ARCT • Teachers’ Diploma (RCM) in-progress
Trained Music Together Teacher
Erin Plank (they/he) is a passionate young piano teacher. For their professional development, Erin received the highest exam scores in all of Canada last year for “Teaching Elementary Piano” with the RCM.
Erin’s main goal is to turn students into lifelong music lovers, not just pianists. I seek to provide them with the tools to practice efficiently at home, sight read a song at their friend’s piano, learn the melody to a song off the radio by ear, and nurture a technical foundation that lasts a lifetime so it’s “just like riding a bike” to play the piano. And even better, they’ll want to.
Get to know Erin…Beyond the Bio!
Hobbies: Piano, weightlifting, playing with my cat, and hanging out with friends
Musical influences: Ben Folds, Brad Mehldau, Edvard Grieg
Favourite food: Fried chicken sandwich
Least favourite food: snap peas, because I ate too many as a kid one time and threw up and now I dislike the smell
Favourite music: Romantic era piano music, Beach Boys and similar era music, math rock
Favourite song: “How Dare You Want More” by Bleachers
Favourite movie: Sing Street
Favouirite movie music: main theme for “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” or anything Star Wars
Favourite musical theatre/opera: Wozzeck
Best quote from your teacher: “Don’t show the audience you messed up, they won’t know! Keep going!”
Favourite quote: “That’s what life is, Happy Sad”
Favourite book: Recursion by Blake Crouch
Best thing about teaching at ABC: Getting to reach and connect with so many lovely people!
Latest Homework from Erin
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Thursday March 30 Lessons – Erin P
Welcome to what is hopefully truly Spring! Enjoy the sunshine folks :)
Liam
*New* Royal Procession – Play the melody louder than the accompaniment. Think of what chord you are playing as you go, I’ve written most of them in. A nice round robust sound is ideal for these “royal” pieces so play deep into the keys.
*New* Microjazz 1 – Work on however much you can! The exercises are very helpful, so work on them all at a comfy tempo. When you do put the piece together, it’ll be like doing a really easy puzzle :) Count nice and slowly and accurately.
New minor scale family = E. E natural minor (just F#), harmonic minor (raised 7th), melodic minor (raised 6 and 7 going up, lowered 6 and 7 going down). Same fingering as always, R: 123 12345, L: 54321 321
Fiona
Russian Sailor Dance – You’ve got this! Keep your LH finger 3 on the G# key. Make sure there’s a big difference between your bouncy staccatos and your smooth legatos. Go nice and steady, it is a dance after all.
*New* Top Secret Agent – This introduces a new concept = the flat! It has the same rules as the sharp does, but it lowers the note. This means a black key could be called a sharp or a flat, like F#/Gb.
Marita
*New* Microjazz 1 – Practice the first 8 bars of this one, counting carefully. The exercises on the back give you all the puzzle pieces to a successful performance, so it’s worth looking at them. The LH is always exactly on the beat nice and steady, the RH gets to have some offbeat fun. The articulation (like the connected vs detached notes) make the rhythm easier and flow more naturally.
The Snake was amazing today! Great work, proud.
*Please practice Heavenly Blue this week so I can hear it next week, all the way through :)
Sara
Today I heard your etudes:
Arabesque – great quiet at the beginning!! Start thinking about the crescendo AND diminuendos in the B section where the LH gets the 16th notes. Dropping onto the pinky using your arm weight and then rolling your wrist (and therefore arm energy) upwards will help to execute this diminuendo.
In the Spirit – Explore the tempo range, perhaps a little slower will help it to swing and sound more laidback and “cool”. Emphasize the diminuendo at the bottom of the page more. Great accents and pedalling.
*New* Three plus Two Blues – Have fun with this one! Do as much as you can this week. Count 123 12. Use the 1-4, 2-5 LH fingering (or else it’s very tricky). Ensure you’re counting so you don’t turn it into 6/4, and enjoy the sound of constant dominant chord sounds! *Jazzy*
Sightread any of your old books – playing through ANYTHING is amazing sightreading practice. Look at the time signature, key signature, what’s the fingering, general shape of the melody, any hand position changes, articulation etc. before you begin playing. Count yourself in! Subdivide if you need to (ex. 1+2+3+4+ to make sure you play 8th notes the right speed).
Sina
Homework – D position. Spend some more time getting this one fluent. Make sure the 8th notes are half the length of the quarter note, ex. 1and2and. Great work !
*New* Movin’ On – This piece is a 12 bar Blues form. It spends 4 bars in the home position of G, then goes to C for 2 bars, back to G for 2, then D, C, G G to finish off. This means our hand LH moves twice, once to C position, and back again. Notice there are both sharps AND flats AND naturals in this piece. Sharp = raise, flat = lower, natural = neutralize (white key). Also notice the ties in the RH (for example that initial B is held for 5 beats). Have fun with it!
Saturday February 18 Lessons – Erin P
Happy long weekend everyone! Enjoy and thanks for your hard work <3
Isabella
Yankee Doodle. Good reading today! Keep your eyes on the page and keep making those connections of how the notes look on the page to how they feel on the keyboard. Make sure the notes in the intro get the correct amount of beats (half notes, the hollow ones, get 2 beats).
G major scale. Same fingering as the C scale (RH = 123 12345. LH = 54321 321) except it has one black key, F#, right before the top. Remember to keep the same fingering going up and down, just reversed.
Jadon
When the Saints Go Marching lead sheet. Play the melody while using any rhythms you like for the LH chords.
Scales with proper fingering. You know C, D, E, F, G, A: all of them (except RH F) use the exact same fingering. RH= 123 12345. LH = 54321 321.
Grace
Alone in a Crowd and Moon River. Print these out or read them off your laptop but our intention here is sightreading and always looking to the page for details – not immediately internalizing the notes and discarding the page :)
Practice your staccato touch with scales (finger staccato) and solid intervals like 5ths or 6ths (wrist staccato) using both hands.
Shelton
Morning by Grieg. Great reading today! This piece begins with a LH melody first, then right, than LH to end it off. Both follow the same phrase shape. Remember the 8th notes have to be half as long as the quarter notes, so two of them can fit in the time of one beat.
Warmup with your C, G or D major scales. You can play them legato or staccato.
Julian
Storms of Saturn – All. Your hands stay in the same Whole Tone scale shape until the top of page two where the RH goes up to treble C position and the LH reaches down to some different low notes. Have fun creating a musical landscape with the pedal. You could put a space movie scene (or Star Wars) on silent and then play this to be a soundtrack!!
You can learn the LH This Old Man for some extra practice too!
Your new scale is F Major. It is the same fingering as all the other scales you know for LH. RH is a bit different = 1234 1234. It has only one black key: Bb.
Preferred Books for Erin Students
Click to buy them here, and they’ll come right to your house! What could be easier?
BOOK TITLE
COMING SOON
Faber Piano Adventures
The 2nd Edition Level 1 Lesson Book introduces all the notes of the grand staff, elementary chord playing, and the concept of tonic and dominant notes. Students play in varied positions, reinforcing reading skills and recognizing intervals through the 5th. Musicianship is built with the introduction of legato and staccato touches. This level continues the interval orientation to reading across the full range of the Grand Staff. The 5-finger approach is presented here in a fresh, musically appealing way.
Piano Safari


