From Passion to Profession: Martyn Cast and the Jenca Music School
Martyn Cast is a distinguished musician and educator from Jenca Music School in Jersey. Martyn discusses the transformative power of music, particularly in educational contexts, where it serves as a medium for individuals—especially children—to express themselves and navigate their emotions.
He recounts his personal journey, beginning with a childhood steeped in musical influence, which culminated in the founding of the Jenca Music School in Jersey. Through this institution, he aims to cultivate a nurturing environment where students can explore their musical passions, develop resilience, and ultimately achieve personal growth through music.
Martyn Cast, owner/ guitar tutor at Jenca Music School, Jersey C.I.
Author of children’s guitar songbook Mr Martie’s Marvellous Melodies
Takeaways:
- Music serves as an empowering force in people’s lives, enabling them to express their creativity and emotions.
- The journey of learning an instrument is often more about personal enjoyment than achieving formal grades or accolades.
- Inspiration is crucial in teaching, as it helps to foster a genuine love for music among students.
- Resilience is vital in the learning process; students must persist through challenges to achieve their musical goals.
- The connection between teacher and student can profoundly influence a child’s engagement and growth in music.
- Music education provides not only academic benefits but also enhances social skills and personal development in learners.
Website
Social Media Information
Facebook: MarvellousMrMartie
Instagram: MarvellousMrMartie
Show Sponsor – National Association for Primary Education (NAPE)
Discover more about Education on Fire
🔥 https://www.educationonfire.com/
🔥 Support the show with a One-Off Tip
https://educationonfire.com/support
🔥 Ecamm Free Trial – How I record and produce this show.
https://educationonfire.com/ecamm
🔥 Captivate.FM – My podcast host
https://educationonfire.com/captivate
🔥 Descript – My Editing Tool
https://educationonfire.com/descript
Some of the above are affiliate links, I may receive a small commission if you purchase via these but there is no cost increase to you. These links help support the channel so any clicks are greatly appreciated.
Transcript
Music is one of the most empowering of all the arts.
Speaker AI mean, what it gives to people and seeing people come out of their shell, it wasn't about learning grades or studying pieces.
Speaker AI just wanted to play like the people I listened to, you know, like the people I grew up listening to, and it loved their music.
Speaker AHalf of me can read and play.
Speaker AThe other half of me, I use my improvisational skills, which doesn't require me to read.
Speaker AI just feel the music.
Speaker AI have a song called Jeff the Dancing Shark, which is basically a song that a little boy I was teaching said, can we write a song about a show?
Speaker AAnd I was aware that, oh, yeah, okay, you got baby shark and all of these things like that.
Speaker ABut he said, I want to call it Jeff.
Speaker AInspiration is what I, I provide for children as I teach them.
Speaker AAll my knowledge and all my years of doing it and how I got connected with music in the first place is very much through inspiration.
Speaker AResilience.
Speaker AKeep trying, keep pushing.
Speaker ATry to be the best you can.
Speaker AEven when you feel like it's not going as you expect, you've got to keep trying.
Speaker AWithout doubt, without music, I wouldn't have what I have now.
Speaker BHello, my name is Mark Taylor, and welcome to the Education on Far podcast, the place for creative and inspiring learning from around the world.
Speaker BListen to teachers, parents, and mentors share how they are supporting children to live their best, authentic life and are proving to be a guiding light to us all.
Speaker BHi, Martin, thank you so much for joining us here on the Education on Far podcast.
Speaker BAs a musician myself, it's always fantastic to speak to someone who has the same passion, and I know the importance of music around education generally as well.
Speaker BSo, yeah, thanks so much.
Speaker BI'm really looking forward to hearing your stories about music in general.
Speaker AThanks.
Speaker ANice to meet you, Mark.
Speaker AI'm looking forward to relating it to you as well, and hopefully we can get some good feedback either way.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BSo let's start off with the fact that you're in Jersey, because that's a very exciting thing for me.
Speaker BI've done a few concerts in Jersey many years, years ago now, but it's a fantastic island and I would imagine sort of how your business works, how your musical life works, is slightly different than maybe it was if you'd sort of stayed in the sort of the uk Mainland.
Speaker AYeah, I mean, I, I, I, my musical journey started well, probably, like so many people, through loving music as a child, growing up in an environment as music, my parents, my, my siblings all shed a joy and passion for Music.
Speaker ABut I was the only one in my family that took up an instrument in my.
Speaker AI'd say I was about 12, just preteen.
Speaker AI took up the guitar living in the UK at the time.
Speaker AAnd I developed my interest from that point.
Speaker AAnd because I lived in, in England at that particular time in the mid to late 70s, I was surrounded by so much great music and I was very privileged to be able to attend a lot of concerts when I was going into my mid to late teens living in and around London.
Speaker AAnd so that kind of inspired me, if you like, to keep going on my own particular journey.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AI got into playing in bands when I was about 17, 18.
Speaker AI also went to a music school in London when I was in my early 20s and I did.
Speaker AI think it preceded BIM, if you know who BIM are, which is like the British and Irish modern music.
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker ASo BIM were like a precursor for that.
Speaker AAnd I went and did a, a year course there in guitar.
Speaker ACame back from that.
Speaker ABut this is kind of about the time I.
Speaker AI eventually moved base and started to live in Jersey.
Speaker AI came to Jersey primarily just for a holiday.
Speaker AEnded up falling into a scene here.
