Benedict - Piano tutor - Orpington
1st lesson free
Benedict - Piano tutor - Orpington

One of our best tutors. Quality profile, experience in their field, verified qualifications and a great response time. Benedict will be happy to arrange your first Piano lesson.

Benedict

One of our best tutors. Quality profile, experience in their field, verified qualifications and a great response time. Benedict will be happy to arrange your first Piano lesson.

  • Rate $60
  • Response 17h
  • Students

    Number of students Benedict has taught since their arrival at Superprof

    50+

    Number of students Benedict has taught since their arrival at Superprof

Benedict - Piano tutor - Orpington
  • 5 (16 reviews)

$60/h

1st lesson free

Contact

1st lesson free

1st lesson free

  • Piano

Learn to practice piano properly — and watch your playing transform faster than you thought possible.

  • Piano

Lesson location

Ambassador

One of our best tutors. Quality profile, experience in their field, verified qualifications and a great response time. Benedict will be happy to arrange your first Piano lesson.

About Benedict

I didn't set out to be a piano teacher. I became one when I started wondering how I'd got to where I was as a pianist — and realised that most of what separates good pianists from great ones isn't talent. It's knowing how to practice.

That sounds obvious. It isn't. Most people practice the same way they always have, making the same mistakes, reinforcing the same habits, wondering why progress is slow. The truth is that effective practice is a skill — and like any skill, it can be learned. With the right approach, you can make more progress in a few months than you have in years.

That's what I teach.

I hold an ARSM in piano with distinction, an LTCL in viola with distinction, and distinctions in Grade 8 organ, Grade 8 singing, and Grade 8 theory. I completed my BA in Music at Worcester College, Oxford, where I was also an Organ Scholar. Beyond academia, I have served as the Michael James Organ Scholar at Portsmouth Cathedral, taught at Portsmouth Grammar School, and I am currently Graduate Music Assistant at Framlingham College. I've taught students from age 7 to adult, including students who have gone on to achieve distinctions in ABRSM grades, students who had previously plateaued for years, and complete beginners who wanted to learn properly from the start.

See more

About the lesson

  • Beginner
  • Intermediate
  • Advanced
  • +8
  • levels :

    Beginner

    Intermediate

    Advanced

    Proficient

    Children

    1st year

    2nd year

    3rd year

    4th year

    Graduate Student

    PhD

  • English

All languages in which the lesson is available :

English

My lessons feel different from conventional piano lessons — students often say so themselves. Rather than me telling you what to do at every moment, I use coaching techniques to put you in the driving seat. You'll learn to diagnose your own problems, solve them yourself, and extract as much value from our time together as possible.

This isn't just a teaching style. It's a method. I've developed the Expert Learner system specifically to help students practice with intention rather than just repetition. Once you know how to practice, your progress accelerates on its own — between lessons, not just during them.

Beyond the lesson itself, you'll have access to the Expert Learner Workbook, video feedback between sessions, and a supportive online community of pianists at a similar stage to you. You're not on your own between lessons.

My students range from secondary school age upwards — including adult returners who last played decades ago, self-taught pianists who want to formalise their playing, and exam students aiming for merit or distinction. If you've tried lessons before and felt like you were just going through the motions, this will feel very different.

First lesson is free. Let's find out what's holding you back.

See more

Rates

Rate

  • $60

Pack rates

  • 5h: $300
  • 10h: $601

online

  • $53/h

free lessons

This first lesson offered with Benedict will allow you to get to know each other and clearly specify your needs for your next lessons.

  • 30mins

Find out more about Benedict

Find out more about Benedict

  • 1) When did you first develop a passion for music and your favourite instrument?

    I grew up surrounded by music, but the real turning point came in my teens when I started to understand that music wasn't just a subject — it was a language. The piano was my first love and still feels like home base, but over the years I've also studied organ, strings, singing, and composition. The organ in particular opened up an entirely different way of experiencing sound and physical coordination. Each instrument has taught me something unique, but piano is the one I return to most — both as a performer and as a teacher.
  • 2) Is there a particular type of music or artist that you listen to on a loop without it driving you crazy?

    Art Tatum. His improvisations are like living organisms — dense, playful, surprising, and full of detail you miss the first ten times through. There's always another twist in the harmony or a sudden rhythmic flourish that catches you off guard. Even after years of listening, I still find myself stopping mid-bar thinking: how on earth did he do that?
  • 3) Explain to us the most difficult or riveting course you could personally give to a student of music.

