Private lessons
(Instruments, singing)
Hello Hong Kong friends,
Let me introduce myself: my name is Domitille. I am a French mother living in Hong Kong since October 2017. Musician from a young age, I learned piano and music theory in a small neighborhood music school in Lyon (France), very simple, caring and wonderful. Passionate about this instrument, I have over 20 years of piano studies to my credit, and hold my Cycle 3 Piano certificate (French Grade 8 equivalent) and DFE Degree in Music theory obtained at the “Conservatoire de Lyon”. Long after obtaining these diplomas, I became a student of Bruno Robilliard, renowned teacher in Lyon, international concertist, composer and talented improviser.
From the age of 16 (and throughout my studies), instead of babysitting like all my friends, I gave piano lessons to young children. And already at the time I liked the transmission, the wonder of the little ones in front of this immeeeeense keyboard and their enthusiasm when they managed to play their first rhyme at the end of their very first lesson …
If my academic career then led me to more traditional studies (prep school, ESCP business school, career in consulting and entrepreneurship), I have never forgotten this great passion for the piano. I remember during my intense prep school years, I continued to play the piano for up to 2 hours a day to “decompress” … Or even after, during my business school years, I moved twice a year in Europe with my suitcase and my digital piano, hardly financed by my little summer job done for this specific purpose, just after my business school entrance exams.
After my studies and the start of my professional career in Paris, London, and then Hong Kong, my piano continued to be my faithful friend in the evenings and weekends … I played during parties with friends, during weddings, at sunday masses…And piano is still a very big part of my life now. Need to decompress? Hop, I play Beethoven’s Pathetics sonata to let go of all this energy! A little bit of blues ? Fortunately, my piano is there to cheer me up with Chopin’s Fantaisie Impromptue! Need some peace? Let’s go for a quiet Nocturne that will allow me to relax after a big day … Need to escape? I sit down in front of my piano and let go of my fingers, improvising what comes to mind … Music is really magical: it calms, it comforts, it energizes, it feels good!
So, in 2019, when my eldest boy Grégoire turned 6 years old and asked me to “do like mom” and start learning the piano, it was only natural that I looked for a music school in Hong Kong, in the hope he could develop that same passion.
But there it was a bit of a cold shower: in Hong Kong, to learn the piano or any other instrument, there are not a lot of options available for non-cantonese speakers like us: either we call on a home teacher for individual lessons, or we enroll our child in a rare “academy” of music in Central or Aberdeen (that would also offer only individual lessons but in a more structured environment). Then, in the local system, at a more or less rapid pace according to his abilities, the child is strongly encouraged to “pass his grades” (8 in total, the eighth corresponding to French Cycle 3 more or less), which allows him to build a good academic record. Learning music (piano and violin in particular) is indeed a strong argument for entering a good primary or secondary school in Hong Kong, which explains why the piano or the violin are so popular on the island, to the detriment of other instruments. Unfortunately, there are many students but very few enthusiasts: many drop out after a few years … why?
After having discussed it a lot with local teachers and after comparing the local method with the European one which, even if it has shortcomings (who liked music theory in France ???) has served me well, here are my conclusions:
My conviction is that there are two essential things that should be encouraged while teaching music in Hong Kong: group dynamics and musical culture.
For this reason, I want to help young music lovers: FHK Music in Stanley offers individual instrument lessons accompanied by group lessons in music theory and musical culture, so that students receive a complete education that will make them truly progress, and especially knowing and loving classical music.
I wanted to do it in a simple way, in parallel with my main professional activity, by setting up an organization made up of a team of experienced partner teachers, caring, motivated and sharing my vision of music for children.
Since March 2021, FHK Music offers:
My greatest joy: when parents tell me that their children have taught them a lot of things in the evening at dinner, after my musical culture class … the whole family benefits from it, it creates a bond and it even makes parents want to get back to the piano or the violin!
And then ? I do not intend to stop there: I am looking for guitar, flute, trumpet, clarinet, drums teachers … to join the team and always offer more choices to children. My dream ? Set up a children’s orchestra in Stanley, because music triggers the best emotions when it’s shared … Maybe soon!
