Wellington Music Centre is excited to bring music tuition back to Wellington!
Wellington Music Centre is excited to bring music tuition back to Wellington!
The Wellington Music Centre is a Ministry of Education funded out-of-hours music school aimed for students aged 5-12 years old and offers tuition in 15 different instruments from beginner to advanced levels.
All lessons are held in groups and our tutors and relievers are all police-vetted, established music teachers and professional musicians in the Greater Wellington Region.
We aim to meet the musical needs of all the children including those with special needs. The Wellington Music Centre has been running for over 30 years in various venues,
Miramar North School has a wonderful team across the staff, principal and school board who are passionate about music and very supportive in bringing music into the Wellington community.
The Music Centre aims to ensure classes remain a positive learning environment and expects parents and guardians to use common sense and limit disruption to teaching and learning when entering and leaving by only making contact the before and after class if possible.
Please do not enter the classrooms during the tutors’ break time.
Wellington Music Centre students are under supervision whilst in class time only. Whilst we endeavour to provide a safe environment, tutors and staff cannot be responsible for students outside their allocated class time.
Parents. guardians and siblings are encouraged to observe class lessons. However, such attendance is permitted only at the discretion of the class tutor, and on the understanding that parents, guardians and siblings must not distract the students who are attending the class lesson.
Most students start learning on the alto saxophone which is the most versatile and has the largest repertoire, but CSM also offers soprano, tenor and baritone saxophones for hire.
Learning an instrument is the brains equivalent of a full body work out. The earlier you start the bigger the benefits. These include increased memory, problem solving and literacy.
We’re passionate about what we do and the benefits that learning to play a musical instrument provides.
The physical ability to comfortably reach and cover the lower keys of the instrument with the fingers is a prerequisite.
To play a wind instrument the musician blows through a mouthpiece to vibrate the air – sometimes through a reed (clarinet, oboe) or sometimes across a metal mouthpiece (flute) or into a fipple or open hole (recorder).
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