- Music Lessons
- Trombone Lessons
- Trombone Lessons - Brooklyn
Trombone Lessons - Brooklyn, NY
(212) 537-6126
"One Trombone Teacher, hold the crust please!"
Learning to play the trombone becomes a chore if your teacher is overly strict and serious.
At Encore Music Lessons you'll find the teachers are well qualified, but they're also fun.
We devote our time and energy to matching students with teachers that are just right for them. All we need is some basic information and within 48 hours you can be matched with a terrific instructor. You can also choose a teacher yourself - just check out our Trombone Teacher Directories.
Each year in May we have a spring recital, and it's great chance for students to play the trombone in front of other people. This year it was held on May 17th.
To see video footage of the NY Spring Recital click here.
Stop taking lessons anytime! Encore Music Lessons doesn't hold its students to any kind of semester or lesson term contract.
All of the business aspects of the lessons like billing and payments are handled by Encore Music Lessons directly. That maintains a positive situation for both students and teachers alike.
It couldn't be easier! Lessons can be in your home, office or in a teacher's studio, and are available in most areas of Brooklyn including Fiske Terrace, Starret City, Gowanus, Manhattan Beach, Ditmas Park, Brighton Beach and City Line.
Take lessons with us and leave the crust for the birds!
Call Encore Music Lessons at (212) 537-6126 to get started.
- Student Registration is Free!
- No Semester System or Term Contracts
- Locations throughout the greater Brooklyn area: Take trombone lessons in the conveniance of your home or in a teacher's studio
- Flexible Scheduling: With so many trombone teachers in Brooklyn to choose from, there's bound to be one that fits your schedule
- Choose a Brooklyn trombone teacher yourself, or we'll match you with the teacher we think best fits your needs
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.