Speaker AI got a job here and ultimately got into the music scene here.
Speaker AGot into a couple of local bands and then I got into playing with some like duo work.
Speaker AAnd it was from that really that was like how I eventually got into teaching was purely by chance because I had some.
Speaker AA guy come up to me after a gig with his son and said, do you teach guitar?
Speaker ABecause my son would really like to learn how to play the guitar like you do.
Speaker AAnd at that point I thought, well, I've never tried.
Speaker AAnd I said I can try to give him support.
Speaker AAnd that's kind of how the whole thing started.
Speaker AThat was 25.
Speaker A25?
Speaker AYeah, 25, 26 years ago now.
Speaker ASo that's when I started teaching.
Speaker AAnd gradually, over the course of, I suppose of about five, six years, I eventually started teaching from a base in town over here in Jersey and built up like a clientele from there.
Speaker AUltimately where I am now is that I have my own school.
Speaker AI teach in private schools as well.
Speaker ABut the school, I operate in Jersey itself.
Speaker AI have a pool of teachers that work for me.
Speaker ASo I have like drums, I have three drummers, I have four other guitar teachers.
Speaker AI've got a bass tutor, a vocal tutor and a piano tutor.
Speaker ASo all very high end quality teachers as well.
Speaker AAll live performers.
Speaker ASo as I say, that's kind of where it started to.
Speaker AWhere it is now and it's.
Speaker AWe're also.
Speaker AMy school is affiliated with Rock School, who are like the main examination body in the uk.
Speaker AI think they're, well, pretty much worldwide now.
Speaker AAnd we've been associated with them again for about 25 years.
Speaker ASo we're now regarded as a center of excellence for our school.
Speaker AMy.
Speaker ASorry, my school, I should tell you, my school is called Jenka Music School.
Speaker AIt's an unusual name.
Speaker AIt's like an.
Speaker AAn acronym of my daughter's name.
Speaker AI took the initials from her name and amalgamated it into Jenka because a lot of people ask, how do you get the name?
Speaker ASo that's fundamentally what we came up with.
Speaker AAnd as I say, we.
Speaker AWe've been working with rock School for 25 years now.
Speaker ASo we do exams in our school three times a year, every year in all disciplines.
Speaker AI think we've got some coming up the end of June now.
Speaker AWe've got three days of exams which is going to be like about, I'd say, in excess of 60 people doing exams.
Speaker ASo it's a really, really big concern for us.
Speaker AIt's obviously a successful part of what we do.
Speaker AAnd it's something that we highly encourage for all our students to endeavor to be the best they can, taking up the instrument and going as far as they can with it to the point where they.
Speaker AThey're obviously accomplished at it, but also they have a passion and a love for learning to play and hopefully get to the point where they can either perform themselves or become teachers themselves in the future.
Speaker BAnd I think for me, the most important thing there that sort of threads through all of that is the idea of just the learning and the experience and the opportunity, isn't it?
Speaker BBecause, like you say, I was the same.
Speaker BIt was that opportunity when I was at school, I had to learn an instrument and drums was the thing I sort of decided was I thought was going to be the best idea for me.
Speaker BBut then teachers who are passionate, being surrounded by ensembles within my school and outside of school and, you know, the music scene, sort of like saying that sort of air was just amazing.
Speaker BI think understanding what that is, the opportunity to listen, the opportunity to experience, to watch things live, to then be part of things.
Speaker BAnd like I say, that natural progression, hopefully then into being being in a band or a duo or an orchestra, depending on what your sort of instrumentation is, makes such a big thing.
Speaker BAnd I love the fact that sort of now, like, say all these years later, it's exactly the same passion that comes across.
Speaker BYou know, you have somewhere that People can go, they can learn, they can embrace music as they want to do it and then sort of have that structure and understanding of how they can be supported.
Speaker BAnd I think that's the thing which is a shame in a lot of the arts and a lot of places certainly around the UK now that that sort of diminishing a little bit.
Speaker BSo it's always fantastic to be able to hear and sort of share these stories with things which are positive.
Speaker AWell, I mean I, I don't need to tell you that music is one of the most empowering of all the arts.
Speaker AI mean what it gives creativity create creatively to people and seeing people come out of their shell.
Speaker AYou know, in many cases we, we have people that are either shy or introverted or have learning difficulties.
Speaker AWe have quite a lot of adhesive, is it ADHD kids that you know, they have and that they find that they have, they need some kind of outlet for their frustration and music is a, is such a big part of their, becomes such a big part of their lives and as long as the teachers are aware of that and they can enhance it, bring it out, then you feel like you're accomplishing amazing things with young children and adults.
Speaker AOf course it's not just confined to children.
Speaker AWe get adults that have maybe anxiety or they have things in their life that they can't cope with and they, they use music as a conduit, if you like, as an outlet for that frustration in life.
Speaker AAnd I, I think it's criminal to even consider that they could cut back on the music education for young people in the.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AI think it's quite a big thing in the UK that the, the, the government.
Speaker AI'm not quite sure how that works but.
Speaker BWell, I think, I think, you know, in general sweeping terms when I started my lessons and I think I was about the same age as you, I'd just gone to secondary school.
Speaker BOur music lessons had to be a win band so that, so that everyone had to learn an instrument for that first year.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd then the opportunity sort of went from there.
Speaker BBut my first year of music lessons were absolutely free.
