Showing posts with label piano lessons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piano lessons. Show all posts

Friday, January 07, 2011

Piano Lessons For Everybody

When I was growing up it seemed as though most the kids my age were taking piano lessons. As I reached my teen-age years I realized that wasn't quite true, but still, a much larger percentage of kids used to take piano lessons than is true today.

I don't know the reason for that, but I suspect it was because we didn't have a million options -- very few families had TV, and of course that was way before the days of the internet and electronic games.

Taking music lessons of some kind was a real benefit to all of us back then, even if we didn't follow through, because it gave us a certain discipline we needed.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

How Long Do I Have To Keep Taking Lessons?

There comes a time in the life of every piano student when he asks the question "How long do I have to keep taking lessons?"
The answer is simple: Don't quit before you get to the "tipping point".

There is a "tipping point" in piano that when reached makes it easy to continue as a pianist even if lessons aren't taken. It's like a teeter totter -- once the weight gets on your side, things begin to happen and momentum takes over. Once people know you play well, you get asked to do things -- accompany someone, play at SS, at school, etc. and your skill brings with it some pride of achievement and satisfaction of participating.

As you may know, I took lessons from about 1st grade through 7th or so with no intention of doing anything with it, but because of that I was asked to do several things (let's see if I can remember):

1. When I was a freshman in Placer High the accompanyist for the school choir (which I sang in) was sick for a week, and Mr. Walker asked me to fill in. I was scared and didn't want to, but ended up doing it. I faked a lot of it, but got through.

2. The piano player for a school dance band had just graduated, and because I played a little and they didn't have any alternative, they asked me to play with them. They said I would have to know chords, and I didn't, so I learned a WHOLE bunch in a very few months simply out of fear of being embarrased. I didn't feel very comfortable playing with the group for a couple years, but I gradually got the hang of it.

3. Harry, the owner of the funeral parlor, saw me play at Sunday School at the Methodist church across the street, so asked me if I would fill in for the organist at the funeral home when she was gone. Again, I didn't want to do it, but it paid $15., and all I had to play was 2 or 3 songs.
 
    So one thing led to another and before long I was playing semi-professionally, and then professionally, and eventually played almost continuously for soloists, groups, quartets, trombone quartets, etc. etc. It was natural then to begin teaching privately part time, then full time, then having a studio of my own, then teaching by cassette long distance, then publishing my own piano books and cassettes and then videos and......
 
     The point of all this is: Get past the tipping point! Once you do, momentum will take over. If you like music, don't quit taking lessons until opportunities like this arise naturally -- and don't quit at all if you want to get really good. I continued to take lessons on and off while I was playing professionally, and it paid off big time!

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Music Theory & Harmony: Boring?




Music Theory & Harmony: Boring? No!
It's An Exciting X-Ray Into

How Music Works!


It's a sad fact that most people, including piano players, regard music theory and harmony as some abstract concept that has very little to do with the songs they play on their pianos. Nothing could be further from the truth. Knowing music theory and harmony is the key to opening a whole new world of exciting insights into the songs we play, and enable us to do things on the piano we never dreamed we could do, to say nothing of enjoying the process a hundred times more.


What is music theory, and how can I benefit?


Here are just a few of the wonderful skills and insights a person benefits from by learning music theory:


How notation works -- a huge advantage in sight-reading.


The hierarchy of rhythm -- solving rhythm problems before they begin.


All kinds of scales -- the "ladders of notes" every song is composed of. Major scales, 3 types of minor scales, chromatic scales, whole tone scales, modal scales.


How transposition and modulation works -- playing songs in different keys, and getting from one key to another smoothly.


Complex time signatures, and what they tell you.


Perfect, major & minor intervals -- helps ear training greatly.


Two-part and four-part harmony.


For the rest of this article, please go to http://www.playpiano.com/musictheoryharmony.htm

Monday, February 26, 2007

Piano Books: The Top Piano Books To Help You Become a Better Piano Player!

Piano Books: The Top Piano Books To Help You Become a Better Piano Player
There are umpteen zillion piano books available in music stores and online at such places as Amazon. And piano books are usually necessary if your goal is to become a better pianist.

But how does a person know which piano books are necessary and which books are redundant, to say nothing of good or bad. There are books on music theory, scales, chords, books about composers, books about music in general, and of course piano lesson books by Schaum, Williams, Alfred d'Auberge, Bastien, John Thompson, Glover, etc., etc.

The best way is to divide the study of piano playing into it's components:
General lesson piano books:
For the rest of this article, please go to: http://www.playpiano.com/pianobooks.htm
AddThis Social Bookmark Button


If you aren't already a subscriber then please subscribe to our FREE e-mail newsletter on:
Piano Chords & Chord Progressions!

:
: