Information and Resources To Help You Learn The Piano
7 Apr
I’m learning to play piano and I want to know if there’s any exercises I can do to improve my playing with the left hand. What I mean is that I cant play one rhythm with the left and another with the right, is there any way to help me?
Anyone can learn to do that- you just need to practice. It’s frustrating at first, but that just means you’re learning.
Find a book of simple beginners’ pieces. (Unfortunately, it will probably be aimed at 6-year olds and have an embarrassing cover- put duct tape on the front or something if that bugs you.) You want the pieces to be easy to read, so that you can focus on your hands. Work through the pieces slowly and consciously, as slowly as you need to. It might feel lame or something to be working that slow- but that is how everyone has to start a piece. There is not a single musician in the world who sounded the same on his first day of practice, as he does in performance.
Learn each hand separately so you can understand what it sounds like. ‘Counterpoint’ comes from Latin ‘puncta contra puncta’, ‘point against point’ or note against note. It basically means having two independent melodies that sound nice together. When you understand how the melodies sound on their own, it will be easier for you to play them together.
Then, once you have an idea of what each melody should sound like (which probably won’t take very long) play slowly, hands together, getting used to the different feeling. Playing hands separate and playing hands together are very distinct from each other, so don’t get intimidated if it’s really rough at first.
If you start to become tense or frustrated, stop and do something else. If you start to get tired, if your mind starts to wander, stop.
The only valuable practice is conscious practice, when you are alert enough to engage yourself in your music. You’re better off practicing for an alert, active 30 minutes a day than a sort of mechanical, hazy 4 hours. Your endurance, like your skill, will come with time.
Make a recording of your practicing every week- you’ll like seeing how much you’ve improved and it can motivate you when you hit a rough spot. You’ll see how far you’ve come, and you’ll appreciate your victories.
Hope this helped.
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2 Responses for "How can I play piano with both of my hands?"
Anyone can learn to do that- you just need to practice. It’s frustrating at first, but that just means you’re learning.
Find a book of simple beginners’ pieces. (Unfortunately, it will probably be aimed at 6-year olds and have an embarrassing cover- put duct tape on the front or something if that bugs you.) You want the pieces to be easy to read, so that you can focus on your hands. Work through the pieces slowly and consciously, as slowly as you need to. It might feel lame or something to be working that slow- but that is how everyone has to start a piece. There is not a single musician in the world who sounded the same on his first day of practice, as he does in performance.
Learn each hand separately so you can understand what it sounds like. ‘Counterpoint’ comes from Latin ‘puncta contra puncta’, ‘point against point’ or note against note. It basically means having two independent melodies that sound nice together. When you understand how the melodies sound on their own, it will be easier for you to play them together.
Then, once you have an idea of what each melody should sound like (which probably won’t take very long) play slowly, hands together, getting used to the different feeling. Playing hands separate and playing hands together are very distinct from each other, so don’t get intimidated if it’s really rough at first.
If you start to become tense or frustrated, stop and do something else. If you start to get tired, if your mind starts to wander, stop.
The only valuable practice is conscious practice, when you are alert enough to engage yourself in your music. You’re better off practicing for an alert, active 30 minutes a day than a sort of mechanical, hazy 4 hours. Your endurance, like your skill, will come with time.
Make a recording of your practicing every week- you’ll like seeing how much you’ve improved and it can motivate you when you hit a rough spot. You’ll see how far you’ve come, and you’ll appreciate your victories.
Hope this helped.
References :
I had the same problem when I was learning. My tutor told me to practice scales in my left hand, particularly contrary motion scales where your hands are moving in opposite directions so for instance if you were playing a contrary motion scale on C major you’d start with both thumbs on middle C, your right hand would move up the keys (D, E, F, G etc.) and your left hand would move down (B, A, G, F etc.). Once you reached two octaves you ‘turn’ so to speak and repeat in reverse so by the end your thumbs should both be back on middle C. It really helps to build up strength in both hands and its good for practicing keeping both hands in sync. Once you’ve mastered the scale on C make it a little harder and move onto D major which includes the two sharps, F and C.
If this is too hard to start off with then just practice normal scales on your left hand. If your not too confident on key signatures it might be an idea to buy yourself a book of scales to practice with.
Practice everyday and you’ll soon see a difference in that left hand.
Good luck!
References :
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