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You’ve seen it before. Miss Mary singing songs with her guitar once a week at preschool. A child’s first piano lesson. A long car ride singing along with pop songs on the radio. We can all hear music and learn how to make it with formal lessons, but the truth is, we’re born musical. At Music Together, we understand the importance of music in early childhood—from birth, in fact. We know if our inner music-maker isn’t nurtured early on, then it won’t develop. Because the truth is, people are born with enough music aptitude to end up playing in a symphony orchestra if they choose to. But first we must learn how to “speak music”—taking the musical instrument we all have, which is ourselves, and developing that as early as possible. The sounds we make, our movements, our rhythms. These are the building blocks of music—and the foundation for all learning. And that’s what Music Together is all about.
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You’ve seen it before. Miss Mary singing songs with her guitar once a week at preschool. A child’s first piano lesson. A long car ride singing along with pop songs on the radio. We can all hear music and learn how to make it with formal lessons, but the truth is, we’re born musical. At Music Together, we understand the importance of music in early childhood—from birth, in fact. We know if our inner music-maker isn’t nurtured early on, then it won’t develop. Because the truth is, people are born with enough music aptitude to end up playing in a symphony orchestra if they choose to. But first we must learn how to “speak music”—taking the musical instrument we all have, which is ourselves, and developing that as early as possible. The sounds we make, our movements, our rhythms. These are the building blocks of music—and the foundation for all learning. And that’s what Music Together is all about.
You’ve seen it before. Miss Mary singing songs with her guitar once a week at preschool. A child’s first piano lesson. A long car ride singing along with pop songs on the radio. We can all hear music and learn how to make it with formal lessons, but the truth is, we’re born musical. At Music Together, we understand the importance of music in early childhood—from birth, in fact. We know if our inner music-maker isn’t nurtured early on, then it won’t develop. Because the truth is, people are born with enough music aptitude to end up playing in a symphony orchestra if they choose to. But first we must learn how to “speak music”—taking the musical instrument we all have, which is ourselves, and developing that as early as possible. The sounds we make, our movements, our rhythms. These are the building blocks of music—and the foundation for all learning. And that’s what Music Together is all about.
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