Piano Guidance
Photo by Marta Wave Pexels Logo Photo: Marta Wave

What is the best way to learn piano scales?

Here are 10 practice tips for students and teachers: Begin with the black keys (B major, D-flat, G-flat). ... Practice chromatically rather than through the circle of fifths. ... Always practice musically! ... Develop an accurate inner pulse. ... Never play too fast. ... You can't force anything. ... Use the thumb properly. More items...

What is a 5 3 chord?
What is a 5 3 chord?

5-3 Chords 5-3 means root position chord. Look at the bass note (B). Add a note which is a fifth higher (F#) and another which is a third higher...

Read More »
Why do musicians jam?
Why do musicians jam?

Original jam sessions, also called "free flow sessions," are often used by musicians to develop new material (music) and find suitable...

Read More »

New: Major Scales for Piano for free download!

A thorough study of piano scales is vital to playing musically and with confidence. Nonetheless, while virtually all piano music has scales literally left and right, all too many students view scales as needless tedium rather than essential elements of music’s expressive vocabulary. Here are 10 practice tips for students and teachers: Begin with the black keys (B major, D-flat, G-flat). The five black keys promote a natural position of the hand, since the longer fingers play the shorter (i.e., black) keys and vice versa. Chopin always started his students with these keys and ended with C major as the most physically difficult. Unfortunately, nowadays C major is almost without exception the first piano scale learned, since the most difficult to play is also the easiest to read. However, even Vladimir Horowitz made this observation about C major: With his reputation as the greatest virtuoso of his time (his sheer variety of touch at all speeds has hardly been excelled), whenever interviewers asked him to name the most difficult piece he ever played, he would offer one of two replies, either Liszt’s startlingly difficult etude ‘Feux follets’ or the C major scale. He wasn’t being entirely facetious. Practice chromatically rather than through the circle of fifths. Chromatic progression has the advantage that the fingers are forced to adjust to a very different pattern from one scale to the next. Similarly, it’s useful to practice parallel keys side-by-side. Thus, a great daily warm-up is: D-flat major, C-sharp minor; D major, D minor; E-flat major, E-flat minor, etc. Alternatively, you can progress backwards chromatically starting with B major and ending with C, as per Chopin’s suggestion. Always practice musically! This point cannot be stressed enough. It is absolutely vital that the mind and emotions be connected with your fingers at all times. There is no such thing as “just” a scale or “just” an arpeggio. Practicing musically means varying your touch and articulation, the intensity of the sound, and sometimes even the tempo within a scale. Thus, crescendo and decrescendo as well as accelerando and ritardando, however subtle, are all expressive means that belong in the scale practice regimen of every pianist. Experiment with communicating various emotions simply through piano scales. Piano scales are at particular risk of sounding mechanical, and we need to do everything to make them as musical as possible. Develop an accurate inner pulse. Practicing scales is one of the few areas in which regularly practicing with a metronome is desirable. The vast majority of pianos students play scales very unevenly, and they cannot hear their unevenness. The metronome is therefore useful for correcting this problem. Nonetheless, it’s important not to have to rely on it. Subtle, controlled fluctuations in tempo are very often a desirable effect. Musicians need to be equipped both to play strictly in time and to deviate from absolute time in a beautifully controlled manner. For scale practice, rhythmic evenness should be given by far the greatest emphasis. (I actually had to practice, rather extensively at that, playing scales unevenly to achieve a desired effect, only to be criticized by a colleague for “not having practiced my scales”!) Never play too fast. Evenness is much more important than speed. Speed will come over time, all by itself, given proper concentration and regular work. Velocity is in any case never an end in itself, no matter how “showy” the music.

Can A song only have 3 chords?
Can A song only have 3 chords?

These three chords are a simple means of covering many melodies without the use of passing notes. There are tens of thousands of songs written with...

Read More »
Are there 9 senses?
Are there 9 senses?

9: vision, hearing, touch, taste, smell, pain, mechanoreception (balance etc.), temperature, interoreceptors (e.g. blood pressure, bladder stretch).

Read More »

You can’t force anything. Attempting to “force” your way to play something before your mind and body are able will always backfire. Thus, practicing scales slowly and evenly, without any excessive tension, will pave the way much more quickly to brilliant scales than will trying to play too fast too soon. Use the thumb properly. A true, literal legato connection can only be achieved in slow to moderate tempi. At faster speeds trying to play legatissimo creates an awkward manipulation of the playing mechanism that inhibits muscular freedom. Instead, listen very carefully (as always!) to match the articulation of each and every note, without any unnecessary tension. More legato will come over time when practicing this way; however, a perfect legato is not necessarily desirable in the fastest tempos – only a legato effect. Practice different rhythmic groups. Practice piano scales first in quarter notes, then eighths, then eighth-note triplets, then sixteenths. Even slightly accenting every fifth note can be a challenging change of pace for advanced students. Look straight ahead! It’s important to develop proper proprioception. That’s a complicated word that simply means the awareness of the body in space, something that athletes and dancers have to often an astonishing degree. Musicians need this faculty as well, and the less we rely on watching our hands, the more secure becomes our playing. This strategy has auxiliary benefits as well: Not only is looking up better for posture and muscular freedom (and hence tone production), but closing our eyes allows our minds to focus more on the sound, for the simple reason that there’s less “processing” for our brains to do.

Who is the greatest female guitarist of all time?
Who is the greatest female guitarist of all time?

1: Sister Rosetta Tharpe Heading this list of the best female guitarists in history, this early gospel artist really did invent a lot of the...

Read More »
What was Princess Diana's favorite perfume?
What was Princess Diana's favorite perfume?

Penhaligon's Bluebell Princess Diana's favourite perfume was Penhaligon's Bluebell - and you can still buy it today | HELLO! Sep 28, 2022

Read More »
What key is best for R&B?
What key is best for R&B?

What Scales Are Used for Soul or R&B? Listening to thousands of soul/R&B/neo-soul tracks, I can clearly hear that the E flat, B/Bb, and F major...

Read More »
What cords are used in jazz?
What cords are used in jazz?

Here is the List of Jazz Chords you will be Learning : Major (7th and 6th) Minor (7th, 6th, 9th and 11th) Dominant (7th, 9th and 13th) Minor 7th...

Read More »