
Empowering performers to realize their full potential.
Download our free PDF guide: 5 Ways to Incorporate Alexander Technique into your Piano Teaching
Online Lessons for Professional Pianists
Does this sound like you?
You’re a busy professional musician looking for new ideas to enhance your skills and support you as you face challenges in your career.
Maybe you’re weighed down by your workload as a staff pianist, and you’re starting to feel some pain. Or if you’re a piano teacher, you want to foster good physical habits in your students. Your time is a precious commodity, and you don’t want a technique overhaul or weekly lessons.
Taking a workshop or piano lessons that incorporate Alexander Technique could be the answer for you. You’ll learn concepts that you can integrate into your playing and teaching right away. These small shifts in habits will be easy for you to practice on a daily basis, and they can fit in with your routine and work schedule. They’ll also allow you to optimize the technique you already have, so that if technical changes need to be made, it won’t feel as hard.
Piano Lessons with Alexander Technique
Watch this example of how we incorporate Alexander Technique into our lessons at Princeton Piano Teacher.
I’m Lynda Saponara, an online piano teacher, and I work with professional pianists who want to continue developing their craft.
If you’d like to free your technique, recover from injury, and benefit your students, learning to integrate Alexander Technique into your playing and teaching will have countless benefits. We offer one-on-one lessons and workshops to help you do just that.
Piano Teachers
You may have experienced some Alexander Technique during your studies, but it was a while ago, and you might not be sure how to apply it to your playing and teaching. It’s actually possible to learn simple Alexander Technique exercises and ideas to incorporate into your teaching right away. You’ll be providing significant benefits to your students, and it doesn’t have to be a major investment of your time, which is likely very precious!
BM/MM Gap
Your music degree didn’t quite give you all the necessary tools to be a professional musician, and it’s been causing you stress. Whether you’re a collaborative pianist trying to learn large amounts of repertoire or you’re a choir director struggling to read open score in rehearsal, our lessons are designed with your real-world work scenario in mind so that you can feel confident as you go into your next rehearsal or performance.
Staff Pianists
As a collaborative pianist, you probably spend a lot of hours at the piano with a very heavy workload. You might be experiencing some pain, fatigue, or even an injury, but you don't really have the time to stop to address it. Learning to incorporate a few simple Alexander Technique ideas into your playing can be a game changer. It won’t interfere with your professional schedule, and it can decrease your pain and increase your efficiency.
Learn to free your technique, play with ease, and improve your performances!
“I used some of the AT info in a lesson...It totally opened up my student’s playing!! Her gestures were lovely to watch! Thank you!! ”