Posts tagged as:

piano techniques

Top Ways To Sound Great Playing Piano

by Tania Gleaves on January 29, 2012

Develop and refine your piano technique.

No matter how advanced your playing develops, you’ll always benefit from returning to the basics. Returning to the basics in fact, is one of the top ways to sound great playing piano and it means practicing your scales, chords, sharps, flats, and all the other grunt work you learned as a beginner. You’ll want to be so skilled that you can repeat your lessons with your eyes closed! After you’ve mastered the basics, you’ll want to then practice playing the piano emotionally. There are several tools you can use to convey emotion in your performance, many of which manipulate volume and rhythm with range dynamics, legatos, slurs, staccatos, ties, transposes, and more.

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These are some of the items you can develop and refine before you set out to play chords progressions and accompaniment. Quite often, learning pianists will rush into their lessons without taking the time to appreciate the details. As they say, the devil is in the details. So resist the temptation to skip lessons 4, 5, and 6 before you’ve even learned lesson 3! Lesson 7 after all, may introduce concepts that depend on knowledge gained from the lessons you might have “glossed over.”

Developing and refining your musical ear

We know a fellow who likes to poke fun of speech and emphasize an important reality about our senses. He likes to tease people who say they have an ear for music or an eye for art. As always, this fellow’s response to such a phrase is, “Oh really? Well I have two! One on each side of my nose!” Although he’s a bit too literal for our tastes, he does make a good point. And that is to “see” clearly, or in our case, to “hear” clearly.

We suppose our friend is really saying, listen ‘twice’ as hard. At the same time that you listen to a great piece of music — and enjoy it — you’re also evaluating it . Even while you’re playing the piano yourself, you’re evaluating how faithfully you’re representing the song’s emotion and technical notation. To strengthen your listening skills however (or to listen with *both* of your ears as our friend would insist), you can record yourself playing the piano, and then evaluate the result. After enough practice, you’ll be able to do this without the aid of a tape recorder and make an immediate assessment the minute that you press a key.

Another way to strengthen your listening skills is to evaluate the music that moves you. While listening to the music of others, ask yourself what it is about that music that excites you. Then try to incorporate its characteristics into the music that you play (or at least, into your playing style). Of course you could do just the opposite as well. Evaluate what it is about music that bores you to death and then do everything you can to avoid it in your own music!

Just don’t make the mistake of believing that your opinion is the only one that matters. Seek out the opinions of others and ask for honest criticism. Don’t ask for just the sugarcoated stuff. Ask your friends and family to be a brutally honest as they care to be. Then use that criticism to improve your style.

Click Here And Discover The Top Ways To Sound Great Playing Piano!

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Top 10 Ways To Improve Your Sight Reading

by Tania Gleaves on January 25, 2012

Looking for the top 10 ways to improve your sight reading? 1. Learn every bit of notation that you can get your hands on. The more notation that you learn, the easier it is to interpret the notes you see. Don’t just stop at the basics. Go on to learn intermediate notation and advanced notation. Sure, the deeper that you delve into notation, the more advanced and complicated the music becomes — but don’t let that scare you. You’re in the learning stage right now, so have at it. You’ll thank yourself for all the hard studying you’ve done once you’re placed into the spotlight.

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2. Check out the key. When you’re faced with a piece of sheet music, look at the key. This will quickly let you know which notes are sharp and which notes are flat. 3. Try to hum the song before playing it. If the crowd that you’re playing for is patient, give the notation a good look-over and hum it as you read it. If you’re lucky, there’ll be a friendly musician standing by who’ll walk you through the piece before you begin.

4. Hear or know the song before you read its notation. You’ll be even luckier if you’re already familiar with the song that you’re expected to play! This is where the benefit of exposure begins to shine. The more music that you expose yourself to, the easier it is to “know” how a song is supposed to “go.” 5. Get your hands ready. Time permitting, see if you can place your hands in several important chord positions before starting. 6. Keep your eyes on the music. “Never let them see you sweat,” they say — a feat that’s certainly easier said than done! The key here is to, at the very least, look as though you know what you’re doing even if you don’t. While you’re faking it, you can use a little improve to stall and quickly find a place in the music that’s easy to interpret. This will be a place where you can restore your confidence, play like a pro, and give your audience a convincing nod and wink (as though you never missed a beat). 7. Speaking of keeping the beat, you’ll also want to keep up the tempo no matter what happens. We guess the cat’s out the bag now and your question of whether pianists ever make mistakes is now answered. They do – but the most skillful ones won’t let you know it. They keep the beat going even if they drop notes or lose their place in their sheet music. Like the Energizer Bunny, they move on full force as if they were born savants. As a sight reader – that’s your job now. 8. Keep the left hand busy. The role of the left hand is to maintain a steady rhythm and key. The role of the right hand however is to embellish what the left hand is doing. If things get hectic and you’re stuggling with a song’s melody, stop playing the melody but keep that left-hand going! The lead singer or other instruments will fill in what your right hand is incapable of playing. As a rule, rhythm, key, and chords are more important than the melody. 9. Practice seeing sheet music. Before placing yourself into a sight-reading situation, envision what a song’s notation would look like. Pick any song from the radio or television, and start picturing its notes. This will help train your mind to associate sounds with notes and notes with sounds, anywhere… anytime. 10. Try to write your own music. This too, will help train your mind to make appropriate note-sound associations.

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Top 10 Ways To Effectively Practice Piano

December 17, 2011

Let us start by admitting piano practice isn’t always fun. At times, it can be as grueling a task as mopping the floor or teaching your York Terrier to roll over (even when he hasn’t done it for the hundredth time). The key thing about piano practice however, is that it isn’t really supposed to [...]

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Top 5 Myths About Learning To Play Piano

November 2, 2011

You have to be born with natural ability. As one of the top 5 myths about learning to play piano, this myth may have you condemned before you even start! Everyone and anyone can learn to play piano as long as they exercise the required amount of patience and practice. The piano in fact, is [...]

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Top 10 Things To Look For In Online Piano Lessons

August 30, 2011

1. Basic notation. When looking for online piano lessons, one of the top 10 things to look for in online piano lessons is the very basics at the least. While you may think that learning the names of notes and where they exist on a keyboard will suffice, quality piano lessons will teach you much [...]

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Online Piano Lesson Reviews – Finding a Piano Training Program That’s Right for You…

February 6, 2010

The purpose of  good online piano lesson reviews is to help you separate high quality piano training programs from down right scams. Can online piano lesson reviews really teach you to play piano at home like a pro? Can anyone use them? The answer to both questions is yes; You need to be aware of [...]

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Piano Suite Premiere: The Ups and Downs

January 16, 2010

Piano Suite Premier is based on the idea of continuous feedback. The software constantly guides you with an interactive tutor, letting you correct your mistakes before they become bad habits. Designed with the beginner in mind, it features automatic page turning in the songbook, speaking menus and over 500 songs. From pop to blues, national [...]

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Play Piano Like a Pro – Deal or Dud?

December 10, 2009

Product Overview Learn to play piano like a pro, and get it from a performer and instructor who knows how to get you the results you want quickly. There are three coures in the full collection. “Mr. Ron” Worthy uses straight-forward, time-tested methods to break down piano playing to its basic elements. Then, as you [...]

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