Yamaha Education Blog »
Viewing Posts matching 'education'

Yamaha Awards Scholarships to Top Young Brass & Woodwind Players

 0 Comments- Add comment Written on 06-Feb-2009 by billcmartin
YMFE Winners 2009On 5th February 2009 Birmingham Conservatoire hosted the 20th Yamaha Music Foundation of Europe Scholarships (YMFE), in which three under-25s studying full-time music at HE-level received awards totalling £6,000 to further their studies and professional careers.
Each year the discipline for the YMFE Scholarships rotates, between piano, brass/woodwind and the disipline every third year itself rotates between voice, percussion and strings. This year was the turn of brass and woodwind and we really felt we were being given a glimpse of some of tomorrow's top professionals, who gave spell-binding recitals on saxophone, trumpet, bass trombone, flute and clarinet.
We would like to thank our distinguished panel of world-class judges, chaired by David Purser (Head of Brass, Birmingham Conservatoire) with Janet Hilton (Head of Woodwind, RCM), Bryan Allen (Head of Brass, RSAMD), Paul Goodey (Head of Wind, Brass & Percussion, RNCM) and John Reynolds (Head of Woodwind, RWCMD).
They selected the three winners and we offer our congratulations to them: Hannah Morgan (clarinet, Royal College of Music), Tom Poulson (trumpet, Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama) and Dominic Childs (saxophone, Royal College of Music).
In 2009 some 37 YMFE scholarships will be awarded in 25 countries, with a total scholarship fund of £56,000. Theses scholarships are in addition to others that Yamaha offers to conservatoire and higher education students in the UK. These top young musicians inspire other young people to become great at what they do in music and we look forward to tracking the careers of this year's young winners with interest. Watch out for them over the next few years - you'll be seeing a lot more of them!
Send to a friend

Social Networking as a Learning Tool for Young People

 0 Comments- Add comment Written on 27-Jun-2008 by billcmartin

At last week's Federation of Music Services conference, education consultant, David Price OBE, talked enthusiastically about the ways to engage more young people in music education. The current thinking is to do more around the music that interests and excites young people.

Web 2.0 has brought web-based interactivity that allows participation and instant responses and sharing. The popularity of Facebook, Bebo and even MySpace has exploded into a world-wide on-line community which can share instantly. David argued that local music services (and therefore the local authorities which usually govern them) which continue to drag their feet on web 2.0 style social networking as a tool for delivering education will continue to haemorrhage people from music.

I just wanted to remind Yamaha Education Friends members that you can all have a community like this, which is interactive, where you and your pupils can share ideas, music, homework, etc; where you can set levels of privacy to protect the community from unwanted outsiders.

It's called 'Webjam'. It's free to set up and you can do it by clicking on the 'Create New Webjam' button at the top of the screen! Please let us know if you have already done this or are thinking about it.

Send to a friend

Yamaha Education Reaches the Republic of Ireland

 0 Comments- Add comment Written on 15-May-2008 by billcmartin
From June 2008 Yamaha Music UK Ltd extends its activities to include the Republic or Ireland, as well as England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. I'm visiting Belfast and Dublin this month to meet key players in Irish music education and look forward to extending some of our projects and partnerships there.
Send to a friend
Loading …
  • Server: web1new.webjam.com
  • Total queries:
  • Serialization time: 218ms
  • Execution time: 250ms
  • XSLT time: $$$XSLT$$$ms