Mark Pigot Music Studio

ABN: 25 197 113 475

Piano & Music Theory lessons

Vocal coaching

Adults & young people

Beginners & returners

Orff Schulwerk

Last Friday 6/10, I and ~20 other piano teachers attended a full day workshop on the Orff Schulwerk music teaching "approach" (NOT a method!!!), using the new Trinity College of London piano exam pieces.

In a sentence, the approach takes each element of music - rhythm, melody, texture, harmony and form- which are taught separately using a variety of techniques that don't all use the piano e.g. listening, speech rhymes, singing, percussion, dance, etc.  This is underpinned by a "natural learning process" that mirrors the progression we all go through as we learn our oral and written language: listen - sing - play - read - write.

The workshop was very interesting and enjoyable - and highly participative!! - and contained a range of techniques for further investigation in my teaching.  The holistic and flexible principles embodied in Orff Schulwerk are very consistent with my strong belief in learning music holistically, using the piano as a vehicle.

New Australian Piano Recording

Yes, I'm one of those old-fashioned guys who still buys CD's...

The ABC have just released "Into Silence" by Australian pianist Tamara-Anne Cislowska and the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, an album of piano & orchestra works by four Baltic composers born "behind the Iron Curtain" either during or just after WWII - including Henryk Gorecki (if you haven't heard his "Symphony of Sorrowful Songs", go to YouTube RIGHT NOW!!!) and Arvo Part (his "Spiegel Im Spiegel" is the most well-known piece on this album).

A very different and very beautiful album of classical piano...

Beethoven

You don't have to know me for long to know that Beethoven is my most admired classical composer.  Straddling the Classical & Romantic eras of Western music (and art, and philosophy, and architecture, etc), more than any other his command of musical language and ability (and preparedness!) to innovate paved the way for a whole new style of music.

I'm currently (re)-discovering the Piano Concerti, and as always am amazed at the beauty.  Try the slow movement of the 1st Concerto for some late night relaxation...