Suzuki Violin School: Violin Part & CD, Vol. 3

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Suzuki Violin School: Violin Part & CD, Vol. 3 Details

Teach violin with the popular Suzuki Violin School. The Suzuki Method(R) of Talent Education is based on Shinichi Suzuki's view that every child is born with ability, and that people are the product of their environment. According to Shinichi Suzuki, a world-renowned violinist and teacher, the greatest joy an adult can know comes from developing a child's potential so he/she can express all that is harmonious and best in human beings. Students are taught using the "mother-tongue" approach. Each series of books for a particular instrument in the Suzuki Method is considered a Suzuki music school, such as the Suzuki Violin School. Suzuki lessons are generally given in a private studio setting with additional group lessons. The student listens to the recordings and works with their Suzuki violin teacher to develop their potential as a musician and as a person. This Suzuki Book & CD is integral for Suzuki violin lessons. This revised edition of the Suzuki Violin School, Volume 3 features: * Revised editing of pieces, including bowings and fingerings * Additional exercises, some from Shinichi Suzuki, plus additional insight and suggestions for teachers * Text in English, French, Spanish, and German. * Musical notation guide * Fingerboard position * CD with recordings by William Preucil Jr., accompanied by Linda Perry, as well as piano accompaniments recorded alone. Titles: Study Points * Tonalization * Vibrato Exercises * Gavotte (Martini) * Minuet (Bach) * Gavotte in G Minor (Bach) * Humoresque (Dvorák) * Gavotte (Becker) * Gavotte in D Major (Bach) * Bourrée (Bach). For a complete list of the most recent printings by AMPV number, go to alfred.com/suzuki. This title is available in SmartMusic. The International editions include an updated title page that designates the book as the International Edition.

Reviews

As a guitarist of 9 years now learning the violin, I am really enjoying the Suzuki series and making a lot of progress. I would, however, recommend supplementing Suzuki pieces with some independently selected pieces of various difficulty levels. The thing to remember is that the Suzuki pieces are chosen specifically for teaching techniques, and each piece is not just one technical lesson, but many. This is great, and it allows for rapid progress, but it's easy to get a bit drained by the onslaught of new techniques in every piece. If you apply the techniques you learned in a given Suzuki piece to other music of a similar or easier difficulty level, this can help reinforce what you've learned before you move on to the next Suzuki piece (plus you've added to your repertoire).

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