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Published: Friday, 23 August 2024 at 14:11 PM


So, you’re ready to indulge that decades-old desire to take up the guitar. Or perhaps you’re a proud parent looking to introduce your child to the wonders of playing a instrument, perhaps even joining a local orchestra in time. Next thing you need: some advice on how to choose a great music teacher.

Before we get there, though: congratulations! It’s widely acknowledged that learning and playing an instrument can have enormous benefits. And the links between music and mental health are now generally recognised. And, of course, you’re giving yourself – or your child – access to that wonderful, almost limitless wealth of music out there. Whether your ambitions run to performing ‘Happy Birthday’ on the piano or joining an orchestra for a performance of Beethoven‘s Fifth, there will be some joyous musical milestones along the way.

Learning a musical instrument brings many benefits. Pic: Yang Min/VCG via Getty Images – Yang Min/VCG via Getty Images

Add to that that you’re helping to nurture the cultural landscape in your neighbourhood, keeping good music teachers employed and maybe eventually boosting a local chamber music group or orchestra, and we can see that learning an instrument brings many, many benefits.

But, once you’ve decided which instrument is for you, how do you start seeking out the music teacher who will be the best fit for your needs and learning style?

First things first. The best way of finding a music teacher is to ask around. Find recommendations from friends or others within your community. While there will be flyers and advertisements in supermarkets, newsagents and libraries, you can’t guarantee the quality of the teaching. Recommendations are key!

Once you have established contact with a prospective teacher, a quick conversation should answer your preliminary enquiries and give you some idea about whether they are genuinely offering good advice. These are some top tips for choosing a music teacher.

Top tips for how to choose a music teacher

Find out how much the teacher charges for music lessons

A qualified music teacher should charge between £30 and £45 per hour in the UK, or $50 to $75 per hour in the US. That said, lessons with a first-class soloist may set you back by up to £200 / $250 an hour or beyond).

Boy having a violin lesson
Pic: WIKUS DE WET/AFP via Getty Images – WIKUS DE WET/AFP via Getty Images

In the UK, the Musicians’ Union recommends teachers charge a minimum of £38.50 per hour, although this rate also includes marketing and administration. You may find a cheaper way of learning an instrument is to join a group lesson, but the tutoring will inevitably be less tailor-made for you and you may not progress as quickly.

Remember that professional players will often be working or touring, and lessons will inevitably be more intermittent than they would be from a full-time teacher.

Choose the teaching method that works for you

If you’ve found a teacher that sounds good, you can now start to fine tune the way you want to learn. Is their teaching method structured in a particular way, or is it biased towards one particular system – such as the Suzuki method, whose tenets include saturation in the music community and a preference for learning by ear over learning from a score?
Carry out some research into the teaching methods favoured by the teachers near you. They may or may not be for you!