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N. Jane Tan, the only person to hold the honor of being a
Steinway artist strictly for her pedagogical work, is the
founder-director of The Well-Prepared Pianist Institute (WPP
Institute). Retiring after thirty years of teaching at
Towson State University in Maryland, she is dedicating her
energy to The well-Prepared Pianist teacher-training
program and PianoTeams®
ensembles. Her work in these high achievement curriculums is
internationally recognized and has earned her Steinway's 150th
Anniversary Standard of Excellence gold medallion award
in 2006. In the WPP program, teachers are taught the art
of mentoring students in long-term permanent goals through
left/right brain training, multi-sensory learning and
multi-sensory memories. The goal for students is either to
complete their learning and become independent pianists before
entering high school, or to use their WPP training as
foundation for advanced high school level study in preparation
for careers in piano. The program has been started in China.
PianoTeams®,
an internationally registered trademark of WPP Institute,
was a title coined to mean five pianists playing repertoire
specifically composed or arranged for five pianos. It was
originally conceived in 1979 for her college piano majors as a
tool to develop spontaneous musicianship through interactive
music-making. PianoTeams®
began with orchestral favorites which Professor tan re-wrote for
five pianos. Today, PianoTeams®
repertoire has grown to include original works and pieces on
traditional melodies. They are performed by a wide range of
pianists from young beginners to concert artists worldwide.
Sponsored by Steinway & Sons
Pianos, N. Jane Tan started the International Festival of The
Well-Prepared pianist Institute in the United States. The
centerpiece of the festival is the International PianoTeams®
Competition, which attracts teams of student pianists and
teachers from around the world. Plans for the festival and PianoTeams®
Competition in China are set to begin in the summer of 2010.
Raised by Chinese parents in the
Philippines, Tan came to the U.S. as a Fulbright-Hays scholar to
study with Leon Fleisher at the Peabody institute in Maryland.
Besides Leon Fleischer, her mentors included another Artur
Schnabel pupil, Edward Mattos. As one of the most sought-after
master teachers, artist-lecturers and composers, Tan travels
extensively internationally and from coast to coast in the U.S.
Her WPP Institute has teacher-training centers scattered
all over the U.S. and centers being planned internationally. As
a writer-composer, her works are performed and studied in many
countries throughout Asia and Europe.
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