Speaker BYou know, they were subsidized by the school because they were passionate about giving everyone that opportunity.
Speaker BI think we had to pay from the second year, but it was very, very highly subsidized and I then the opportunities I had to play around school were all subsidized.
Speaker BThere was sort of minimal cost and you know, that sort of minimum barrier to entry as it were, or opportunity is so key because I certainly know now, in sort of my music experience as a teacher is the fact that if you can afford it, then great, but it's such a big thing for parents to, to do, to sort of find a teacher to be able to afford it, to then support over the long term, because, you know, there is that kind of.
Speaker BYou want the experience to give children a go.
Speaker BBecause if you don't have a go at anything, you, you don't know how it's going to be.
Speaker BBut I think you'll probably agree with me.
Speaker BThere's the process of learning and the understanding and the practice and the ebb and flow of, of how that works and the, the relationship that you build with the teacher.
Speaker BLike you say, no matter what your learning circumstances are, that builds over time.
Speaker BAnd that I think has a financial cost.
Speaker BIf it's going to be a really expensive thing, where some parents are going to be like, oh, we've given it a go for a.
Speaker BTwo or three lessons.
Speaker BYou don't seem to already be performing concerts, therefore we're going to let you do something else.
Speaker BSo it's a, it's a really sort of key thing.
Speaker BAnd I think with that funding or that kind of investment not being given so that as many people have the opportunity to do it as possible is the thing which I think is the thing that sort of maybe stifling the arts and there's a bigger conversation there about how these things sort of move forward.
Speaker BBut yeah, such an important part of it.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AClearly that, that when, when you start out on any instrument, it, it doesn't always.
Speaker AI mean, occasionally you'll find someone who's very.
Speaker AJust got a natural ability.
Speaker ABut for, by and large, most people have to work for it.
Speaker ASo the parents are weighing up the cost of the lessons over the time, the duration of this process.
Speaker ASo it is.
Speaker APeople say, how long will it take my son or daughter to learn to play, say, the piano to a, a reasonable standard?
Speaker AWell, of course it's all fundamentally, it's down to a lot of practice and a lot of belief in wanting to learn and, and the teacher's there to guide you and bring out the best of you.
Speaker ABut it does take time and we are aware that it's not some, sometimes it can't.
Speaker AIt's not always affordable for parents with young families.
Speaker ASo we, we don't get subsidized by the government for our business.
Speaker AOur business is just run.
Speaker AIs a private business, but we have overheads because we, we rent a space so we have to charge according, but we compromise we work out deals where we can offset the cost of a lesson to, you know, give them a little bit more extra time or, you know, give them a reduced rate because of their circuit.
Speaker AThere's always compromise because I.
Speaker AEspecially when you.
Speaker AA student that comes to you and you can see they've got great potential and the worst thing you can do is knock that back because they might not get another chance to do that in their life.
Speaker ASo you encourage it and say you find a way so that is affordable for the parents.
Speaker AAnd then of course, once you start getting results, the parents are less concerned about the cost, but they're aware that their child is actually getting reaping the benefits of having private tuition.
Speaker BYeah, I completely agree.
Speaker BAnd I think the other thing to point out here for people listening, especially if they're sort of about to enter into this world, is the fact that the grades and the exams and those sorts of things are obviously a really good way to sort of see that progression and be able to sort of understand how that's working.
Speaker BBut you should never underestimate what everyone is learning within that as well.
Speaker BSo whether they ever take the exam or don't do the exam, the skill set that you're learning, like you say, the creativity, the way of understanding how your brain works and some of the skills that you're learning around just that particular instrument as well, has so many positive effects in other subjects, in their personality, how they interact, their social life, being part of things.
Speaker BAnd so sometimes that's harder to quantify until you have that sort of look of hindsight because you can say, God, this person's really changed.
Speaker BMy child's really changed since they started learning a year go or whatever that happens to be.
Speaker BSo I think that's a really important thing for people to be aware of.
Speaker AOh, absolutely, yeah.
Speaker AI mean, you're right because it does.
Speaker AIt brings out a different side of that person they didn't know existed.
Speaker AAnd I've had many children that come to me for lessons that didn't know quite where.
Speaker AWhere, why they were taking up the instrument they just had.
Speaker AAnd I maybe a friend had sort of played or maybe they parents.
Speaker AQuite often it's the parents like that.
Speaker AThe parents kind of almost like use their child as like a conduit for the fact they didn't learn as children themselves.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker ABut they've got a passion for music and they, they put it forward to their children and their children pick up on it and then before you know it, they're playing, you know, great pieces of music.
Speaker ABecause they've found themselves within it.
Speaker ABut is very rewarding for a teacher to see that as well, to see the pupil evolve and you know, achieve so much.
Speaker AI mean, I've got young children and maybe I've got a couple of children I'm teaching about 12, 13, they're already on like grade six or seven because they've just put themselves wholeheartedly into it.
Speaker AThey're getting into like that area where they can play in a band or they're meeting other like minded people they can jam with or, or form friendships because of the music, the, the common interest with music.
Speaker ASo it is an amazing thing to see, to experience firsthand.
Speaker AAnd of course the parents love it as well because they see it's a distraction from their other things.
Speaker ASo many young, I mean, I'm sure you're aware that so many young children now are into computer games and it almost takes up their entire life in some ways.
