top of page

Licensing

Let's Play Music classes are

proven scalable in group settings

Ideal for piano studios, music schools, and community programs.

Available for private teacher use or multi-teacher studio use. 

Private Teacher

Teach Let's Play Music in your community

  • Make money from home

  • Join a community of teachers like you

  • Set your own hours

  • Do what you love

1 (22).png

Studio License

Turnkey programs for music studios

  • Group ready lessons

  • Turn-key teacher training system

  • Year-round curriculum options

  • Imports into studio schedules

2 (8).png

Want to see our Teacher Training Programs?

Live Training

Online Training

Start Your Journey Today!

The Let's Play Music curriculum is centered in the teachings of the music masters Kodaly, Orff and Dalcroze.  These men were revolutionist who changed the attitudes of teaching music to children.  Their philosophies are at the heart of our curriculum and you will see their methodologies in each detailed lesson plan.

Zoltán Kodály

In the Kodály Method children are first introduced to musical concepts through playful, natural experience. He emphasized the use of the folk song in all early music education, stating that they are the ‘mother tongue’ for teaching music.   Melodic patterning, the repetition of certain notes in a row, trains both the ear and the eye to read the patterns on the staff.  Adding solfeg handsigns and syllables further enhanced the learning experience. He used both folk music and songs that are based on the pentatonic scale to help teach the art of singing in tune.

Émile Jaques-Dalcroze

The Dalcroze method, taught in his Eurhythmics schools, is another approach music educators use to foster music appreciation, ear-training and improvisation while improving musical skills. In this method, the body is the main instrument.  Students learn rhythm and structure by listening to music and expressing what they hear through spontaneous bodily movement. (I.e. walking to quarter notes, skipping to dotted notes.)

Carl Orff

In the Carl Orff approach, children are taught concepts through improvisation, composition and a natural sense of play.  He taught using folk music and music composed by the children themselves.  All musical concepts were taught through singing, chanting, dance, movement, drama and the playing of percussion instruments. He believed the order of instruments should be: 1. Body Percussion  2. Voice  3. Simple Percussion Instruments  4. Barred Instruments

(For example, our tone bell set is an Orff instrument!)

Let's Play Music was founded in great educational philosophies

Learning From the Masters

GRA_LPM_website-asset_wavybackground-HEXb0d896_Rev0.png
bottom of page