- Music Lessons
- Trombone Lessons
- Trombone Lessons - Baxter Estates
Trombone Lessons - Baxter Estates, NY
(516) 568-4942
"One Trombone Teacher, hold the crust please!"
If you want to learn how to play the trombone , the last thing you need is an instructor who only teaches drills and dry technical information.
Students at Encore Music Lessons get quality instruction and have fun at the same time!
We devote our time and energy to matching students with teachers that are just right for them. Tell us who you are and what you want and we'lll match you with a local trombone teacher within 48 hours. If you're more the proactive type, feel free to check out our Teacher Directories and pick out the instructor you want.
Come play the trombone at our annual spring recital. We just had a great one on May 17th.
We've got some videos from the NY Spring Recital. If you'd like to watch, just click here.
Stop taking lessons anytime! Encore Music Lessons doesn't hold its students to any kind of semester or lesson term contract.
So that the lessons stay purely musical, Encore Music Lessons takes care of all the payment and billing. That way, both students and teachers are sure to have a positive experience.
Different students learn the trombone in different ways. That's why at Encore Music Lessons we give you the choice of taking lessons in your home or at a teacher's studio. Choose whichever option is most comfortable for you.
Take lessons with us and leave the crust for the birds!
To get started give us a call at (516) 568-4942.
- Affordable Alternatives: Select a trombone lesson length that fits your budget
- Registration is Free: It costs nothing to sign up
- Convenient Locations in Long Island: Take in-home trombone lessons or lessons in a teacher's studio
- Students of any age or level of ability can take trombone lessons in any musical genre or style
- No Semester System or Term Contracts
The repertoire of trombone solo and chamber literature has its beginnings in Austria in the Classical Era where composers such as Leopold Mozart, Georg Christoph Wagenseil, Johann Albrechtsberger and Johann Ernst Eberlin were featuring the instrument, often in partnership with a voice.