Speaker ASo the music side, if they can offset it and put the time aside to practice, the benefits are just like immeasurable really over time.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think, you know, some of sort of even now my best friends are the people that I work with and play, play with professionally because like I say there's something about that kind of connection that you have, which is quite hard to quantify.
Speaker BBut you know, you've got a real passion there that you can share and that comes across in your conversations, but also comes across and also your personalities and the way that you're, that you ate, the way you sort of put those things together.
Speaker BAnd I think it's also fascinating about like you say, the teaching side of it because one of the things that I find amazing sometimes is you take a child from quite a young age, maybe all the way through their sort of teenage years to what, what they're doing sort of post school.
Speaker BAnd I think that relationship can be really important because children don't have the same teacher across that many years in their academic life necessarily.
Speaker BAnd you sort of, they have a safety net with you.
Speaker BThey have that, they, they have that idea of what growth and learning is with one person.
Speaker BAnd I think it's a really sort of powerful and important relationship for those children that sort of have that longevity with it as well.
Speaker BAnd I think there's, there's something to be said for that.
Speaker AOh that, yeah, that's absolutely right.
Speaker AI mean I've, I've had children that I've taught say from the age of six or seven and usually the drop off or the cutoff point I suppose is when they get to their.
Speaker AThere are sort of A level standards, we only take them up to sort of grade eight because of.
Speaker AQuite often that you get this, that point where they're doing their GCSEO levels and they go.
Speaker AAnd then they're going, preparing to go to university.
Speaker ASo invariably there's a cutoff point when they no longer require to have.
Speaker AI mean, they might come back in years, years later, but what often happens is that you'll lose contact with them and then say, maybe five years later, you might by chance bump into them.
Speaker AAnd of course they've grown up quite considerably since the last time you've seen them, but they remember you.
Speaker AYou know, obviously we get older ourselves, but.
Speaker AAnd I've.
Speaker AI've been taken aback quite often when someone has sort of said, oh, you used to teach me guitar.
Speaker AOh, really?
Speaker AAnd then they mentioned their name.
Speaker AOh, yeah, I remember.
Speaker AAnd the, the, obviously the reward is when they say they still play.
Speaker AYeah, they still play.
Speaker AAnd they're thanking you for the time that you gave to teach them, which is brilliant.
Speaker AYou can't, you can't.
Speaker AThere's very few walks of life.
Speaker AI mean, teaching gives you that.
Speaker AAnyway, it's not all about.
Speaker AI mean, the thing is, I guess the fact that we're teaching primarily one to one, you've got that, like, you say that affinity with the student, like.
Speaker AWhereas if in a class, it's not so easy to, to do that because you might have people that aren't interested in what you're teaching.
Speaker ASo this is the one to one.
Speaker AA way of teaching is, is.
Speaker AIs a bonding, if you like.
Speaker BYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AAnd it stays with you.
Speaker BAnd I think you, you mentioned there, the GCSE and A levels, and I just like to sort of point out for people listening that there, there is usually a cutoff point at that point, partly because of, like, say, the school ends, you know, logistically, they might go to university and that sort of thing.
Speaker BAnd sometimes you find that people say, oh, should we stop the lessons before these exams start?
Speaker BBecause they need to focus on their exams.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's, obviously, it's a personal choice as to what you want to do.
Speaker BThe one thing I would always say is the fact that I think as teachers we're fairly aware of what's required when it comes to children learning and the pressures they're under for those sort of formal exams.
Speaker BBut the flip side of that is, is that, you know, I'm always thinking, but you need a break, you need to do something around that.
Speaker BSo if you're still passionate about music, having a practice playing some of the pieces that you know, having time out in a skill and an environment that you know that you love and you've really enjoyed is actually an enhancing experience rather than taking away from revision or taking away from studying.
Speaker BBecause I think that's where the, the, the, the mindset of sort of feeling that sort of stress and well being comes in.
Speaker BBecause it's the, it's the whole sort of fabric of what your life looks like, which is the support, supportive thing.
Speaker BSo yes, of course it's going to ebb and flow and you're going to focus on what you need to.
Speaker BBut keeping up those things which are integral to who you are and why you've been learning is something that I think you should keep in mind.
Speaker AYeah, that's very true.
Speaker AI mean, I, I think back to my journey when I first started to learn to play the guitar.
Speaker AIt wasn't about learning grades or studying pieces of music.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker AI just wanted to play like the people I listened to, you know, like the people I grew up listening to.
Speaker AAnd it loved their music.
Speaker AI just wanted to be able to feel that passion the way they did through the music.
Speaker AAnd it wasn't all about how many, how, how, how good I can get graded wise.
Speaker AAnd it was never about competing with other people.
Speaker AIt was just being the best I could be for my own personal goals and achievements.
Speaker ASo that, that's what started me.
Speaker ASo of course the fact that we as a school, we do encourage children to learn grades.
Speaker AIt's not the be all and end all.
Speaker ASome people just want to learn for fun.
Speaker AAnd I totally get.
Speaker AAlso with adults that we teach, is rare that we get an adult that will come through our school wanting to do grades.
Speaker AThey just want to learn how to play for fun and for their own enjoyment, which is totally fine.
Speaker AWhich is really all it comes down to.
Speaker AIt's about what you get out of it, the enjoyment you get, whether it be the simplest form of song or the most complex arrangement of a piece of music, if that's what makes, makes it work for you, then where.
Speaker AThat's what we try to do.
