I'm going to have classical piano lessons next.

Yes, I was forced to take piano lessons for 8 years as a child.

I took piano lessons and dancing lessons. I was very good at piano.

However, I began composing as soon as I started taking piano lessons.

Every day, I start with a workout; I do vocal lessons, I do piano lessons.

I grew up taking piano lessons and liking Wagner when I was in second grade.

I play the sax, piano, guitar, bass... I started as a kid with piano lessons.

I've no real musical training, although I took some piano lessons a while ago.

I saw the film 'Amadeus' from when I was five, which made me want to take piano lessons.

There was a lot of music in our home. Mom played piano in church and gave piano lessons.

My upbringing was definitely piano lessons and homework, just as much as the next Asian kid.

I started piano lessons when I was four; I was being classically trained at the Colburn School.

I was coerced into taking piano lessons in the early '50s. It was a quite unpleasant experience.

I started with the piano-accordion and rebelled against it, but I could not afford piano lessons.

I took piano lessons when I was like 5 or 6 but that was a long time ago. I stopped when I was 13.

So I guess I had, I think they tell me I had, about three years total of piano lessons, off and on.

I've always been involved in music. Whether it be taking piano lessons or something, I always have.

I had piano lessons when I was younger, but I quit because I didn't want to sit and learn the scales.

I never took guitar lessons. I took classical piano lessons from the age of six when we lived in Holland.

My son's taking drum lessons, and my daughter's taking piano lessons. One day they're going to start a band.

I used to raise the devil when my father made me practice the flute and my mother made me take piano lessons.

I was always super, super musical. So my parents recognized that and put me in choirs, piano lessons, and all that.

I had piano lessons when I was a kid, like most people. And hated them, like most people. And quit, like most people.

I was a lifeguard, camp counselor, the president of the YMCA Leaders Corps. I also took piano lessons. I was a dancer.

I ended up taking piano lessons at a really young age, I took, like, years of piano lessons, and I always loved to sing.

I want to take piano lessons, I want to study at university, I want to travel, I want to do other parts, make another movie.

At 16, I was going to church and playing music for church, and Dad would only pay for piano lessons so I could play at church.

When I was nine, my father said 'You can take piano lessons or do karate' - I had a black belt and was competing before I was 19.

My dad died in 1980, and I found out afterwards from mum that my piano lessons, which cost £2 a week, took up nearly a third of his income.

There was a substantial vinyl collection in my home, and my mom played piano. We, the children, were enrolled in piano lessons very early on.

I started dance class when I was a little kid, and then, when I turned 11, I started taking vocal lessons, guitar lessons, and piano lessons.

Growing up, I was so involved in music in different ways, be it taking piano lessons or guitar lessons. As a listener, I was always so inspired.

I had piano lessons at five and started guitar at ten, but although music and acting was always around me, my parents never pressured me into it.

I took piano lessons as a kid, and my daughter's played piano since before she started kindergarten, so classical piano is something I really love.

You know, my family is very musical, I was surrounded by it. And from four years old I was the one that asked my mother could I take piano lessons.

I was guided into piano lessons and 'guided' is a nice way of saying 'forced.' I don't regret it, but I think music theory as a concept doesn't work.

I took piano lessons and I wanted to play drums when I was six. Luckily enough, my parents let me have a drum kit in my room - which is kind of crazy.

I met my wife when we were both 19 or 20, at a music school where she was taking voice and piano lessons and I was doing classes in music theory and composition.

For ten years, I went to piano lessons. I don't think I'm a very musical person, and the theory quite defeated me, but I had a freak aptitude for Debussy and Ravel.

My brother and I played music together, and we all liked to show off. But I wasn't a particularly musical kid. I did piano lessons and quit. I got kicked out of the choir.

I tried a little of everything when I was little. I tried karate, I tried ballet, I tried piano lessons and singing lessons... I was a pretty normal kid, for the most part.

My parents made me take piano lessons from 1st grade to when I graduated from high school, and music never came to me as naturally as my other more visual artistic talents.

I call myself the world's best faker. It was hard to get piano lessons, it was hard to dedicate myself into reading the music, but it doesn't stop me from touching the keys.

During the couple of years it took to write 'At The Bottom of Everything', I decided, on the sort of hopeful whim that occasionally overtakes me, to sign up for piano lessons.

All the kids at the kindergarten had to play, or at least touch, the piano. It was a good start. Then, after kindergarten, all my friends took piano lessons, so I joined them.

My mother also had us take piano lessons, and this had a similar effect. I hated those lessons, but I now play regularly for pleasure and have even tried my hand at composing.

I had piano lessons when I was five or six years old, so my mom got me this little keyboard in my room. And then it progressed from that to classical guitar and drums and oboe.

I didn't get into the music business because somebody made me take piano lessons, you know. I got into music because I was a natural writer and had a lot of curiosity about sound.

I started taking piano lessons from the age of six years old. It's such an essential part of what I do in the production process. I wouldn't be Kygo today without those piano lessons.

Although my dad was a doctor, we weren't necessarily a super-artsy family. We were just a classic, traditional family who got to take a lot of piano lessons and became a bunch of musicians.

Share This Page