is weekly customer service, with occasional late night support calls when the instrument falls out of tune or the player is struggling. A teacher is dealing with customers who are exploring new ground, hence requiring lessons in the first place, and is responsible for helping advance them into musicians who no longer require our services.

Sounds easy, except that the most trying aspect of customer service is, oddly enough, the customer. The human collective is a random grab-bag of mixed egos and inhibitions, fears and potential, attitudes and limitations. Even the ideal customer, who listens closely, asks exactly the right questions and retains everything they have ever been taught, cannot master music in an afternoon. (At least we teachers have a semblance of job security).

Music, a vast system of pitch, velocity and rhythm that can take a lifetime to understand, has been further complicated with pedagogy. There are more styles to teach violin than there are ways to cook an egg. Each method claims theirs is the most effective way to master the instrument, they have countless scientific studies to prove it and please enter your credit card number here.

A teacher has to weed through the dogmatic hype and come out with a cohesive teaching concept that jives with their own approach to playing and learning. They also have to understand their instrument inside and out, keeping in mind a clear idea how and when to introduce new concepts as to not overwhelm the student. After carefully formulating a perfect lesson plan, the teacher will then scrap it all and reinvent their method when it inevitably doesn’t fit the student’s learning style.

A good teacher is not locked into one method or way of explaining ideas. Instead they receive feedback from the player and interpret it into a lesson that will make an impact.

What makes the most impact, you ask? Repetition. Repetition. Then you do it again. Detach yourself from how many times you’ve played “Fur Elise” or corrected that particular eighth note. There are pin-sized holes in my eardrums from “Twinkle Twinkle” and I develop an itchy rash prior to our annual Christmas recital, but I’ve found a Zen peace in accepting my fate.

I see each lesson as a new chapter in the life of a musician I am helping along. With experience, lessons have developed their own rhythm and my teaching days swoop past me.

The repetition can get to some people, like the crusty old piano teacher, the one everyone seems to have had as a child, who wielded a nasty ruler for discipling unwanted notes. I knew a guy in high school who whacked his violin students on the head with his bow whenever he, the teacher, became frustrated.

A teacher cannot crack when the student plays the wrong note for the hundredth time, so impatient musicians must carefully consider their suitability as teachers. “Penny whistle teacher needed: Psychopaths with Intermittent Explosive Disorder need not apply.”

Instead of whopping students with a pernambuco stick with hair, my aforementioned colleague could have channeled his infinite aggression into another enjoyable branch in the music industry, such as fending off broken beer bottles at the country bar or smashing double-neck guitars for screaming mobs at GM Place. Last I heard he’s still teaching at the music store, but has invested in a heavy carbon bow and a cocktail of barbiturates.

Once a player has established that teaching is a good direction to take and they have passed all the inkblot exams without incident, he or she needs to lay down a teaching foundation. Selecting a method book to use is one thing, but the teacher needs to develop a mission statement and their goals in teaching.

My mission focuses on two words: Inspiration and Encouragement. My goals include “music as a life experience” and sharing my love for violin among friends. The mission statement and goals serve as a guide whenever I am faced with a decision or problem in my work, it’s sort of an operations manual for my business. And that’s what teaching music really is: a business.

I urge all musicians who plan to make their music more than a hobby to take business classes on marketing and promotion, finances and taxes, and business plans. Learn to promote yourself because no one will know who you are if you just sit at home chatting on MSN. Keep good financial records so you are prepared for tax season. There are far too many exceptional musicians, performers and teachers who are stuck on the dole or playing for the coming and going liquor store clientèle due to poor business practices.

You don’t have to be a marketing whiz or a lawyer, though your mother would prefer such a career change so she can have her basement back. Just learn enough to keep yourself out of trouble with the tax man and to maintain a full compliment of paying, regular students. For more guidance I suggest the book “Making Money Teaching Music” by David and Barbara Newsam, available for a free read through the Okanagan Library system.

It seems to be an oxymoron, but it is possible to make money teaching music! So teenage musicians, nod your head, say “yes Rhiannon,” and do exactly everything I have ordained in the article above, then watch the money pour into your bank account.

Hallelujah!

And try not to spend it all at the music store filling the blank slots in your gear rack.

Amen.

**Rhiannon Schmitt (nee Nachbaur) is a professional violinist and music teacher who has enjoyed creative writing for years. She currently writes columns for two Canadian publications and has been featured in Australia’s Music Teacher Magazine.

Rhiannon (age 29, she’s not really old) has worn the hats of businesswoman, performer, events promoter, classical music radio host, school orchestra music arranger and music columnist in rural British Columbia, Canada.

Her business, Fiddleheads Violin School & Shop, has won several distinguished young entrepreneur business awards for her comittment to excellence. Her shop offers beginner to professional level instruments, accessories and supplies. http://www.fiddleheads.ca provides a rich resource of information on her school, violin, products for sale and more.

Rhiannon is also Founding President of the Shuswap Violin Society. http://www.violinsociety.ca She dedicates much of her time to community music projects and helping young musicians.