Speaker AWe try and guide them in that direction.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd you have to be very flexible as a teacher as well to cover all those faces.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BAnd I think, I think you sort of mentioned rock school.
Speaker BI mean, I think some of these organizations are set up really well now because it's that kind of, you know, we can use the material, you can learn some great songs where you can learn the skills that you need to progress.
Speaker BIt gives you a structure.
Speaker BBut like say take the exam, don't take the exam, use it as a step ladder, use it as a guide, whatever, whatever you want it to be.
Speaker BAnd I think that flexibility and that understanding, if I'm.
Speaker BI'm using all the things I've got to my availability to help me do what I'm really enjoying doing.
Speaker BAnd that I think in, in the, in the landscape that we're living with an education at the moment about it needing to look like this and do this and don't do that.
Speaker BI think it's a very sort of freeing thing, which is a very positive.
Speaker AYeah, that's very true.
Speaker AI mean for me as a.
Speaker AAs a musician, I'm a bit like half.
Speaker AHalf of me can read and play.
Speaker AThe other half of me is I use my improvised improvisational skills which doesn't require me to read.
Speaker AI just feel the music.
Speaker ASo I have a combination of both.
Speaker ABut I.
Speaker AIf I need to study a piece, I can study a piece as well.
Speaker ABut is.
Speaker AI've got the best of both worlds.
Speaker AI mean, I say I'm not so person.
Speaker AI would sit there and sight read every piece of music that I could.
Speaker AJust sit in with the band and just play whatever they're playing and jam around the ideas.
Speaker ASo there's that element of being a musician as well, which is equally important.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BCouldn't agree more.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo take us into sort of.
Speaker BYou sort of mentioned about the fun and the enjoyment and that sort of thing.
Speaker BWas that sort of integral to sort of having your own book and sort of giving people the opportunity to be able to sort of learn things in that way?
Speaker BDid you sort of.
Speaker BDid you sort of feel there was a gap there or a need to be able to provide something which was going to support people that you.
Speaker BYou weren't able to find elsewhere or was.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I wrote a book last year for.
Speaker AFor children, for a music songbook.
Speaker AI started doing it, I think probably about the time when we.
Speaker AWe went into Covid.
Speaker AWhen we went into lockdown.
Speaker ASeems like a distant memory now.
Speaker AAt that period I had like so many of us, we were kind of a little bit restricted to movement.
Speaker ASo I spent quite a bit of time at home and I.
Speaker AWe managed to survive by doing online lessons and during that time I started to get the idea of writing songs and also I took up.
Speaker AI signed up for a.
Speaker AAn online course called from the Songwriting Academy and I think they're London based and I did a course with them and I took.
Speaker AI had some mentoring as well.
Speaker AAnd that went on for quite, quite a few, about three months.
Speaker AI think I did that.
Speaker AAnd what I learned, the skills I developed from that was how to compose and how to, you know, be more concise with the way of putting a song together.
Speaker ABut what I decided to do because I, I thought, well, primarily I teach children.
Speaker ASo for me it was like, why don't I write a book for children?
Speaker AAnd I was aware if I.
Speaker AI started doing some research and I was, I was aware that most of the song books out there specifically for guitar, not so much for piano, but for guitar, like, had like beginner songs, were almost always the traditional nursery rhymes that we all grew up listening to, which are like, they're ancient on it.
Speaker AThey go back hundreds of years in some places.
Speaker ASo I decided to write something in, in relation to that, but in a modern form.
Speaker ASo what I did, I managed, managed to get the ideas for the songs from the children that I taught.
Speaker AThey come up with like a subject matter and I flesh it out from that point.
Speaker AFor example, I had one song.
Speaker AI have a song called Jeff the Dancing Shark, which is basically a song that a little boy I was teaching said, can we write a song about a show?
Speaker AAnd I was aware that, oh yeah, okay, you've got Baby Shark and all of these things like that.
Speaker AThey said, I want to call it Jeff.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI said, let's work with that.
Speaker AAnd after that I developed the song.
Speaker AIt took a while, got the melody.
Speaker AThe melodies came a lot easier than the words.
Speaker ABut ultimately I managed to create the character.
Speaker AI got an illustrator to do the, the work for the book.
Speaker AI got a guy from Rock School who I knew really well.
Speaker AHe did all the backing tracks for me.
Speaker AAnd then I used local singers to do the, the vocals for the each song.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker AAnd then I got someone to score out all the music as well, from for piano and for tablature, for guitar.
Speaker AI mean, I did most of a lot of it myself, but I needed someone to do it, like using Sibelius.
Speaker ASo that's what I did.
Speaker AI created the book, got a publishing deal, and I put the book out about just under a year ago.
Speaker AAnd it's widely available through Amazon and Waterstones.
Speaker AAnd I'd like to say it's of sure for a success, but it's been very slow.
Speaker AI realized that I need to work harder the other side of the actual publication, but I need to do things more like Tick Tock or Instagram postings which I'm not so good at, but it's something I'm, I'm working on to try and get a bit more traction with the book.
Speaker BYeah, it's kind of that sort of make it just pick and people aware, isn't it?
Speaker BLike you say, you sort of think the hard work is the creator, the creating everything, but actually often it comes a little bit further around.
Speaker BBut I think, I think these conversations are really important because it's the same, it's the same when you're learning an instrument, isn't it?
Speaker BIt's like you think it's up to this point, oh, it's about learning the music.
