piano-ology-meet-your-teacher-featured

Meet Your Teacher

My name is Frank Peter, a semi-pro musician and the sole proprietor and creator of Piano-ology…

What Music Means to Me

I LOVE music… and have made it a big part of my life because it challenges and excites so many things that make me feel alive.

I do not consider myself to be “talented”. I don’t have perfect pitch. Technique did not come naturally to me. I have overcome severe problems with rhythm. My memory is so-so. I enjoy performing even though I still deal with performance anxiety. But I’ve worked very hard to get where I am today and take immense pride in never giving up when things get tough.


Whether as student, teacher, composer, or performer, music has greatly enriched my life in countless ways and continues to be food for my body, mind, and spirit.

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A fellowship of Ethiopian music with Mitiku Tesfaye in Addis Ababa!

And it gives me great joy to share my love and knowledge of music with others so that they, too, can fall in love with it and realize their full potential… not only as musicians, but as self-actualized human beings.

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Making some new piano buddies in Seoul!

My gift is LOVE… love of life, love of music, and love of people.

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Having just enjoyed some four-handed improv with delightful Wistawa in Warsaw!

And I play, study, and teach music for personal growth, fraternity, and peace.

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A special moment with Per and family at the Amsterdam train station!

My Teaching Philosophy

Teaching is my greatest joy because it integrates those values that are most important to me: freedom, self-awareness, discipline, self-improvement, creativity, self-expression, fun, adventure, sharing, education, courage, and service.

The bedrock of my teaching philosophy is as simple as it is challenging…


My “Credentials”

I have no musical degrees or diplomas, no “credentials” in the conventional sense. My credibility stems from the diversity and authenticity of my unique smorgasbord of musical and life experiences. My real “claim to fame” is that I profoundly understand your frustrations as a student because I have struggled with the very same challenges myself. And I still remember how [unnecessarily] difficult everything seemed at the time.

That said, I will allow Piano-ology (not my “credentials”) to speak for itself.

Piano-ology is the fruit of countless cycles of frustration and joy, repeated bouts with self-doubt, thousands of hours and thousands of dollars spent over three decades on books, recordings, videos, magazines, private lessons, independent research, college classes, and a huge amount of plain old hard work.

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Just one dimension of Frank’s musical self-education.

Piano-ology is the fruit my unrelenting commitment to fuss over things until they made sense. Along the way I separated the bogus from the authentic, gleaned the signal from the noise… forever in search of the true and useful… not only in the domain of music, but in life in general.

In a phrase, Piano-ology is frustration transformed into joy.


