Product Description
There's a new cello lesson book on the market!
In this book I've turned the "normal" way of learning to play the cello upside down. With a little bit of creativity, and a lot of knowledge and understanding about how the instrument works - and how students learn - I have created this book. I hope you will love it just as much as I do, and that it will help you build a good foundation for your cello playing.
FROM THE INTRODUCTION:
This lesson book was created with a new perspective in mind. My hope is, that this way of
learning, will make it easier to learn to play the cello.
I have chosen to include a few chapters in the beginning of the book, where you will play on
open strings. That will help you establish a good, basic understanding for how the cello should sound.
It will also give you the opportunity to build up strength in the left hand slowly and concentrate on
getting a good, basic bowing technique. I have included small chapters with music theory, that I find
important in order to understand how the instrument works. The cello doesn't have any keys or frets to
help you play in tune, so knowing a few tips and tricks will help you tremendously. As opposed to most
cello lesson books, the first finger you will learn to use here is the 4th finger. The 4th finger is your little
finger and usually the least strong finger of them all. Starting with 4th finger has 2 very important
advantages:
When you use the 4th finger especially in the beginning you will use the other 3 fingers to
help push the string down into the fingerboard. That will help you establish a good, healthy
hand position for the left hand. And when you start with 4th finger, using the other 3 fingers will
feel so easy!
4th finger in the first position is the same note (an octave higher) as the open string below. It
gives you the opportunity to use the open string to know if you play in tune.
Once you have gone through this book you should be able to play with the bow, by plucking
the strings (pizzicato) and use 1st, 3rd and 4th finger on the left hand. That means that you should be able
to play songs in G Major and D Major in one octave. The last few chapters include duets for two cellos.
I have chosen to include the duets to make it more fun to play and to start developing the students
ability play chamber music. It is wonderful to be able to play an instrument, and playing with other
people adds an extra dimension to that.
Love, live, play!
Julie
This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.