Speaker BOh, and then I've got the skills of having to perform and then I've got the skills of being able to do this and that and maybe I'll record it or whatever it happens to be.
Speaker BThere's all these extra things around.
Speaker BAnd I think for me as well, whenever we sort of find ourselves in those positions, it's that kind of, oh, I've got something new to learn now.
Speaker BOr this feels a little bit, I've got in my comfort zone doing what I do day to day, and now I've got something different which takes me out of that.
Speaker BAnd I always think, yeah, there's a real positivity in that because then I kind of remember, oh yeah, because the people I'm teaching, they're out of their comfort zone a lot of the time because we're doing something new.
Speaker BAnd I think there's a, there's something about the humanity of understanding that which so makes me a better teacher or certainly a better musician, I think.
Speaker AYeah, you've got a good point there.
Speaker ABecause, yeah, like say I, I'm within my profession as a teacher.
Speaker AI, I go to work every day like everyone else does, but I, I, I know exactly what I'm doing.
Speaker AEvery lesson I teach is, is different.
Speaker AI, I accommodate my lesson to according to who I'm teaching, how they need to learn, what I think they need to focus on.
Speaker ABut outside of that, I, I'm say going on to things like the Internet, putting up promotion, promoting a book on the Internet is something I'm not very, very skilled at this point.
Speaker ASo it's a learning curve for me, which I'm still struggling with.
Speaker ABut I'm sure the good thing is once, unlike say, if you put a post up anything on, say, Facebook, it's kind of red and then people move on.
Speaker ABut with something like a product, you can keep, is you can keep promoting it, keep Putting it out there and hopefully find a market for it, which is what I'm.
Speaker AI'm intending to do, but I just need to be a little bit more proactive with it, which is probably the only thing that I'm lacking at the moment is that little bit of.
Speaker AA bit more drive towards getting it out.
Speaker AI was under the impression once it was out there was just going to sell itself, but it's clearly not.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people doing similar things.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think I speak to a lot of authors on the show, obviously, because they've created something that's supporting education in whichever way that happens to be.
Speaker BAnd I hear that story a lot.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's about.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker BUnderstanding that, like saying.
Speaker BGetting that message out there and just, you know, like, say the more conversations you have, the better.
Speaker BThat's really.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I think it's good because it's a reflection on, in a way, of how some of my students feel when they're struggling to get, you know, their skill set together for.
Speaker ATo perform a piece or to do a.
Speaker AAn exam.
Speaker AAnd they're frustrated and they think, oh, I'm never going to get as good as I need to.
Speaker ABut what I'm seeing at the other side now, I'm thinking, well, I've got to feel the same way about what I'm trying to achieve with what I've done.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AIs just don't give up.
Speaker ANever always believe in what you.
Speaker AYou do, but keep striving to be this the best you can.
Speaker AAnd hopefully I'll get a breakthrough with it at some point and someone will pick up on it and say, this is great.
Speaker AWe want to, you know, enhance the sound of your book.
Speaker AAnd then, yeah, it will start doing.
Speaker AI've got enough material to write two more books, but because I haven't been selling this one, I.
Speaker AI kind of feel like I've lost my mojo a little bit.
Speaker ABut that's just kind of expect.
Speaker AI've kind of got used.
Speaker AI've.
Speaker AI've got some sort of.
Speaker AI think when it first came out, I was very excited.
Speaker AI think, as any author, new author would be, you've got something out of products out on the market.
Speaker ABut after a few months, I sort of.
Speaker AMy feet came.
Speaker AI came back down to earth a bit and realized it's not as easy as I thought it was going to be and I need to try harder to try and to do the right thing to promote it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think the.
Speaker BI think it's a bit like the teaching that sort of.
Speaker BThe arc of that learning process is really key, isn't it?
Speaker BI mean, I don't know, maybe this resonates with you.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BI sort of try when my pupils start to understand that you start with a piece and it feels really difficult because you're learning new skills or there's something different there.
Speaker BAnd then you do the repetition and it gets a bit easier, but you don't quite know it as well as you could do.
Speaker BBut then it gets easier, and then you think you know it, and then you realize that if you had to perform it, you quite know it well enough, and then you repeat it again and you keep playing it, and then you can almost do it in your sleep, and you're like, I can't imagine I didn't do this to begin with.
Speaker BAnd I say, once you understand that arc, you've kind of got it nailed.
Speaker BBecause all we're then going to do is we're going to have another piece and another piece, and it might get more difficult.
Speaker BBut when you understand where you are in that cycle, then you can kind of give yourself a little bit of grace and say, it's okay.
Speaker BI'm not able to play it just yet, but I will be able to play it in time.
Speaker BAnd you sort of.
Speaker BYou sort of have some sort of solace in understanding that.
Speaker BAnd I think what you were talking about there in terms of sort of the promotional side and.
Speaker BAnd the able to sort of share that it's the same sort of thing.
Speaker BYou know, you think it's going to look like this and then it's not, but then you get a bit of traction and then you do you have another thought about doing something differently, and then you learn how to do that, and then you sort of go around that cycle again.
Speaker BAnd like I say that the identification of that, I think is.
Speaker BAnd the journey that you understand that is, I think, certainly gives me a little bit of solace in the things that I do sort of, okay, where am I on this sort of arc?
Speaker BAnd then I sort of, what can I do next?
Speaker BAnd then that kind of helps me anyway.
