Violin Lessons
Built on the right foundation.
The violin rewards precision. It punishes shortcuts. And it gives back — in ways that few other instruments can — when a student has been given the right foundation from the very first lesson. That foundation is exactly what we build here.

The evaluation comes first — always
After 25 years of teaching violin, the single most consistent pattern is this: if your child has been playing for a year or two and progress feels stuck, there is almost always a reason. And it almost always starts with something physical — a bow hold that was never corrected, a left wrist that collapses under string pressure, a posture that tightens with every passing month. These are not small problems. They compound. They are far harder to correct at year three than they are to prevent at week one.
This is why every student at Soul Music Lessons begins with a private evaluation before anything else. We assess your child’s posture, bow arm, left hand position, and intonation awareness. If they have played before, we identify the specific habits — and there are almost always some — that need to be addressed before we build anything new on top of them. The evaluation is diagnostic, not performative. It tells us exactly where your child is, and exactly what the right path forward looks like.
The curriculum that follows is not generic. It is built around what this student needs — their current physical development, their goals, and the technical gaps that stand between where they are and where they want to go.
Your child may arrive with a piece in mind — something they heard and fell in love with. That motivation is valuable, and we never dismiss it. But here is the truth: the pieces that matter most will sound the way they deserve to sound only after the foundational technique is in place. Most parents are surprised by how fast that foundation comes together when it is built correctly. The foundation comes first. The music follows — sooner than you expect.
Who studies violin here

What the curriculum covers
Violin technique is a system. Every element connects to every other. Bow technique affects tone. Intonation depends on ear training. Shifting requires a relaxed left hand. Rhythm is the skeleton everything hangs on. Understanding music theory — how scales are built, how intervals relate — makes the left hand smarter and practice more efficient. We teach these as an integrated whole. The first sign of correct bow technique, by the way, is not a beautiful sound — it is silence. No scratching. No pressure. Just the hair moving across the string with weight rather than force. That moment, when a student first feels it, changes everything.
Pedagogy — the great teaching traditions
The violin has centuries of codified pedagogy behind it. The approach we use draws from all of it — not from a single method, but from the accumulated wisdom of the greatest teaching traditions in the instrument’s history.
For younger beginners, the Suzuki method is a valuable entry framework. Built on the principle that every child can learn an instrument the way they learn their mother tongue — through listening, imitation, and consistent reinforcement — it develops strong physical habits and musical intuition before notation becomes the focus. The method requires meaningful parent involvement in the early years, and that involvement produces measurably better results.
But the Suzuki method is an entry point, not a complete education — and we treat it as such. The core violin repertoire — Bach’s Partitas and Sonatas, the Mendelssohn and Bruch concertos, the Beethoven and Brahms sonatas — exists largely outside the Suzuki books. The great étude collections — Kreutzer, Rode, Dont, Fiorillo — are not in Suzuki. The systematic bow technique work of Sevcik and the left-hand exercises of Schradieck are not in Suzuki. Carl Flesch’s Scale System, the foundation of most professional-level technical work, is not in Suzuki.
As your child advances, the curriculum expands into the full tradition — the Galamian scale system, the standard étude progressions, and the major concerto and sonata repertoire that defines the instrument at its highest level. The method serves the student. Not the other way around. For audition-specific preparation, see our dedicated Violin Audition Preparation program.
Classical foundations open every door
Classical violin technique is the most complete foundation a string player can build. This is not a matter of taste — it is practical. The bow control, intonation precision, left-hand strength, and music-reading fluency that classical training develops are the exact same skills that underpin every other style of violin playing.
Your child will not be locked into classical music. They will be capable of learning anything. Once the technical platform is solid, the doors open in every direction — and they open faster than they would from any other starting point:
Country music, pop arrangements, original compositions, free improvisation — all of it is possible. And possible faster from a classical foundation than from any other starting point. We build the foundation. Your child decides where to take it.

Understanding how scales are built — which notes are a semitone apart, which are a whole tone — makes your child’s left hand more intelligent. A student who understands intervals is not guessing at finger placements. They are reasoning about them. Our music theory program and the virtual piano tool are both valuable for violin students — the piano’s visual layout makes intervals and scale structures tangible in a way the fingerboard alone cannot.
Twenty focused minutes every day produces more progress than two hours the night before a lesson. At the end of each session, your child receives a specific written practice plan — not “review your pieces” but exactly which measures, at which tempo, with which technical focus. The metronome is used in every practice session, every day. Students who practice without one are not practicing — they are rehearsing whatever rhythmic mistakes they already have.
Frequently asked questions

Lesson details
The right place to begin.
The evaluation is 30 minutes. No commitment, no pressure. We tell you exactly where your child is and exactly what the right path forward looks like — not from a generic book, but from this student, at this level, with these goals.