Suzuki Music Columbus
Come Play With Us!

Join our Suzuki music school where joy leads the learning experience! We focus on a child-centered approach, ensuring every student flourishes on their musical journey.
Following Shinichi Suzuki’s philosophy of Talent Education, we believe every child can learn and talent can be developed in every child when one creates the right environment. At Suzuki Music Columbus, we aspire to create a music learning community which embraces excellence and nurtures the human spirit. Students in our Suzuki strings programs will learn a common repertoire of songs using the Suzuki Method. We teach children music in the way that they learn language -- first by ear and later by reading. In our music lessons, we use the “vocabulary” of a common repertoire to build fluency, confidence, and playing skills that will enhance their violin, viola, or cello playing. At Suzuki Music Columbus, you will find enthusiastic teachers who nurture and inspire your budding young musician as they learn their craft!

Our Musical Journey

Established in 2007 by Douglas and Susan Locke, Suzuki Music Columbus specializes in music lessons utilizing the Suzuki Method, promoting a joyful and enriching learning process for students of all ages.

Lessons at Suzuki Music Columbus Include These 5 Important Parts:
1. Weekly Private Lesson
Students have a one-on-one violin, viola, or cello lesson with a highly trained and compassionate teacher who will tailor each lesson to the specific needs of your child. We help you and your child learn how to practice violin together in a positive child-centered environment. The teacher and student commit to a specific regular weekly lesson time for the full year. New beginners start out with 15-30 minute violin lessons, depending on age, maturity, and teacher availability.
2. Tuesday Group Activities
All students and teachers gather each week for group classes and a weekly recital. The group classes reinforce private lesson and home study through ensemble playing and fun activities. The weekly recital fosters a positive performance environment and a regular concert experience. Each student will have multiple opportunities to perform on a weekly recital throughout the year.
3. Daily Listening
Students listen to recordings of Suzuki repertoire every day. The high quality model provides a basis for developing artistry, beauty, creativity, and tone.
4. Home Practice
Daily practice guided by the parent will begin at around 15-20 minutes per day.
5. Performance
Weekly solo recitals, group concerts, Grand Concerts, community performances, and the SMC Tour Group, provide opportunities for performance. As a regular part of the Suzuki program, student musicians become comfortable performers.
Why Suzuki?
More than fifty years ago, Japanese violinist Shinichi Suzuki realized the implications of the fact that children the world over learn to speak their native language with ease. He began to apply the basic principles of language acquisition to the learning of music, and called his method the mother-tongue approach. Here are some of the special features of the Suzuki Method:
Parent Involvement
As when a child learns to talk, parents are involved in the musical learning of their child. They attend lessons with the child and serve as “home teachers” during the week. One parent often learns to play before the child, so that she or he understands what the child is expected to do. Parents work with the teacher to create an enjoyable learning environment.
Early Beginning
The early years are crucial for developing mental processes and muscle coordination. Listening to music should begin at birth; formal training may begin at age three or four, but it is never too late to begin.
Daily Listening
Children learn words after hearing them spoken hundreds of times by others. Listening to music every day is important, especially listening to pieces in the Suzuki repertoire so the child knows them immediately.
Repetition
Constant repetition is essential in learning to play an instrument. Children do not learn a word or piece of music and then discard it. They add it to their vocabulary or repertoire, gradually using it in new and more sophisticated ways.
Encouragement
As with language, the child’s effort to learn an instrument should be met with sincere praise and encouragement. Each child learns at his/her own rate, building on small steps so that each one can be mastered. Children are also encouraged to support each other’s efforts, fostering an attitude of generosity and cooperation.
Learning With Other Children
In addition to private lessons, children participate in regular group lessons and performance at which they learn from and are motivated by each other.
Graded Repertoire
Children do not practice exercises to learn to talk, but use language for its natural purpose of communication and self-expression. Pieces in the Suzuki repertoire are designed to present technical problems to be learned in the context of the music rather than through dry technical exercises.
Delayed Reading
Children learn to read after their ability to talk has been well established. in the same way, children should develop basic technical competence on their instruments before being taught to read music.
Our Blog
Two Convenient Locations:
James Rd. Location
Main Branch
Located within:
Redeemer Lutheran Church
1555 S. James Rd.
Columbus, OH 43209
Lewis Center Location
North Branch
Located within:
St. Alban's Anglican Church
7521 S Old State Rd, Lewis Center, OH 43035
Suzuki Music Columbus is a 501 (c) (3) non profit
Our Mission:
We aspire to create a learning community which embraces excellence and nurtures the human spirit. We are dedicated to furthering the philosophical and educational ideals of Shinichi Suzuki.
Non-Discrimination Statement:
Suzuki Music Columbus, Inc. admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, and other school-administered programs.

























