Amazing Grace

  1. Jul 7, 2018 Natalie Raynes Music-Amazing Grace- Advanced And Basic
  2. Nov 24, 2017 Hoffman Academy-Amazing Grace - Level Two Piano Tutorial - Hoffman Academy
  3. Jan 26, 2018 Three Left Hand Patterns You Need To Know || Piano Questions Answered
  4. How to work out the chords to a song on the piano


Besar Anugerah-Mu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOMh4SLH-vY&t=104s Jan 26, 2018 Three Left Hand Patterns You Need To Know || Piano Questions Answered Left hand patterns are a really popular way of starting to develop your hands-together improvisation skills on the piano or keyboard. In this tutorial, I take a look at three patterns - block chords, arpeggios and stride - and their strengths and weaknesses. The tutorial also covers how to move beyond left hand patterns as a pianist, because it's very easy to get "trapped" playing patterns and lose focus on the the real job of the left hand, which is to bring bass sounds, texture and harmony to the overall mix of your piano sound. Mixing up block chords, arpeggios and other patterns can give you a much more satisfying overall sound. Check out my piano book: http://www.billspianopages.com/how-to... Amazing Grace leadsheet (mentioned in tutorial): https://goo.gl/J9zUtM Tutorial on working out chords to a song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilcfg... If you want to learn more left hand patterns and general techniques for the left, be sure to subscribe to my channel and follow me on Facebook and Twitter: http://fb.me/billhiltonpiano http://twitter.com/billhilton You might also take a look at my Patreon crowdfunding page... http://www.patreon.com/billhilton Komentar dari: Aulia Izzati1 year ago 1. BLOCK CHORD 2. ARPEGGIO 3. STRIDE Combine all of those to make the piece that you're trying to play more fluid and not sound robotic. JawJX1 year ago agreed, you dont need to overplay in your left hand to be great. you can play simple root chords, arpeggios , but play them with maximum feeling with great melody right hand playing and it will sound awesome Tim Jacobs1 year ago I was asked to sit on the piano and play while friends of my sister got married. I only had some keyboard experience from 10 years earlier and only few weeks to learn 2 pop songs on piano, so I just decided to play the voice melody with the right hand, which is always easy. but then I had the problem: I never used my left hand for anything but block chords. so I needed a pattern that sounded a bit richer buts still easy to play. I came up with just a "power chord" style arpeggio pattern. R - 5 - 8 - 5 - 8 - 5 - 8 - 5 in 8th notes. Played slowly with plenty use of dynamic it figured out very well. Nobody did realize that I was actually a guitar player with no piano experience :-D Melo Keyz1 year ago Bill, you generally explained the three types of LH patterns but you played so fast, I couldn't catch the arpeggios pattern. Is it 1-5-1-5-1? Is it 1-5-1-3-4-5? Vaibhav Sokhi1 year ago I think he normally plays 1-5-1-3-5-1 but it seems like he varies it a bit Bill Hilton 1 year ago It varies by chord and the exact notes you use to form the arpeggio/broken chords, but on (say) the F and Bb I was playing 5-2-5-4-2-1. As ever with fingerings, though, what works and what doesn't is going to to vary slightly depending on your hand and finger size, strength and flexibility. The main thing is to choose a fingering that works for you and is good and legato! Besar Anugerah-Mu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOMh4SLH-vY&t=104s Jan 26, 2018 Three Left Hand Patterns You Need To Know || Piano Questions Answered Left hand patterns are a really popular way of starting to develop your hands-together improvisation skills on the piano or keyboard. In this tutorial, I take a look at three patterns - block chords, arpeggios and stride - and their strengths and weaknesses. The tutorial also covers how to move beyond left hand patterns as a pianist, because it's very easy to get "trapped" playing patterns and lose focus on the the real job of the left hand, which is to bring bass sounds, texture and harmony to the overall mix of your piano sound. Mixing up block chords, arpeggios and other patterns can give you a much more satisfying overall sound. Check out my piano book: http://www.billspianopages.com/how-to... Amazing Grace leadsheet (mentioned in tutorial): https://goo.gl/J9zUtM Tutorial on working out chords to a song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilcfg... If you want to learn more left hand patterns and general techniques for the left, be sure to subscribe to my channel and follow me on Facebook and Twitter: http://fb.me/billhiltonpiano http://twitter.com/billhilton You might also take a look at my Patreon crowdfunding page... http://www.patreon.com/billhilton Komentar dari: Aulia Izzati1 year ago 1. BLOCK CHORD 2. ARPEGGIO 3. STRIDE Combine all of those to make the piece that you're trying to play more fluid and not sound robotic. JawJX1 year ago agreed, you dont need to overplay in your left hand to be great. you can play simple root chords, arpeggios , but play them with maximum feeling with great melody right hand playing and it will sound awesome Tim Jacobs1 year ago I was asked to sit on the piano and play while friends of my sister got married. I only had some keyboard experience from 10 years earlier and only few weeks to learn 2 pop songs on piano, so I just decided to play the voice melody with the right hand, which is always easy. but then I had the problem: I never used my left hand for anything but block chords. so I needed a pattern that sounded a bit richer buts still easy to play. I came up with just a "power chord" style arpeggio pattern. R - 5 - 8 - 5 - 8 - 5 - 8 - 5 in 8th notes. Played slowly with plenty use of dynamic it figured out very well. Nobody did realize that I was actually a guitar player with no piano experience :-D Melo Keyz1 year ago Bill, you generally explained the three types of LH patterns but you played so fast, I couldn't catch the arpeggios pattern. Is it 1-5-1-5-1? Is it 1-5-1-3-4-5? Vaibhav Sokhi1 year ago I think he normally plays 1-5-1-3-5-1 but it seems like he varies it a bit Bill Hilton 1 year ago It varies by chord and the exact notes you use to form the arpeggio/broken chords, but on (say) the F and Bb I was playing 5-2-5-4-2-1. As ever with fingerings, though, what works and what doesn't is going to to vary slightly depending on your hand and finger size, strength and flexibility. The main thing is to choose a fingering that works for you and is good and legato! How to work out the chords to a song on the piano https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilcfgQ3lZus

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