Summer Term 2025
Weekly Schedule
Mondays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Tuesdays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Wednesdays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Thursdays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Fridays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Saturdays
9:00 aPrivate Lesson
Summer Term 2025
Term Calendar
(Events & Camps)
Music School Registrar
541.434.7000
Term Announcements
- Summer session 2025 begins Monday, June 17th.
- Friday, July 4 (Independence Day) The Shedd is closed: No classes, camps, or lessons. - Begin private lessons anytime!
- Summer SongFest! (August 4-29)
- Harburg Academy Revue (July 7-25)
Focus on Summer Camps
SongFest 2025
SongFest 2025
Every year, elementary school children enjoy The Shedd Institute’s Summer SongFest, 4 one-week music enrichment camps with kid-friendly themes. This year's themes are:
Globetrotters (Aug 4-8)
Water, Water Everywhere (Aug 11-15)
By Land, Air & Sea (Aug 18-22)
Spaceships & Aliens (Aug 25-29)
The Revue
The Harburg Academy's Summer Revue
The E. Y. Harburg Academy's SUMMER REVUE 2025 is a high school training program designed to aspiring performers with intensive skill building in the fundamental areas of acting, voice, and dance towards the pursuit of their craft. This summer's Revue, Road To Hilarity, is a tribute to the 6 “Road” comedy films released by Paramount Pictures between 1940 and 1952 featuring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour. Read more…
fiddlers
Playing Your Instrument
by Ginevra Ralph, Director of Cultural & Community Services
“Summertime” MEANS playing and having fun. Playing a musical instrument should be fun too – after all, that is the word we use to describe what you are doing!
At The Shedd we expect students to leave their lesson wanting to play their instrument at home. Too often going home and being required to practice implies sheer drudgery. (Our professionals are the ones who need to practice—we’ll be paying to hear their proficiency!)
A student – youngster or adult – isn’t typically gearing up for a major performance, and, if they aren’t thoroughly enjoying making music, something is wrong. It’s a critical moment for an adult student or a parent of a younger one to examine why not. There are many changes that can be made to maintain that enthusiasm that was the reason they wanted to learn in the first place.
Granted, for a mature student, there indeed can be intellectual and emotional satisfaction from deliberate practicing – the reward of accomplishing something that was difficult, or even, as author Stephanie Judy noted simply observing “ourselves in the act of learning.” But these are more self-reflective and sophisticated enjoyable moments than the broader reasons that most people say they like making music.
As a Shedd music student, you will change over time – and as you do we want you to keep the playfulness and joy of making your own music first and foremost in your experience.
The Eye Center
Shedd Presenting Sponsor