Wednesday, August 31, 2011

To Learn Piano You Need To Learn To Practice.

By Andy Penbram


Attempting to learn piano can be a bit upsetting if you concentrate on your playing for weeks on end only to find out that you do not seem to be getting anywhere. A lack of improvement is the most common reason that folks give up learning to play the piano, this is above all true in children. So as to improve at playing piano here are a few pointers for your practice sessions.

Structure your practice sessions - Make a little routine for your practice sessions. This may be a bit different for every person based totally on the type of music they are learning and the style they are planning to play in.

The very first thing to do when you sit down to practice is to warm up. This may be done really effectively by playing scales and arpeggios which apart from warming up the fingers also serves in becoming comfortable at playing in all keys.

When you've done the warmup you may then go on to playing your pieces. You will know where the tricky passages are in the pieces you're learning. Go straight to these sections at the start of your practice sessions. Separate the hands and spend one or two seconds playing each hand by itself. First the right hand and then the other but do keep swapping over in order not to allow the other hand get cold. As fast as you have done that for a while you need to then endeavor to play the section with both hands together. Now you can go onto playing the entire piece and feel more comfortble when it comes to that troublesome part you have just practiced.

Attempt to employ a metronome whenever you can, both for your scales and for any pieces you're learning how to play too if they permit it. Initially set the metronome at a slower speed so that you can practice the piece more correctly. When you've the piece more or less in order then you can over a period of one or two days begin to slowly notch up the speed until you are practicing the piece at its proper speed. You might even try setting the metronome at a faster tempo than needed just to get your fingers really accustomed to the piece.

You want to discover how to relax at the same time as you are playing. Relax your fingers, your back and in fact your whole posture. If you are tense while you play then you will find it far more difficult to control your fingers and for your playing to flow. Doing this is sort of like studying how to ride a bike. At the beginning there are such a lot of things to remember and coordinate but at some point it all of a sudden clicks and it all falls into place.




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