





🎼 Unlock your inner musician—one note at a time!
It's Recorder Time is a beginner-focused instructional book featuring 32 pages of standard notation, designed to teach intonation, tonguing, and basic music theory through familiar songs. Ideal for children and absolute beginners, it includes duets for shared play and covers the soprano recorder’s first octave with simple, accessible pacing.
| Best Sellers Rank | #359,734 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #32 in Recorders (Books) #1,620 in Music Instruction & Study (Books) #4,138 in Songbooks |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,709) |
| Dimensions | 8.75 x 0.5 x 12 inches |
| Edition | unknown |
| ISBN-10 | 0882848143 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0882848143 |
| Item Weight | 4.8 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 32 pages |
| Publication date | June 1, 1968 |
| Publisher | Alfred Music |
C**C
perfect book for a kid new to music
I bought this for my son (7 years old) and I to learn the recorder together. This is a BEGINNER book, and when I say beginner I really mean it. Although I’d never played the recorder before, I used to play trumpet and I blew through this thing faster than you can say “soprano.” That said, for my son, it’s been absolutely great. The pacing is perfect for the typical total beginner, maybe a little fast for my 7 year old son who had zero musical experience. It never gets complicated and I think it only goes up to D and I think only one sharp and one flat if I recall correctly. It does a good job of introducing new concepts and musical markings. You literally don’t need to know ANYTHING about music and you will do fine with this book. The song selection is very good and all the pieces are very short. For an adult they might get boring, but for a child the short song lengths are great because your kid won’t get bored. There are a good number of duets you can play with your child as well which always sparks excitement for my son. Again, this is best for someone with no musical experience or is a child. If you have any experience playing a music instrument, you’ll plow through this book pretty quickly and I’d recommend a book with a faster pace for the first octave and more in-depth songs. But if you have a kid you just bought a recorder for, this book is PERFECT.
T**L
A great book for beginners
This book is a great introduction to playing the recorder. It has a very useful explanation of the different types of recorders and their keys (Sopranino, Soprano/Descant, Alto, Tenor, Bass, Big Bass). The music is written for the most well known type of recorder beginners learn first (the Soprano or Descant pitched in C rather than F) and is a good introduction to any type of recorder. The fingering is baroque and a handy 2 octave, chromatic chart for the Descant recorder is at the back of the book which serves as a great reference. The content covers basic music theory for beginners and the notes learned span the first lower octave (including Bb and F#). A great book to get started with. Has some well known easy tunes and they are a nice selection that won't annoy the neighbors. Well worth the price.
R**4
Good book for beginners
Clear simple directions for playing. Shows where the fingers go, shows which holes to cover to make which note. Basic directions for learning music. Each lesson has familiar music. Really nice chart of all of the notes that the recorder is in the back. Only thing I didn't like is that the lessons don't extend to covering most of the upper register notes nor most of the of accidentals. You have the chart to show this to you and you end up either getting another book (don't know which yet), or learning those on your own using other music you have available. (I play other instruments, I do have other music to use in figuring this out, so I'm going that route.)
A**I
Well Done Recorder Book, Better for Middle School and Above
Ah, the hill I died on. I ended up homeschooling our daughter for slightly less then 8 months of her 3rd grade school year. I wanted to maintain a music curriculum. They had started with recorder that year in the school we pulled her from, but I have had limited experience with it. I gave her the choice of continuing with Soprano recorder or I could start working with her on piano, which I do know how to play. I was seriously hoping she'd pick piano...but she said she wanted to stick with recorder if I wasn't going to teach her guitar. Which isn't an instrument I play and definitely didn't have time to figure out with everything else we had going on, so I told she was out of luck on that one and recorder it was. So I bought this book because it is solidly reviewed. Having gone through the entire thing myself to brush up and improve upon my own recorder skills when she decided that was what she wanted to go with, I can say I think it does a great job of teaching the basics for recorder and the treble clef. Since I already read music, I didn't really need that part of it, but it allows me to evaluate the quality better. I also tried to use this to support my daughter in learning recorder...but it just. wasn't. guitar. About a third of the way through the book I said "to heck with it!" It isn't something they are going to test her on upon admission to her new school in the fall, it isn't required learning under the standardized testing, and it just wasn't worth the battle. It's the only curriculum area I failed to complete with her. I think for her, she may have found the book more engaging if it had cutesy pictures in it, or some of her favorite Disney songs. So younger children may be less motivated by the lack of illustrations and the song choices, and this may not be the best support for them. But I think for any kiddo middle school or up (where there is the discipline of mind to put up with song choices that aren't their favorites and who might view cutesy illustrations as not what they need), this is very well done and will adequately teach them what they need to know to get started.
H**A
It’s easy to know which holes to cover from the way they introduce new notes. I like this book and am glad I bought it. If you can’t understand music staffs, learning to read that will need to occur relatively quickly since the notes in musical notation are not labelled past when the notes are introduced. I like this book and it has quite a few duets for teachers to play with students. I’d say this book is for a soprano recorder.
J**A
This book is really useful for beginners to wind instruments. A little bit musical theory knowledge is required. Very well paced
L**O
I bought this in a Kindle version so it can go with me easy when camping. I’ve just got back into playing the recorder after a very long time so thought I’d start at the beginning. As an adult who has previous experience I breezed through this and picked everything back up again quickly. It’s definitely a beginners book.
L**O
I bought this book (kindle version) so I could learn to play the recorder someone gave my daughter as a gift. I went from absolute zero to playing simple songs with the help of this book alone. I had some previous -although very basic- knowledge of rhythm and musical notation which made it easier for me to move fast through the lessons. I don't know how useful this book would be to an absolute music-beginner, but if you have some precarious notion the book will definitely help you get started with this instrument. Another thing that's worth noting is the approach: as soon as you learned the first three notes you begin to play nice melodies; which is a powerful motivation booster.
P**X
Ce a quoi je m attendais , rien de trop compliquer et plusieurs pieces ,populaires ou classiques famillieres
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منذ شهرين
منذ 4 أيام