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  Featherstone Music
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The app for music teachers, designed by music teachers
visit the musicology website
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Feature article from the Port Dover Maple Leaf. Read the full text below. Written by Nate Clark

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Musicology App Features:


  • the lowest latency possible
  • collaborative whiteboard with annotation
  • collaborative file upload for worksheets
  • interactive and collaborative keyboard
  • grand staff drop and drag editing
  • guitar and ukulele interactive features with chord chart and TAB.
  • 2500 guitar and ukulele chord database
  • metronome
  • guitar & ukulele tuner
  • embedded YouTube
  • URL paste
  • music mode vs conversation mode audio
  • secure rooms
  • bookmarks for offline and online reference
  • teacher and student portal
  • never changing five digit code
Musicology: A Port Dover Pianist’s Plan to Revolutionize the Teaching Industry
by Nate Clark


It happened last March, and Rebecca Featherstone’s panicked staff of 14 piano, guitar and voice teachers looked to her for answers. In the blink of an eye, everything she’d worked the last 12 years for was on the brink of collapse. It was sink-or-swim time and she needed a new plan, fast.

“Everyone was in shock when they locked us down,” says Featherstone, 41, a Port Dover native, from her home in Dundas, Ontario. “There was no government relief coming that we knew of, and my teachers needed guidance. I didn’t sleep for a week.”
 
Featherstone’s first solution was the obvious one: she took her entire school online. Although the move provided her team with some relief, everyone quickly realized that traditional video conference platforms were not designed for music classes.
 
“We started with Facetime, Skype and Zoom, and immediately found that they didn’t cut it. They crash, they freeze, there are huge latency problems and there are no tools for teaching music.[1]”
 
Featherstone sums up the problem this way:

“Imagine explaining to a 5-year-old where middle C is on the piano over Zoom,” she says, and then mimics a conversation with a student, “‘A little to the left, no that’s too far left!’ (laughs) That kind of talk just frustrates the kids. Music teachers need specific tools to keep students engaged on the same level as an in-person lesson.”
 
It was after a late night conversation with her accountant and friend, Toronto’s Ryan Kagan C.P.A, when Featherstone decided to take matters into her own hands.
 
“I explained our problems to Ryan, and his first thought was to make a platform for teachers to find students. That was the spark, but I knew that product already existed. I told him what we really needed was a dedicated video conferencing app for music teachers–something actually designed by music teachers. He agreed and Musicology was born.”

Featherstone says Kagan’s input has been indispensable.

“Ryan has something most musicians don’t: business connections, a lot of them, and he got to work finding them. When investors realized there wasn’t anything else like it on the market, the funding just started to pour in. We feel very blessed to have received such support from our investors as well as the Business Development of Canada (BDC) who is supporting us every step of the way to ensure we succeed in our vision.”
 
Flash forward eight months, and Featherstone now holds the reins of a half million dollar app company, Musicology, which promises to revolutionize the music teaching industry in the post-Covid era of online education. The mom of two boys now commands her own team of developers, advertisers, and administrators–most of whom, it should be noted, are musicians themselves. Featherstone says this is fundamental to the project.
 
“I want everyone working on the app to understand the app exactly,” says Featherstone. “My whole team teaches, performs or plays music at some level, from the developers to the advertising director–even our consultants at the BDC.”
 
In 2008, Featherstone opened her popular Toronto music school, Featherstone Music, and hired her first teacher that same year. Since then, she and her team have taught hundreds of Canadian kids how to play musical instruments, with a fresh new batch of students coming through her doors each year. 

Every day, Rebecca Featherstone honours the memory of the great teachers that have inspired her by giving the gift of music to children online. Unfortunately, she has no choice but to use problematic conferencing platforms like Zoom and Facetime. Like the teachers she’s trying to help, she anxiously awaits Musicology to begin beta testing in January.

“Honestly, I’m desperate to start using Musicology myself,” she says. “That’s how I know it’s going to be successful.”
 
Featherstone says the reason the app continues to attract intense interest from teachers, musicians and investors around the globe is all about staying open to new ideas.
 
“The key has been to actually listen to what the teachers are saying. We’re taking their feedback and input and adapting the app to meet their needs. We’re creating a community. We’re listening.”
 
Musicology is set to launch in spring, 2021.

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