Speaker AYeah, I agree with you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's just.
Speaker AIt's like I say, it's like reconfiguring the way you.
Speaker AYou set out to do it and try different things.
Speaker ATry.
Speaker AI mean, I.
Speaker AI should know this in a way because I'm.
Speaker AI'm a.
Speaker AI'm a gigging musician and I.
Speaker AI play.
Speaker AI don't.
Speaker AI don't play in a band these Days I don't have so much time to do that.
Speaker AI just play in a duo and the guy I play with, we, we primarily just do local gigs over here.
Speaker ACaught some corporates, some weddings, but a lot of restaurant work.
Speaker ABut we actually just play instrumental guitar music.
Speaker ASo we don't sing and so.
Speaker ABut we play our repertoires vast.
Speaker AIt's like over 200 plus songs.
Speaker ABut whenever we bring in a new song, it's always a little bit of apprehension.
Speaker AWe rehearsed it, but when you put it out into the public domain, you always think, how are we gonna, how's this gonna come across?
Speaker AWhat if we make mistakes?
Speaker AAnd you realize it's just a learning curve.
Speaker AEverything you do, you have to process it.
Speaker AAnd then you keep.
Speaker AIf it doesn't quite work, I think you get a good reaction.
Speaker AYou're.
Speaker AYou can do it again.
Speaker AAnd then you, there's a positive feeling.
Speaker AAnd then I've played many gigs where I thought I didn't play so well.
Speaker AAnd then someone will come up say, that was brilliant.
Speaker AI really love what you guys did.
Speaker ASo you just don't know.
Speaker AYou don't know.
Speaker ASo you can be your own worst critic, but at the end of the day you, you can't be relying on just, you know, oh, I know this well enough, it's going to be fine.
Speaker AYou've still got to be a hundred percent every time I could play.
Speaker AI mean, I'm sure professional bands like everything say that you think someone like maybe the Rolling Stones, how many times they must have played Satisfaction or, you know, Give Me Shelter, all those amazing songs, but they still have to perform it every single time as good as they can because people expect it.
Speaker AAnd you can't be too complacent.
Speaker AYou can never sort of think, ah, I needn't get any better.
Speaker AYou've got to keep improving to get as good as you can and then prove to yourself that you've got the capabilities to do that.
Speaker ASo it's the same process for putting out a book.
Speaker AI can't.
Speaker AJust because I've got a book out that doesn't mean it's.
Speaker AEveryone's going to love it.
Speaker AI've got to keep proving that it's a worthwhile pursuit and it's worth people investing in it.
Speaker AYeah, very, very hard.
Speaker BYeah, exactly, exactly.
Speaker BAnd we sort of talked about sort of the experience that we've had as teachers and sort of looking back, but it's there a teacher that you remember or an education experience that you remember that it could be positive or Negative.
Speaker BBut I, I certainly also understand that maybe I've sort of drawn on that experience in terms of the way I then now come across sort of in, in my professional work.
Speaker AThat's not specifically a teacher.
Speaker AI mean, I had, I've had, I, I could think back when I was learning to play.
Speaker AThere was.
Speaker AI picked up lots of different things from different people I knew.
Speaker AQuite often it was a friend, you know, that I, I sort of jam with and we'd pick up ideas from each other.
Speaker AAnd then as I had a great experience of seeing so many live performers growing up, that they were like the catalyst for me to want to, to learn to play.
Speaker AAnd I actually learned from people that I teach, funny enough, it might sound, sound a bit sort of back to front, but I often learn things that, that I wouldn't have picked up on if I hadn't.
Speaker AThey had like a child or so why do we do this?
Speaker AAnd then you kind of analyze what you're teaching them because they've asked the question, you know, and sometimes things you take for granted, it has to be pointed out, this isn't always the way that other people think.
Speaker AI mean, the music I grew up listening to, for example, I, I take for granted now that the, the artists that I grew up listening to, I assume everyone would like them the same way I do, but that's not the case.
Speaker ASo I'll often get a young, say it's a 10, 11 year old child say, they've never heard of that music.
Speaker AAnd I have to reassess that and think, well, I need to teach in a different way because I need to teach in a modern way.
Speaker AAlthough the theoretical aspects of music remain the same, but the approach to teaching is different because that person doesn't think that way that I do about music.
Speaker AYou know, I think I'm thinking about things like rap music, a lot of young children into rap.
Speaker AAnd I think how do I teach that style of music to young people?
Speaker AAnd so you have to find a way to relate it so that they, they want to learn with you.
Speaker AYou know, you've got to stay young.
Speaker AI think that's probably the, the key thing here.
Speaker AIf you don't stay young, you feel you become obsolete.
Speaker BYeah, and that's kind of like we were saying at the beginning about that kind of opportunity and experience, isn't it?
Speaker BBecause what you do have is the ability to open up this whole back catalog of amazing music.
Speaker BBut you don't get to do any of that just by saying, right, we're going to start by listening to Black Sabbath.
Speaker BBecause they're like exactly, exactly.
Speaker BWhat's that?
Speaker BYou need that initial in and like say understanding what they might be already exposed to or something they might be listening to.
Speaker AThat is exactly the whole point.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAs a teacher you can't go in like say this is what you're going to be learning because immediately you're on the back foot with that child because they're not interested.
Speaker AYou've got to embrace what they want to learn and find ways to introduce the music that you, you, you're passionate about.
