Kipp Kahlia Music Instruction
Kipp Kahlia Music Instruction

Kipp Kahlia Music Instruction

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Introduction: I work with students aged 12 and up, giving them the kind of foundation that allows them to play and sing the styles of music they love. I've worked with nearly 700 people so far and taught private students and classes for over a decade. I've worked for years to develop a method that gives people the solid foundation they need to sing and play well in any style, and results are guaranteed. I also really enjoy teaching intermediate guitarists, bassists and vocalists what they need to know to get past being "stuck." I remember clearly how frustrating it felt to be in that place. I really didn't understand that I needed new information, broken down in a way that allowed me to absorb it and use it. Instead, I wondered if maybe I was a little "slow." Once I absorbed the information I needed, my playing took off. I want to do that for you. I can give you the keys to the kingdom. You have to put in the practice time -- making music has its mechanical aspects, just like sports, and your nervous system learns by repetition. Your body has to have practice time to progress. Give me 15 minutes of practice 6 days a week, and I can get you where you want to go. Give me more practice time per day, and I can get you there FASTER. The pace of your growth is connected to how much time you want to put into it. I will give you the tools. If a student wants to play AND sing, I have a lot of tips that will help them to do that more easily. There are strategies that can be used to speed up that learning process. We can work in person if you're local, or via Skype. Some people wonder if lessons via Skype are less effective than lessons in person, but I've gotten great results with it. My favorite thing is showing people how to make great music with other people. I'm thrilled when my students get to the point where they're excited to play or sing at a jam session. If students are ready to play or sing in bands, I prepare them to go to a rehearsal with a new group of musicians knowing they have something to contribute, and unafraid that the rest of the band will have to wait for them while they figure out what's going on. They can jump in with confidence and really ENJOY playing and/or singing.
Overview