    Teaching someone to trust themselves. Most students arrive convinced they're not talented enough, not progressing fast enough, or too old to really improve. My job is to dismantle those beliefs — not with reassurance, but with results. When a student realises they've just played something they genuinely thought was beyond them, that's the moment everything changes. Designing the path that gets them there, step by step, is the most challenging and rewarding thing I do as a teacher.
  • 4) What do you think is the most complicated instrument to master and why?

    The organ — and I say that as someone who has studied it seriously, held an organ scholarship at Oxford, and served as the Michael James Organ Scholar at Portsmouth Cathedral. The coordination alone is staggering: both hands on different manuals, both feet on the pedals, all while managing stops and registration in real time. Unlike the piano, where dynamics come directly from touch, the organ demands that you plan sound structurally — almost like orchestrating as you play. It is endlessly humbling and endlessly rewarding.
  • 5) What are your keys to success?

    Teaching students to practice, not just to play. Most people practice the same way they always have — repeating things they already know, glossing over the parts that are actually hard, and wondering why progress is slow. Effective practice is a learnable skill, and it's the single biggest lever available to any pianist. Once a student has it, progress stops depending on me and starts depending on them. That's exactly the outcome I'm working towards in every lesson.
  • 6) Name three musicians you dream of meeting in your favourite bar in the early hours of the morning. Explain why.

    Art Tatum — I'd want to understand how he thought about the keyboard in real time. My instinct is he'd describe it all very matter-of-factly, which would make it even more extraordinary.

    Bach — partly to thank him for the body of music we still live inside, and partly out of sheer curiosity about what he'd make of modern instruments and harmony. I think he'd be more amused than shocked.

    Bill Evans — his touch, his sense of harmony, and his way of sitting inside a chord rather than moving past it make him one of the most thoughtful musicians in history. A conversation with him about sound and silence would be worth any amount of lost sleep.
  • 7) Provide a valuable anecdote related to music or your days at music school.

    When I was studying at Oxford, I brought in a piece I thought I knew inside out. Instead of pointing out mistakes, my teacher asked a simple question: "What are you trying to say with this?" It stopped me completely. Until that moment, I'd thought of practice as getting notes right. That one question shifted everything — music as communication, not just accuracy. It's the single most important thing I've taken into my teaching, and it's the question I find myself returning to with students again and again.
  • 8) What are the little touches that make you a Superprof in music?

    teach students from secondary school age upwards — including teenagers working towards grades, adult returners who last played years ago, and self-taught pianists who want to understand what they're actually doing. What these students have in common is that they want to make real progress, not just show up once a week and hope for the best.

    The little touches that make the difference: a personalised practice plan from the very first session, clear notes after each lesson, video feedback between sessions, and access to a community of pianists at a similar stage. Students also get the Expert Learner Workbook — a resource I've developed specifically to help people practice with intention rather than repetition.

    The lessons themselves feel different from conventional piano teaching. Students often say so unprompted. That's the point.
--
--

Other tutors in Piano

  • Tomás

    Brooklyn & online

    5 (123 reviews)
    • $70/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Sergio

    New York & online

    5 (75 reviews)
    • $30/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Giulia

    Chicago & online

    5 (71 reviews)
    • $60/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Eduardo

    Punta Gorda & online

    5 (62 reviews)
    • $80/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Dr Ethan Lustig

    Los Angeles & online

    5 (52 reviews)
    • $100/h
  • Danielle

    San Francisco & online

    5 (56 reviews)
    • $60/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Lucía

    Brooklyn & online

    5 (13 reviews)
    • $50/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Taryna

    Liberal & online

    5 (16 reviews)
    • $60/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Stephanie

    West Hollywood & online

    5 (36 reviews)
    • $50/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • John

    New York & online

    5 (38 reviews)
    • $40/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Mariam

    Boston & online

    4.9 (27 reviews)
    • $19/h
  • Simon

    Philadelphia & online

    5 (40 reviews)
    • $80/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Gauri

    & online

    4.9 (17 reviews)
    • $59/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Alice

    Washington & online

    5 (74 reviews)
    • $50/h
  • Victoriya

    New York & online

    5 (59 reviews)
    • $35/h
  • Stylianos

    Austin & online

    5 (14 reviews)
    • $60/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Alexandros

    Boston & online

    5 (12 reviews)
    • $120/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • Anastasija

    New York & online

    5 (16 reviews)
    • $40/h
  • Joshua

    New York & online

    4.9 (13 reviews)
    • $80/h
  • Aidan

    Jackson Township & online

    5 (26 reviews)
    • $35/h
    • 1st lesson free
  • See Piano tutors