Gary Eickmeier
August 30th 12, 12:41 AM
All right - interesting way of looking at it, both of you. I just assumed
that being taught performing automatically gives you an appreciation of what
goes into it, and the music you are playing. My daughter is being taught
right now by the first chair cello player of the Imperial Symphony
Orchestra. They don't go on field trips to the concerts, but I must ask him
if he teaches music appreciation as part of the course.
Trying to think of examples from other fields of study. We study English
writing, and isn't an appreciation of English literature part of that? We
study art, and isn't art appreciation part of that? Similar for photography,
filmmaking, cooking, other languages? Just asking.
Gary Eickmeier
that being taught performing automatically gives you an appreciation of what
goes into it, and the music you are playing. My daughter is being taught
right now by the first chair cello player of the Imperial Symphony
Orchestra. They don't go on field trips to the concerts, but I must ask him
if he teaches music appreciation as part of the course.
Trying to think of examples from other fields of study. We study English
writing, and isn't an appreciation of English literature part of that? We
study art, and isn't art appreciation part of that? Similar for photography,
filmmaking, cooking, other languages? Just asking.
Gary Eickmeier