Hired 2 times

24 years in business

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Exceptional 5.0

10 reviews

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Joy A.
Jan 9, 2016
My now-husband and I wanted to sing together at our wedding. We started working with Kipp a couple of months before the wedding. I had sung in choirs already, but I didn't feel like I always sang in key. My husband had never sung at all, but it was actually HIS idea, so we were going for it. Kipp made us feel safe and comfortable. She will tell you what's wrong, why, and then give you strategies to FIX it. She supported and encouraged us through our nervousness, getting us to work on pitch, rhythm, the mechanics of how to sing in a way that's healthy for your vocal chords, and enunciation. We spent a lot of time on breathing. Kipp said that she wanted us to practice the correct way of singing to the point where our "muscle memory" would be in control, making it so that we would sing correctly without even thinking about it. We're still taking lessons although the wedding was several months ago. I want to sing in a choir again, and feel confident about my voice. My husband is a church deacon, and preaches mini-sermons; he wanted those sermons to include a song, and now we sing them together each time he preaches. We've both improved (the husband sounds good!), and we're much more confident about singing. We'll do this for the rest of our lives. Thanks again Kipp!!!!
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Adriana C.
Jan 10, 2016
My dad and my sister took guitar from Kipp years before I did. I studied drums and vocals, and in high school I was the lead singer for a few bands. After I went away to college, I realized that I wanted to play an instrument that would allow me to accompany myself as a singer. And I wanted to have more influence over how the music is arranged when I work with a band. I started lessons with Kipp this past summer, and then went back to college. Now we’re doing lessons via Skype. Kipp is teaching me to play and sing at the same time with confidence, and schooling me on the things I need to know as a musician to lead a band intelligently. She says that it’s important that a singer has the respect of the musicians who are working with her, and the way to get that is to know what’s going on musically. Kipp’s making the whole thing fun, and teaching me a lot at the same time. She says that now – to be a strong performer -- I need to learn to sing and play and DANCE at the same time instead of just tapping my foot. Lol.
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Pen Y.
Jan 11, 2016
Christmas day 2013, my husband built a bass for me. One that was my size with a smaller diameter neck. I looked at him and asked, “what do you want me to do with that?”. He said “ you are going to learn how to play the bass so you can play worship with the family.” It was a very daunting challenge, but I liked the idea of playing music with the family. My husband Craig is a worship leader at church, he plays the guitar and the bass. My son Matthew plays the bass and the guitar. My daughter Megan sings, plays the keyboards and can play some guitar. I would be the newbie joining the group. My husband taught me how to play the bass. He showed me the proper way of playing the bass strings but I had other ideas. I was comfortable with just playing with 1 finger. We got into disagreements over that but he let me go because he did not want to argue with his wife. Craig was a trooper and was able to teach me enough basics that within 6 months we were playing for the elderly in the Senior Homes once a month. By the spring the following year 2014, he asked the pastor if he could add me to the worship team. I was able to provide simple bass line to the music and I had to admit it was fun. I wanted to progress more but I did not want to strain my relationship with Craig. I always pushed back and I wanted to do things my way and often we did not have a good experience. Craig was always proud of me and was always tickled pink whenever we played together. So that fall 2014, I asked to have a bass teacher, he was relieved and went into the business of finding me a bass teacher, a female bass teacher that I can relate to. That was when I met Kipp Kahlia. She is a bonafide professional musician, studied and majored in music. I just wanted to get that out of the way, because on top of that, she is a very nice person. My first lesson was at her house. It was 7:30 pm and I was super nervous. I told her that I needed a teacher because I wanted to get better than just doing “thump, thump, thump, thump” when we play worship on Sunday. I wanted to grow without harming my relationship with Craig. We got along famously from the beginning. I liked how she was so easygoing and was understanding of my bad habits. She was understanding but that didn’t mean she would tolerate it. She started me from the beginning. Basics like, hooking up to the amp, tuning the bass, and strumming. She assured me that over time the hand just adapts to the new programming that I send to the nervous system and the strumming will eventually remodel. Yes, remodel, even with a stubborn person like me. That was November of 2014 and I am writing this April 2015 and I have improved my strumming a lot. Inadvertently, when she is introducing me to something new, the claw or the hook (as I call it) comes out but she is quick to point out the hook and I am back to strumming the right way again. She teaches me how to be creative with the rhythms, she’s teaching me the roots and 5th’s of chords, where they are on the neck, and how you can use the different notes of the scale to enhance the song. She addresses that because she knows my goal is to do more than thump, thump, thump, and just hold down whole notes. She is very encouraging and she has a sense of humor. We laugh a lot when I am there for my class, the studio people come in sometimes and tell us there is too much laughing coming from our room. Sometimes I bring up questions I may encounter in the week and she will take the time to answer it. One time I asked her “What do you think of the lawsuit against Pharrell Williams for copyright infringement on the Marvin Gaye song ‘Got to Give it Up’?’ We would stop and talk about that. Sometimes, I feel not as prepared coming to class because I might not have the homework as complete as I would like it to be and Kipp tells me that she understands that I am a working woman, with a family and that I have stuff to do. I feel that takes the pressure off. But on the days when I AM confident about my homework, then the fun begins, she start throwing in stuff to keep me on my toes and push me out of my comfort zone. I have to have my deodorant on because something unexpected is always thrown in. I always have a good time. My husband always asks me how was class, I always say “great!”. I never miss my class and I always leave feeling I have made strides in my goal to learn more about playing the bass. If Kipp were to move studios or if she needed to change my lesson time, I would make whatever changes were necessary to keep my lessons going. Craig even said, “Where do I have to drive you, hon? Anywhere you need to go, ” LOL! It does make a difference the relationship and rapport you have with your teacher. You can be in a perfect studio, you can have a top of the line bass and equipment, but it’s the teacher, the teacher can either make you feel so nervous that you don’t learn anything, or s/he can make it so unpleasant that you don’t want to come back. It’s a make or break kind of thing for any student.
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Jack D.
Jan 11, 2016
My daughter is a professional singer with her own band, and also works as part of a duo. She started asking me at some point to come and play with her band sometimes, and I decided I'd better take some lessons because I felt utterly unprepared. And I WANT to play some gigs with her. Years before, I had taken a guitar class with the Parks and Recreation Department of Long Beach, and Kipp was the instructor. I liked how she used humor to keep us entertained while she crammed a ton of information into our heads and drilled us on playing technique. I learned so much from her in the five short weeks of that session that when I thought about taking private lessons, she immediately came to mind. I was able to track her down, and she's been putting me through my paces. At first, she had me focusing on playing chords and learning standard chord progressions in different keys. She's often asked me to write out chord charts for different pieces of music so I'm comfortable with reading charts. She wants me to be so familiar with those kinds of common progressions that when I play with my daughter's band, I' be able to handle anything they throw at me. We've also worked on rhythm and groove so I can easily complement whatever the other musicians are playing, and actually ADD something musical to the songs. Now she's started to drill me on scales and melodies. She made me play a solo last week, saying: "This is where it begins -- might as well get started!" I've gone way farther with Kipp's guidance than I would have ever gone on my own.
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Theresa P.
Jan 13, 2016
Our daughter, Emily, took guitar lessons from Kipp Kahlia for over a year and a half. We find it a bit difficult to put into words what Kipp did for Emily. At 16, Emily first enrolled in the Long Beach Parks and Recreation group class taught by Kipp. Kipp had such a comforting, encouraging, and yet “cool” way with the students that Emily asked to take private lessons. Kipp brings to the lessons her knowledge and skill with the guitar, as well as the extensive life skills she has learned. Emily felt comfortable talking with Kipp, and her confidence grew. Kipp helped her in many ways – with her friendships, her relationships in the family, and she also helped Emily in school. As a result of Kipp’s guidance and suggestions, Emily’s study habits improved. She has since passed on those study techniques to her two younger sisters. This was a rough time in Emily’s life, and Kipp was a vital part in helping her grow. We are forever grateful to her