Speaker AAnd ultimately if they can start are engaging with music from the past as well as the present, then you're, you've achieved your goal which is giving them a well rounded education.
Speaker BYeah, absolutely.
Speaker BIs there a piece of advice you were given or maybe a piece of advice you give your younger self, looking back now that you think might be valuable?
Speaker AYeah, I wish I'd.
Speaker AI mean I look at the age of some children that start learning instruments now they're like five, four.
Speaker AIt was ridiculously young.
Speaker AI wish I'd learned maybe a bit younger so that I had more of a head start.
Speaker ABecause although having said that, I'm not sure I would have been become a teacher in the way that I did if I'd gone a different path.
Speaker AIt's impossible to say, but yeah.
Speaker AAnd I think the advice I would give myself is that have a bit more belief in my convictions because obviously there's a time and I see in a lot of young people when they're, they're not sure where they're going with.
Speaker AOf course when you're going through life, your early learning years, of course you're not sure where your life's going to go in the next 10, 20 years.
Speaker ABut I would hope that I, I would have had a bit more belief in my convictions at a younger age.
Speaker AI guess I'm looking at my.
Speaker AI've got a daughter who's 23 now, or 22.
Speaker A23.
Speaker AShe's just finishing her last year of degree course in, up in Northumbria.
Speaker AShe's doing a degree in arts, fine arts and she's very talented, but she's at that point in her life where she's coming out of uni, she's going to be going into the work, the working environment, into a full time education, sorry, full time work.
Speaker AAnd she's unsure where her life's gonna evolve, how her life's going to evolve in the next few years.
Speaker AAnd I understand where she's coming from because although she's got that qualification.
Speaker AIt's not set, there's no path set to say this is exactly how your life's going to be.
Speaker AYou've just got to rely on what you've learned, the skills you have, obviously, obviously your qualifications, but that.
Speaker AThat can only manifest over time, I guess.
Speaker ASo, yeah.
Speaker AI wish I'd had a bit more understanding of which way it would have gone an earlier age, but impossible to say, really.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BNow, obviously, the acronym FIRE is really important to us here on the show, and by that we mean feedback, inspiration, resilience and empowerment.
Speaker BWhat is it that strikes you when you see that?
Speaker BEither one individual word or maybe even.
Speaker ACollectively, all four of them, actually, all four words.
Speaker AUndoubtedly.
Speaker AFeedback is important to get.
Speaker AYou know that particularly in my job, I need feedback from the.
Speaker AThe people I'm teaching.
Speaker AAlso the parents, they feel like their child is getting the right education and they get.
Speaker AIf they get good exam results, I get a lot of great feedback.
Speaker AThat's really important to me.
Speaker AInspiration is what I provide for children as I teach them.
Speaker AAll my knowledge and all my years of doing it and how I got connected with music in the first place is very much through inspiration.
Speaker AResilience.
Speaker AKeep trying, keep pushing.
Speaker ATry to be the best you can.
Speaker AEven when you feel like it's not going as you expect, you've got to keep trying.
Speaker AAnd, yeah, that is such an important part of life anyway.
Speaker AAnd empowerment.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ATo give people the belief that they can become anything they want and is part of being a teacher.
Speaker AYou know, those things strike me straight away about those four words.
Speaker BYeah, I.
Speaker BI couldn't agree more.
Speaker BAnd it's been absolutely brilliant just chatting to you about music.
Speaker BIt's not something I get.
Speaker AIs that gone already?
Speaker AHave we done an hour?
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BTime flies as we get, as we go through.
Speaker BSo, yeah, thank you so much for sharing your insights and wisdom from all of that.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I think it's really important for.
Speaker BFor people to hear it, especially if they're in the learning and education world.
Speaker BBut I think music isn't necessarily always in the front.
Speaker BFront of their mind.
Speaker BSo I think to sort of hear how it is from our side of the track, as it were, so to speak.
Speaker BI think is.
Speaker BIs really important.
Speaker AIt shapes my life, Mark.
Speaker AWithout doubt, without music, I wouldn't have what I have now.
Speaker AI mean, it really has shame.
Speaker AOh, before you do go, a little plug for my book here.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BFantastic.
Speaker BAnd we'll make sure we've got.
Speaker BWe've got a link, obviously, to the website and everything on the description.
Speaker BSo they'll be able to.
Speaker AYeah, I mean, obviously any.
Speaker AAny sales are greatly appreciated, but as I say, it's not all about financial gain.
Speaker AIt's about getting recognition for an achievement.
Speaker AFor myself, I'm proud of what I've done with it.
Speaker AAnd as I say, it's something that I never imagined I would become an author aside of being a teacher, which is an added bonus for me at my stage in life.
Speaker BFantastic.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd just leave people with the website for the music school as well, so they.
Speaker BIf they.
Speaker BIf they are in a way of needing that support, then they can find that.
Speaker AYeah, it's.
Speaker AWww.janker.co.uk okay.
Speaker AJ E N C A.
Speaker BFantastic.
Speaker BWe'll have a link to that in the.
Speaker BIn the show notes as well.
Speaker BSuper brilliant.
Speaker AThank you, Mark.
Speaker BLovely.
Speaker BThanks, Martin.
Speaker BI really appreciate your time and a great conversation and wish you the best with your book and all your continued success with the music school.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AThank you for your time today.
Speaker AMuch appreciated.
Speaker BEducation is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire.