Eduardo still remembers the exact moment when he and a student composed and recorded together in the school studio. You don’t forget stuff like that — when lessons suddenly turn into real music. After 35 years of teaching, Eduardo knows: the best moments happen when technique becomes second nature and creativity takes over.
This Brazilian native grew up with “proper” music and brings that passion into his teaching. As a self-taught musician, he teaches double bass, electric bass, guitar, and drums — not as separate things, but as parts of one big musical picture. From Munich to Hannover, he’s guided hundreds of students over the past three decades.
Eduardo’s biggest strength is rhythm — something most people just aren’t naturally blessed with. “Rhythm is the real challenge,” he says honestly. But that’s exactly where he steps in: through constant repetition, what feels impossible at first eventually becomes automatic.
His style range is pretty impressive: Brazilian music, jazz, pop, fusion, salsa, rap, rock, blues, Afro-Cuban. Doesn’t matter if you’re a beginner or advanced, kid or adult — Eduardo adapts. After a few lessons, students already have a foundation for chord progressions and right-hand orientation. After a month? “Depends on the individual student,” he says pragmatically.
“When playing, always repeat, so that eventually it happens automatically.”
Eduardo works with both private and group lessons and also preps students for performances and studio recordings. His approach is universal and creatively technical at the same time. Perfect for anyone “who wants to learn” — as he puts it simply. Sometimes the most straightforward answer really is the best one.