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Piano Lessons for Teens
in Chicago.

Private piano lessons for teens in Chicago’s Ukrainian Village. Ages 11 and up. Drop-off studio. Taught by a working musician who meets your kid where they are — not where a method book says they should be.

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Nick Olynciw, Chicago teen piano teacher

If you’re a parent looking for a piano teacher for your teen, you’re probably weighing two things: is this person actually qualified, and is this going to be the right fit for a kid who’s either checked out of traditional lessons or never had them and is skeptical?

For the parent reading this

The qualification piece is straightforward: your teen would be studying with a working professional musician (graduate study at Western Michigan University, undergrad at the University of North Texas, awards including Winner of the Jacksonville Jazz Piano Competition, the AJPC Bösendorfer Award, and the American Pianists Association Alternate). Currently teaching at the Chicago Academy for the Arts. Performs regularly at Andy’s Jazz Club, the Coq D’Or at the Drake Hotel, and venues around the Midwest.

The fit piece matters more for teens. Most teens who’ve had unsuccessful piano lessons share a common experience: a teacher who insisted on classical-method-book progression and didn’t let them play anything they actually liked. That’s not how lessons work here. If your teen wants to play Adele, Sufjan Stevens, Bruno Mars, the new song they discovered last week — that’s where we start. Technique and theory get folded in alongside real music, in service of it.

The studio setup

Lessons are one-on-one. Parents are welcome to drop off and pick up — students typically learn fastest when it’s just the two of them in the room. The studio is in Ukrainian Village; the exact address is shared after booking. Online lessons via Zoom are also available at the same rate, which works well for teens whose schedules or geography make in-person tough.

Age-wise, lessons here work best for students about 11 and up — that’s the point at which most students can engage with lessons independently and get the most out of them. We’ll talk about that during the intro call.

What teens get out of this

The students who do best here tend to be ones who actually care about music — not necessarily ones who think they want to be professional musicians, just ones who connect with songs and want to play them. Within a few months, most are playing real music recognizably and starting to hear how songs are built. The longer-term goal is that they leave with a real, life-long musical skill — the ability to sit down at a piano and play.

Why parents choose this studio

What this gives parents.

Working musician & faculty
Chicago Academy for the Arts
Major awards
Jacksonville Jazz, Bösendorfer, DownBeat
Drop-off lessons
One-on-one, parents not present
Multi-style fluency
Pop, jazz, R&B, classical foundations
Ages 11+
Teen-appropriate pacing
Mon–Thu, 3–9pm
After-school slots available
Common questions from parents

Five things parents ask before booking.

My teen has played for a few years with another teacher. Can they pick up here without starting over?

Yes. The first lesson is partly diagnostic — we figure out together what they know, what feels solid, and where the gaps are. Most students transitioning in pick up where they left off within two or three lessons.

What if my teen doesn’t practice between lessons?

Practice habits develop over time, and lessons here are built to make progress visible enough that students want to practice rather than need to be nagged. Students who don’t practice consistently progress slower — fine for some families, not for others. We can talk specifics on the intro call.

Can my teen do this alongside school music programs?

Yes — and it usually complements them. School ensembles teach reading and group musicianship; private lessons here teach how to actually play and improvise. The two stack well. Plenty of students here are also in their school’s band, choir, or jazz ensemble.

How do I know if my teen is actually progressing?

You’ll hear it. Within a few months you’ll recognize songs being played from the other room. We’re also happy to record short progress clips when something is worth capturing. Most parents prefer to let the lessons run and check in once or twice a semester.

Is this audition-prep ready?

Yes. Students preparing for school music auditions, conservatory programs, or college applications have a clear path here — technical repertoire, performance preparation, audition strategy. The studio has recording capability for capturing audition cuts when needed. Talk through your teen’s specific timeline on the intro call.

What a parent says

“He was instrumental in teaching my son to sight-read and develop his own voice on the piano. Five stars plus!”

Luke H.
Parent of teen student
Featured summer program

Eight weeks on the music they actually love.

The Pop Piano Jumpstart is built for teen players who want to play current pop — Olivia Rodrigo, Taylor Swift, Sabrina Carpenter — instead of method-book pieces. Eight 50-minute lessons, $850 for the pack, valid 1 year from purchase.

See the Pop Piano Jumpstart →
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