Alexander Technique
Stop fighting your body. Build coordination that holds under pressure. A method trusted by conservatories worldwide for over a century.
A century-old method for recognizing habitual interference—and learning to stop it.
Alexander Technique is a form of somatic education that teaches you to recognize and release unnecessary tension in your body. Developed by F.M. Alexander in the 1890s, it has been taught at major conservatories worldwide for decades—because musicians discovered that how you use yourself directly affects how you play.
The Royal College of Music states that students have access to Alexander Technique classes to support healthy musicianship. Juilliard has offered Alexander Technique since the 1950s. This is not a fringe practice—it is core curriculum at the world's most prestigious institutions.
The method works by training inhibition (the ability to pause before reacting) and direction (conscious guidance of your coordination). Over time, you develop the awareness to recognize when you're creating interference—and the skill to stop it.
“You translate everything, whether physical, mental or spiritual, into muscular tension.”
Alexander Technique has been taught at major conservatories for decades. The Royal College of Music provides access to Alexander Technique classes. Juilliard has offered it since the 1950s. A growing body of research examines its effects on posture, pain, and performance. Randomized controlled trials have shown improvements in musical performance quality and reductions in performance anxiety in music students receiving Alexander lessons.
We cite research where it exists and are transparent where evidence is emerging. We never overstate findings or present preliminary results as settled science.
Who Benefits
Neck, Shoulder, and Jaw Tension
If you carry tension in your neck, shoulders, or jaw while playing—or notice that tension increases under pressure—Alexander Technique addresses the underlying coordination patterns, not just the symptoms.
“Great at Home, Tight on Stage”
If you play beautifully in the practice room but tighten up in performance, the issue is often habitual interference triggered by pressure. Alexander Technique trains you to maintain coordination regardless of context.
Endurance Collapse
If you run out of stamina in long rehearsals, or find your technique deteriorating as you fatigue, you're likely working harder than necessary. Alexander Technique teaches efficient use that sustains over time.
Post-Injury Rebuilding
After an injury, old habits often return—or compensatory patterns develop. Alexander Technique helps you rebuild coordination without recreating the patterns that contributed to injury.
Stuck in Tension Cycles
If you know you're tense but can't seem to stop it—if relaxation techniques haven't worked—Alexander Technique offers a different approach: not trying to relax, but learning to stop tensing.
Session Formats
Private Lesson
One-on-one hands-on instruction with your instrument. The teacher uses gentle touch to communicate new patterns of coordination while you sit, stand, move, and play.
- Hands-on guidance for your specific patterns
- Work at your instrument
- Personal anti-tension map development
- Take-home awareness practices
Group Lab
Coordination principles plus application blocks with peers. Observe others receiving instruction, practice awareness exercises, and receive individual attention within the group.
- Chair and table work demonstrations
- Instrument application for multiple players
- Peer observation and shared learning
- Group awareness exercises
6–8 Week Cohort
Structured progression from baseline habit awareness through audition simulation. Build skills systematically with accountability and peer support.
- Progressive skill development
- Private check-ins for individual assessment
- Audition simulation
- Personal maintenance plan creation
Curriculum Modules
Inhibition & Direction
Learn the foundational skills of Alexander Technique: pausing before habitual reaction and giving yourself conscious direction. Practice these principles first in simple activities before applying to your instrument.
- Recognizing the moment before habitual response
- Practicing non-doing (not adding tension)
- Giving direction without forcing
- Maintaining awareness under increasing complexity
Head/Neck/Back Relationship
Understand how the relationship between your head, neck, and back influences everything else. Learn to recognize when you're pulling your head back or down, compressing your spine, or interfering with your primary control.
- Sensing the balance of your head
- Releasing neck tension without collapsing
- Allowing spinal length
- Maintaining primary control while playing
Sitting & Standing Setup
Apply Alexander principles to your actual playing position. Whether you sit at a piano, stand with a violin, or move while conducting, learn how to establish and maintain good use.
- Chair height and positioning for your instrument
- Standing balance without locking knees
- Relationship to music stand
- Setup routines that establish good coordination
Effort Leaks
Identify where you create unnecessary work. Common patterns include gripping the instrument harder than needed, lifting shoulders toward ears, clenching jaw, holding breath.
- Identifying your specific tension patterns
- Understanding triggers
- Releasing grip without losing control
- Separating effort from tension
Pressure Application
Transfer your awareness skills to increasingly challenging musical situations. Practice maintaining coordination while playing technically demanding passages under time pressure.
- Maintaining awareness while playing
- Recovering quickly when tension returns
- Performing difficult passages with less effort
- Staying coordinated under pressure
Endurance Design
Learn how to sustain good use throughout long rehearsals, practice sessions, and performances. Develop micro-recovery strategies and pacing approaches.
- Micro-breaks that maintain momentum
- Reset routines for mid-session recovery
- Pacing strategies for marathon sessions
- Recognizing early signs of fatigue
Your Deliverables
Your Anti-Tension Map
A personalized document identifying your specific tension triggers, the situations that activate them, and the Alexander directions that address them.
Three Micro-Routines
Three written protocols: (1) Pre-practice warm-up, (2) Mid-rehearsal reset, (3) Pre-stage routine to center yourself before performance.
Maintenance Plan
A weekly and monthly practice structure for continuing your Alexander work independently with lie-down practice and awareness check-ins.
Frequently Asked
Explore Further
Feldenkrais Method
Another somatic education approach with complementary principles. Many musicians study both.
Breathwork & Embodied Breathing
Alexander principles support optimal respiratory function. Breathwork builds on this foundation.
Injury Prevention
Alexander Technique is a primary tool for preventing musculoskeletal issues that affect musicians.
Vocal Health
Alexander work directly supports vocal production by freeing the neck and releasing the jaw.
Book Your Session
Ready to get started? Contact us to schedule your first session.
Free Your Potential
The way you use yourself affects everything you do at the instrument. Alexander Technique provides the awareness to recognize habitual interference—and the means to change it. Begin your somatic education with The Global Conservatory.