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YAMAHA AND CRYSTAL CRUISES OFFER MUSIC FUN AT
SEA
BUENA PARK, CA (September 26, 2003)Cruising guests aboard
Crystal
Cruises' newest floating resort, the Crystal Serenity, can look
far beyond shuffleboard for their diversions. Beginning with its
"Grand Inaugural Voyage" in early July, the 68,000 ton
luxury vessel offers piano instruction at sea, and Crystal has teamed
with Yamaha to provide both instruments and instructors so that
its "Passport to Music" program is as much fun as anything
on land or water.
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"The
Studio" onboard Crystal Serenity accommodates
up to 15 guest-students at a time with 20 Yamaha PSR-292 digital
keyboards and a CVP-208 Clavinova digital piano.
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"Learning to play music is very much like taking a cruise,"
says Yamaha's Michael J. Bates, director of academic and institutional
relations. "The destinations are wonderful, but you can enjoy
every moment of the journey as well. With an emphasis on hands-on
learning, our approach to music instruction harmonizes tradition
with technology."
Onboard Crystal
Serenity, a dedicated space called "The Studio"
can accommodate 12 to 15 guest-students at a time, outfitted with
20 Yamaha PSR-292
digital keyboards and a CVP-208
Clavinova digital piano. During six 60-minute sessions, depending
upon the length of the cruise, students will learn the rudiments
of the piano and up to a dozen popular songs, with help from Yamaha's
time-tested teaching method. There are even more PSR-292 keyboards
in a lending library that students can check out and use for practice
in their staterooms.
The sessions are part of the cruise line's "Creative Learning
Institute," which also features Berlitz foreign language instruction,
fine art classes from the Parsons School of Design and Crystal's
"Computer University@Sea," among many others.
"The Yamaha Passport to Music program has exceeded our --
and our guests' -- expectations," says Crystal vice president
of entertainment Bret Bullock. "The curriculum, tailor-made
for the Crystal guest, and its cadre of exceptional instructors
has made the program the hallmark of Crystal Cruises' new Creative
Learning Institute. Reaction from our guests has been outstanding,
and we have even had guests return home to purchase a Yamaha grand
piano in order to continue their newfound musical education."
Crystal Serenity's 14-day "Grand Inaugural Voyage" departed
Southampton July 7, visiting Germany, Denmark, Norway, Scotland
and Ireland before returning home. Certified Yamaha music teacher
Debbie Culbertson Skinner of Portland, OR was on board to teach
the innovative and fun sessions, which featured an emphasis on hands-on
learning using Yamaha PSR keyboards and the Clavinova® digital
piano.
In keeping with the setting, each segment of "Passport to
Music" has a nautical title: the first experience actually
working the keyboard is called "All Hands on Deck;" learning
where the different keys are is called "Latitude and Longitude;"
notation and the written language of music is covered in "Charting
Our Course" - and a guest's first performance in front of his
or her classmates is called "Walking the Plank."
Skinner also made the Crystal Serenity's second voyage, to Ireland,
France and Spain, then Certified Yamaha Music Teacher Cheryl Wherry
of New Paltz, NY took over when the ship explored the Mediterranean
in August.
Crystal Serenity will make several European cruises before crossing
the Atlantic, servicing the Caribbean, and arriving in Los Angeles
for a holiday-season round trip to the Mexican Riviera. More information
is available online at www.crystalcruises.com.
For more information on Clavinova Digital Pianos, write Yamaha
Corporation of America, Piano Division, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park,
CA 90622; telephone (714) 522-9011; e-mail infostation@yamaha.com;
or visit www.yamaha.com.
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