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time signatures

Playing Beginner Piano – An Introduction

by Tania Gleaves on January 7, 2012

little girl playing piano Playing Beginner Piano   An Introduction

It isn’t hard at all to learn beginner piano and once you learn the basics, you’ll discover that the rest of your journey is a straightforward process.

Learning can be intimidating to people who have no experience with piano music at all, but it can even intimidate musicians who are used to playing a different instrument as well.

The good news is that everything starts to get a little easier with practice and understanding that it’s relatively easy after you learn how to read music notation.

Interpreting music notation, whether for piano, the bass guitar, or the saxophone, is “required reading” because it not only communicates emotion from a composer, it familiarizes the player with the basic structure of all music.

Once you can read and play piano notation, you can usually go on to play more advanced notation for the violin, the flute, and a host of other instruments.

The basics start with understanding its 88 pitches — the tones produced by striking each key.

The white keys are named by the A, B, C, D, E, F, and G letters while the black keys — the sharps and flats — change the pitch of the white keys with a slightly higher or lower tone.

Each set of white keys starting from the very left (A, B, C, D, E, F, and G) is called an octave, and at first, you may learn to play a song within a single octave. In more advanced notion however, you may play songs with both hands in different octaves at once.

Of course to make a series of notes sound like a song, you will need to learn about note duration. Note duration is also one of the first beginner piano lessons you’ll learn, and it will introduce you to whole notes, half notes, and quarter notes.

Holding down a piano key for the duration of an entire beat plays a whole note, while holding down a piano key for the duration of half a beat plays a half note. The variation of these beats and tones is what creates a tune or a song.

At this stage, you’ll mostly learn simple songs like “Row Row Row Your Boat,” or “Hot Cross Buns” because they provide a gentle introduction to the piano keys, key pitches, and note duration.

In advanced music notation, you’ll find more complicated note durations indicated by dots or ties.

Understanding what the time signature means is another important beginner piano lesson, as it determines the constant rhythm that an entire song should follow. Two numbers that look like a fraction represent a time signature in music notation.

The number on top tells musicians how many beats are in a measure (a group of notes in sheet music) and the number on bottom tells musicians what kind of note qualifies as one beat.

The most common time signature for beginners is the 4/4 signature, and it tells musicians that there will be four distinct beats in each measure and that the quarter note counts as one beat.

As you practice the beginner piano more and more and start to listen for these characteristics in classical music, you’ll start to pick up on some pretty common patterns.

Most simple songs are played within conventional time signatures and octaves, so by training your ear to listen for them, you’ll improve each time that you sit down to play the piano yourself!

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Piano Sheet Music Confidential

by Tania Gleaves on December 28, 2011

Piano sheet music has been around since the birth of the piano. It is the diary of the process of the composer. All of the heart and soul of piece lies within the notation of the sheet music.

Sheet music can be used to record or to create a musical score. Musicians often use it to analyze details in music that aren’t always heard with the naked ear. Sight reading would not be possible if without the miracle of piano sheet music.

Click Here And Understand Piano Sheet Music Better!

The ability to read sheet music is a form of literacy. Musical notation is much like reading a foreign language. Each not and beat is another word and punctuation to add to the sentence also known as a musical phrase.

A piano reduction is a type of piano sheet music. It is a transcription for the piano of a score that was intended for many instruments, as in a symphony. These kinds of arrangements are made for a piano solo or a piano duet.

How Do You Read Sheet Music?

Sight reading for sheet music can take a little time to master. This is a skill in and of itself that gets easier with time and practice. The raising and lowering of the notes on the staves causes the eyes to bounce up and down across the sheet.

A common strategy when reading sheet music is to break the score into chunks or movements. This would be like reading a long sentence an breaking it into smaller parts to make it easier to remember.

When sight reading the focus is on instantly playing the notes as you see them. This is most challenging task for new musicians who are used to playing by ear. The timing and refixation of the eyes from instrument to sheet music does improve over time.

The Nuts and Bolts

The parts that go into making sheet music can be confusing at first, but become clear once you understand their purpose. The five line staff is used to create the basis for the notation. The placement of the notes on the staff dictates the pitch of the music.

The staff starts of with the clef which looks like a fancy letter “g” that is flipped backwards. The clef lets you know the range of the pitches that will be played throughout the piece.

The key signature identifies what key the music was written in. The key signature can also lets the reader know which notes will be flat or sharp in the piece.

The time signature follows the key signature. Music gains its character from the time signature. Measures or “bars” break the music into smaller chunks called beats which are dictated by the time signature.

Piano sheet music is read from left to right just like a standard book. Now that you know the basic structure of sheet music you can search at your local music shop and find some that you want to perform.

Click Here And Understand Piano Sheet Music Better!

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Top 5 Ways To Develop Your Piano Rhythm

December 9, 2011

Learn the basic rhythms. As one of the top 5 ways to develop your piano rhythm, learning the basic beats found in any kind of music will help. The more rhythms that you listen to in fact, the easier they are to identify and emulate. We have for example, the standard four-beat rhythm that counts [...]

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Music Time Signatures – What Are They?

November 30, 2011

When you start studying piano lessons, you will learn the basic knowledge of music which also includes music time signatures. Time signatures are composed of two numbers in the form of a fraction which tells you the number of notes and the kind of note receiving one beat in each measure. Say what?! That might [...]

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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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Beginner Lessons For Piano – Helpful Tips

July 12, 2011

Beginner lessons for piano will take you far in your quest. But supplementing your lessons with some ‘outside’ or unconventional training will shorten the time it takes to become an expert pianist. It goes without saying that practice makes perfect. However, there are a few additional things that you can do to improve the quality [...]

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