My Musical Resumé

  • As long as I can remember, I have always loved music. Decades later I would come to appreciate that LOVE, not talent, is the real gift.
  • My earliest musical memory: Age five in the cellar of my buddy Scott’s cellar, an entire day “squandered”… playing his dad’s monster stack of 45 rpm fifties records on a beat up old turntable. We danced around like crazy.
  • My first experience creating music: First grade, flutophones. I learned how play a few simple tunes and was given the honor of directing the flutophone orchestra, wearing a red blazer with baton in hand.
  • Sadly, the rest of my grammar school years were a musical black hole. Perhaps nobody noticed my love of music. Perhaps they all sincerely believed that there were more important things to do.
  • Fortunately, my parents had a spinet piano in the house. I never took lessons, but I would dabble over the years, picking out a few simple tunes by ear. Only now do I see the profound importance of having access to a real instrument.
  • During my high school years, I taught myself how to read music (badly) and played a few easy songs by ear (actually by trial and error), but I was horribly frustrated because I really couldn’t play much of anything.
  • In college, my fascination with music continued and I decided to study music theory and music history for my liberal arts electives while getting an engineering degree. Still, I knew almost nothing about the piano and so little about what really makes music tick.
  • After graduation, I immediately jumped into an engineering career… and my sporadic musical life went back into hibernation, until…
  • At the age of twenty-eight, I got invited to a jam session by some friends from work who had a band. I was amazed that a bunch of people could just show up and start playing together without sheet music. I was bitten by the music bug once again and committed then and there to learn what this music thing was really all about. I no longer wanted to just listen to music. I wanted to participate in the world of music, just like I had in first grade, so…
  • I bought a very cheesy electric piano (it did not even have full sized keys), started showing up to the jam sessions, and learned something new every week. After about a year, I could play some simple blues, rock, and country music ideas in a handful of keys. After a couple more years, I got good enough that they invited me to join the band. I was shocked and honored and scared to death.
  • I played my first gig (at a grungy, softcore biker bar) the week before my thirtieth birthday. I did not eat or sleep for days beforehand. Despite my nausea and terror, I survived… and realized that it’s all part of the process. My life, musically and otherwise, has been expanding ever since.
  • In the ensuing years, I have simply followed my musical heart and walked through each musical door as it has opened along the way.
  • Through a semi-miraculous series of coincidences, I met my first piano teacher and took my first piano lesson at the age of thirty-two.
  • I have had several teachers since, learning something from each of the unique influences, for better or worse… then quietly moved on to learn other things.
  • Over the years, I’ve bought and read dozens and dozens of books and watched as many videos on theory, technique, styles, ear training, and improvisation… some worthwhile, most not so. Along the way I learned that the music library is full of musical untruths, that tradition dies hard, and that the ability to market and sell something does not make something valuable.
  • I have studied bio-mechanics, somatics, and the Alexander Technique… so I deeply understand how your piano-playing body moves.
  • On the jazz front, I bought and studied dozens of improvisation book/recording packages (Aebersold, David Baker, Bert Ligon, etc.). While I learned the basics of the jazz language, I always hit the same brick wall and disconnect: Almost total emphasis on left-brain constructs (knowledge) and almost no emphasis on right-brain experiences (ear training) and performance (skill).
  • I bought some of the Dick Grove “School without Walls” CDs, which introduced me to Solfege ear training and to the notion and importance of having “flexible” ears.
  • I bought “the” perfect pitch course and gave it an honest hearing. It did not work for me. My perfect pitch experiences are discussed at length on our aural comprehension pages.
  • I took two ear-training classes and a blues/rock improv class at Berklee music school on-line. There I learned two huge (albeit expensive) lessons: 1) the importance of singing out loud when doing ear training and 2) the priority of rhythmic groove over flash when improvising. Also, Berklee confirmed that my approach to ear training (using Solfege) was clearly on the right track.
  • I have a deep practical understanding of how your brain works, because I have studied educational psychology extensively at the university level. Piano-ology is infused with these discoveries and principles in a way that is largely incidental and invisible.
  • During all the above, no musical skills came naturally to me. I have struggled with every aspect of musicianship: technique, rhythm, theory, reading, memorization, performance, interpretation, and ear training. But, in the torturous process of overcoming these obstacles, I discovered a priceless lesson that goes way beyond playing the piano: “You either have it or you don’t!” is a poisonous myth that tragically prevents us from reaching our full potential.
  • I started teaching music at the age of forty and have loved it ever since. Teaching has made me a much better player, because each lesson is an experiment in truth that forces me to be honest and to understand things deeply enough and clearly enough to be able to share them with others so that they, too, will understand.
  • I retired from my engineering career on my fiftieth birthday in order to pursue my authentic dreams. Piano-ology… freely sharing what I have learned about music, piano, and life over the years… is one of those dreams. Piano-ology is not perfect, but it is honest.
  • My continuing goal is to cultivate my uniqueness as a musician and human being: teaching in a way that only I can teach and making music that only I can make.
  • To that end I have never stopped being a serious student. As my time and energy allow, I continue to refine my technique, develop my ears, tighten my rhythm, and expand my improvisation vocabulary in many genres.
  • And musical doors continue to open. One particular set of doors is the great pleasure and privilege to do webcam lessons with some wonderful students (and human beings) from all around the world!

learn more… Hear Your Teacher Play

4 responses to “Meet Your Teacher”

  1. Just discovered your site. I’m excited about it. Thanks so much for sharing it… and FREE! So appreciated.

    1. Thanks a million for your most kind words of appreciation, Randy. It heartens me to know that there are artists like you out there who resonate with the messages I am trying to share! CHEERS!

  2. …absolutely inspiring! Epistemologically speaking, you and your music are one; that’s how your enthusiasm, diligence and thirst for understanding it strikes me.

    1. Wow, Miro! What joy your beautiful words of appreciation have brought to me this day. All the best to you in music and life.

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