Skip to main content
News
Faculty recordings and books
December 15, 2021

A game-changer for oboe players

Headshot of Jan Eberle

Professor Jan Eberle has perfected her method of oboe reed-making, and now she shares it with oboe players everywhere in her new instructional book.

For many years, oboist and Michigan State University College of Music Professor Jan Eberle witnessed angst that overcomes most oboe players when making reeds. Personally, she had the process down due to knowledge shared with her over many years, but her students struggled. Now, she has released a reed-making instructional book that will level the playing field for all oboe players.

“The inspiration for this concept of reed-making instruction came to me from my high school tennis teacher whose method of teaching involved starting with the basics and moving on only when the previous skill was mastered,” Eberle said. “This style came clearly into focus much later when I began teaching oboe reed making to private students and in classroom settings.”

Cover page of 'From Stages to the Stage'

Long-time MSU Music faculty member Jan Eberle has taught oboe reed-making to her students for many years, and she has witnessed first-hand the success it brings to otherwise frustrated musicians. In her new book, she lays out the method step-by-step.

 

She found that over a span of 15 years, her instructional method proved more effective than the traditional reed-making teaching concept, which in all other reed-making manuals, is presented in “construction order” rather than “skill-based order.”

Eberle recently published an instruction manual with her methods. From Stages to the Stage: An Oboist’s Guide to Reed Making Success! is destined to make a huge difference in the lives of oboe players.

“With this method, reed-making skills are mastered in less time with a higher success rate that provides students with increased confidence and self-sufficiency,” Eberle explained. “More particularly, this text presents reed-making in ‘skill-based order,’ which means starting with the easiest techniques and progressing to more difficult ones. This change in learning order enables successful final reed products because all skills are mastered individually prior to beginning construction of an actual reed.”

Jan Eberle

Professor Jan Eberle was inspired by a teaching method used by her high school tennis teacher, and years later she applied the method to oboe reed-making to help the students in her studio at MSU.

 

Eberle, a long-time teacher and performer, has been teaching her methods to her MSU oboe studio students for many years. With this new book, she presents a detailed description of her thoughts and process involved in oboe reed-making. Full color images show a step-by-step approach, guiding the oboist through the reed making process.

“In the long term, I hope that this book helps eliminate the fear of reed making that is currently so universal among oboe players,” Eberle said. “I see this text as providing a more effective alternative to the age-old ‘observation teaching method’ of past generations. I have seen it work wonders for success.”