Paul Williams first started teaching music to children while working for the Shaftsbury Society in England.
Since then he has taught guitar and piano to many private students and has taught music in pre-schools and kindergarten
as well as for the National Guitar Workshop. He has written for Music Television (Nickelodeon) and Musical Theater.
He created "The Music Room" with his wife Carey Cromelin, The Music Room differs from many other
classes in that it is still taught by the people who created it and not farmed out to other teachers.
He has a parallel career as a musician and singer songwriter which began in the Folk clubs of England when
he was 13 years old. He recently wrote "Reaching Out To say Hello" for the 92nd Street Y's Educational Outreach
Program and continues to write, record and perform in the New York area under the name Paul Clements. He had one of the longest
running music engagements in New York City having played regularly on Wednesday nights at the legendary "The Bitter End"
from 1985 to 2000. He is married to actress Carey Cromelin and has two, six and a half year old children, Virginia
and George Williams.