Passing a grade usually means you are playing at a level that corresponds to that grade. For instance, Grade 1 and 2 I would consider late beginner level*. Grade 3 is early intermediate. Grade 4 and 5 are intermediate levels. Grade 6 is late intermediate, Grade 7 is early advanced.
LilyPond is cross-platform, and is available for several common operating systems; released under the terms of the GNU General Public License,...
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Are Digital Pianos Worth It? In most cases, yes! A digital piano is worth it as long as you buy a digital piano that fits your goals and needs. In...
Read More »suspended fourth A suspended chord—abbreviated sus on music sheets and tabs—is a musical chord which is a variation on the major or minor triads....
Read More »Misconception two: the faster I go through the grades, the better I am at playing the piano It’s the disease of our time – trying to find shortcuts to mastery. (hint: doesn’t work people) First of all, the grades are not necessarily evenly spaced. It can take 2 or 3 years to work up to Grade 1. Between grade 5 and 6 can easily take 2 years, and the same for later grades. You will have heard stories of 12-year-olds who have acquired grade 8. Certainly there are students who deserve this. Think of amazing musicians like Tiffany Poon who have been obsessed with the piano since they were 2.5 years old and worked SO hard their whole life. But a lot of those young “grade 8”s are actually limited musicians who have only ever played some exam repertoire and did virtually nothing else in their lessons. There are also adults who seem determined to get to the magical grade 8 in as little time as possible. I’ve heard people claim they did it in 5 years. Possible? Sure. Recommended? Absolutely not. This kind of thinking stems from a deep misunderstanding of the complexity of artistic skill development. It usually comes from a place of competitiveness and a need to ‘prove’ themselves. By trying to go as fast as possible through harder and harder repertoire, you are more likely to get injured, you’ll skip important developmental learning stages and miss out on a lot of experience. All while single-mindedly pursuing a number on a piece of paper. That’s not what music is about. And it’s not what the exams are for. Misconception three: You must go for a grade that’s higher than your current skillset
four people It takes at least four people to efficiently move a piano, with two to three people doing the heavy lifting, and the others guiding...
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