Hello Hong Kong friends,
Let me introduce myself: my name is Domitille. I am a French mother living in Hong Kong since October 2017. Musician from a young age, I learned piano and music theory in a small neighborhood music school in Lyon (France), very simple, caring and wonderful. Passionate about this instrument, I have over 20 years of piano studies to my credit, and hold my Cycle 3 Piano certificate (French Grade 8 equivalent) and DFE Degree in Music theory obtained at the “Conservatoire de Lyon”. Long after obtaining these diplomas, I became a student of Bruno Robilliard, renowned teacher in Lyon, international concertist, composer and talented improviser.
From the age of 16 (and throughout my studies), instead of babysitting like all my friends, I gave piano lessons to young children. And already at the time I liked the transmission, the wonder of the little ones in front of this immeeeeense keyboard and their enthusiasm when they managed to play their first rhyme at the end of their very first lesson …
If my academic career then led me to more traditional studies (prep school, ESCP business school, career in consulting and entrepreneurship), I have never forgotten this great passion for the piano. I remember during my intense prep school years, I continued to play the piano for up to 2 hours a day to “decompress” … Or even after, during my business school years, I moved twice a year in Europe with my suitcase and my digital piano, hardly financed by my little summer job done for this specific purpose, just after my business school entrance exams.
After my studies and the start of my professional career in Paris, London, and then Hong Kong, my piano continued to be my faithful friend in the evenings and weekends … I played during parties with friends, during weddings, at sunday masses…And piano is still a very big part of my life now. Need to decompress? Hop, I play Beethoven’s Pathetics sonata to let go of all this energy! A little bit of blues ? Fortunately, my piano is there to cheer me up with Chopin’s Fantaisie Impromptue! Need some peace? Let’s go for a quiet Nocturne that will allow me to relax after a big day … Need to escape? I sit down in front of my piano and let go of my fingers, improvising what comes to mind … Music is really magical: it calms, it comforts, it energizes, it feels good!
So, in 2019, when my eldest boy Grégoire turned 6 years old and asked me to “do like mom” and start learning the piano, it was only natural that I looked for a music school in Hong Kong, in the hope he could develop that same passion.
But there it was a bit of a cold shower: in Hong Kong, to learn the piano or any other instrument, there are not a lot of options available for non-cantonese speakers like us: either we call on a home teacher for individual lessons, or we enroll our child in a rare “academy” of music in Central or Aberdeen (that would also offer only individual lessons but in a more structured environment). Then, in the local system, at a more or less rapid pace according to his abilities, the child is strongly encouraged to “pass his grades” (8 in total, the eighth corresponding to French Cycle 3 more or less), which allows him to build a good academic record. Learning music (piano and violin in particular) is indeed a strong argument for entering a good primary or secondary school in Hong Kong, which explains why the piano or the violin are so popular on the island, to the detriment of other instruments. Unfortunately, there are many students but very few enthusiasts: many drop out after a few years … why?
After having discussed it a lot with local teachers and after comparing the local method with the European one which, even if it has shortcomings (who liked music theory in France ???) has served me well, here are my conclusions:
My conviction is that there are two essential things that should be encouraged while teaching music in Hong Kong: group dynamics and musical culture.
For this reason, I want to help young music lovers: FHK Music in Stanley offers individual instrument lessons accompanied by group lessons in music theory and musical culture, so that students receive a complete education that will make them truly progress, and especially knowing and loving classical music.
I wanted to do it in a simple way, in parallel with my main professional activity, by setting up an organization made up of a team of experienced partner teachers, caring, motivated and sharing my vision of music for children.
Since March 2021, FHK Music offers:
My greatest joy: when parents tell me that their children have taught them a lot of things in the evening at dinner, after my musical culture class … the whole family benefits from it, it creates a bond and it even makes parents want to get back to the piano or the violin!
And then ? I do not intend to stop there: I am looking for guitar, flute, trumpet, clarinet, drums teachers … to join the team and always offer more choices to children. My dream ? Set up a children’s orchestra in Stanley, because music triggers the best emotions when it’s shared … Maybe soon!