Showing posts with label piano lesson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piano lesson. Show all posts

Learn To Play Jingle Bells- No Sheet Music!



Peter Edvinsson is a musician, composer and music teacher.
Here is one of his articles:

In this piano lesson we will learn to play piano Christmas music. We will use piano tab notation so you don't need to read piano sheet music.


Jingle Bells is one of the most popular secular Christmas songs in the world. The most played part of the song is the refrain which we will concentrate on in this piano lesson.

Jingle bells, jingle bells
Jingle all the way!
O what fun it is to ride
In a one-horse open sleigh

In this piano lesson you will learn to play Jingle Bells without the use of piano sheet music. After this learn to play piano tutorial you will be able to play the melody with both hands!

Instead of piano sheet music we will use piano tab notation which will tell you where to place your fingers as you play the melody.

The first thing we will do is to locate the note C.

You will find the note C on many places on the piano. It is the white key to the left of two black keys.

Now it's time to locate the middle C. It is the C right in the middle of the keyboard. On an ordinary upright piano it is near the keyhole.

In our piano lesson we will number the keys. The middle C in our piano tab notation is called 1.

What does 1 mean?

When you see the number 1 you are to press down the middle C once. The white key to the right of C is called 2, the next 3 and so on.

Let's play some piano tab notes:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Now you have played a C-major scale with the actual notes C D E F G A B.

Let's proceed in our piano lesson and play the first notes of Jingle Bells!

Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells

3 3 3 3 3 3

This is the first part of the refrain. Easy?

I guess that you hear that the third and sixt note has to be a bit longer to create the melody Jingle Bells.

So far we have only used the right hand for playing the melody. How can you use your left hand?

Let's make this piece a little bit more difficult and also more rewarding to play by using the left hand for bass notes.

The notes from C to the next C is called an octave. The keys are grouped this way on the whole keyboard.

You also have these notes to the left of the middle C. We can call these notes the left octave.

If you use the notes 1-7 in the left octave to play bass notes with your left hand we can notate the melody in the following way:

3/1 3 3 3/1 3 3

The note to the right of the slash is the bass note. 3/1 means that as you play the first number 3 with your right hand you simultaneously play number 1 in the left octave with your left hand.

I guess you have noticed that you only play bass notes together with some of the melody notes.

Let's continue this piano lesson with the next line:

Jingle all the way!

3/1 5 1 2 3/1

What fingers should you use as you play?

You can and maybe you already use your index fingers on both hands to play but it will be easier to find your notes if you cultivate the habit of using all your fingers.

On your right hand you can use your thumb to play number 1 and your index finger to play number 2 and so on.

The next piano tab looks like this:

O what fun it is to ride

4/4 4 4 4 4/1 3 3

If you want to use fingerings on your left hand you place your little finger above key number 1 and your thumb on number 5 and the other fingers accordingly.

It's time for the last piano tab:

In a one-horse open sleigh

3 3 3/2 2 2 3 2/5 5

Actually it's not the last piano tab. Now you are supposed to play the refrain from the beginning and when you come to the last line play it in the following way:

In a one-horse open sleigh

3 3 5/5 5 4/5 2 1/1

I suggest that you learn this Christmas song by heart. Memorize it one line at a time and enjoy the Christmas spirit present when you play the song for your friends!

* * * * * * *



I love this arrangement!

Jingle Bells #2 (Easy Piano Arrangement)
A visual presentation of easy piano to accompany the Christmas song "Jingle Bells." TheFolksinger singing for you for Christmas, hoping some will have fun trying this easy arrangement.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GSIJ_C7oQ&sdig=1




Wishing you lots of love and joyful anticipation of celebrations to come!


http://www.LadyDpiano.com

Modulating With Parallel Chains


Another method that one can use is doing the Parallel ii-V7-I

Modulating w/ Parallel ii-V-I Chains

ii- V Chains


Some tunes chain ii-V progressions then resolve to I chord. Any ii-V’s can be used. They work well because of the strong movement (up a 4th) of each ii-V. The example below chains several ii- V’s. It begins with a ii-V in the key of C Major, adds a ii-V in Db
Major, ends with ii- V- I in E Major.

Dm7 G7 | Ebm7 Ab7 |F#m7 B7 | EMa7
(ii - V in C -------) (ii - V in Db --) (ii- V -I in E ----------)

You can also simplify ii-V by playing only I or ii scale across both chords.

Parallel ii- V

Like ii-V-I chains, ii-V’s often move up or down by a constant interval, creating a parallel movement.

Chain Interval Example
1/2-step up Dm7- G7, Ebm7- Ab7
1/2-step down Dm7- G7, C#m7- F#7 (the V and ii is an augmented 4th apart)
1-step up Dm7- G7, Em7- A7
1-step down Dm7- G7, Cm7- F7 (circle of fourths)
4th up Dm7-G7, Gm7-C7 (the V and ii are on the same pitch)

Modulating with Parallel V-I Chains

Minor ii-V and V-i Chains


Minor ii-V progressions can be chained together to modulate. The example below modulates from C minor to Db minor to E minor. The ii chords are m7-5 in quality. This gives the feeling of minor ii-V progressions, even though the minor i chord is not actually played.

Dm7-5 G7-9| Ebm7-5 Ab7+9 | F#m7-5 B7-9| Em7
(ii- V in C min) (ii-V in Db minor) (ii-V-i in E minor -----)

Modulating with minor ii-V chains


Minor V-i progressions can also be chained together to modulate to other keys. The example below modulates from C minor to F# minor to Bb minor.

Dm7-5 G7-9 | Cm7 C#7+9 | F#m7 F7 | Bbm7
(ii- V- i in C minor ----) (V- i in F# min) (V- i in Bb minor--)
....................................... ...........................

Using Minor ii-V and V-i Chains

1) A V chord can resolve to a new I chord by moving down a half step, or up or down an augmented 4th.

2) A V chord can also resolve to a substitute I chord, such as the vi or iii.

3) ii- V- I progressions can be chained together to modulate to another key. The interval between each progression can be random or parallel.

4) ii-V progressions and V-I progressions can be chained together to modulate to another key.

5) V-I progressions usually start in an even-numbered position (halfway through a bar if there are two chords per bar, or on an even-numbered bar if one chord per bar).

6) Consecutive major, minor, or dominant chords can be used to modulate quickly.


* Other Resources on Modulation:


http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/09/modulation-progression.html



http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/11/minor-chord-progressions.html



http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/11/harmony-progressions.html




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Ordinary People- John Legend



* 9 year old Jamael playing John Legend's Ordinary People



* The chords for most of the song is Bbmaj7, Ebmaj9, and Fmaj7 w/a lot of improvising.
It is actually a 4-b7-1 progression in the key of F


"Ordinary People" by: John Legend
Key F LH/RH

Intro (from sheet music):

/ D-D (high)
/ C-C
Bb / A-D-F-A
Bb / G-C-D-G
/ C-F-G-C
Eb / Bb-D-G-Bb
Eb (2x) /
/ Bb
Bb /
Eb / Bb-D-G-Bb
Bb /
Eb / G-Bb-D-G
/ D-G-Bb-D
F / C-E-A-C
C /
F /
/ D-D (high)
/ C-C
Bb / A-D-F-A
Bb / G-C-D-G
/ C-F-G-C
Eb / Bb-D-G-Bb
Bb /
Eb /
/ G, Bb, C, D, G, low G
Bb /
Eb / G-Bb-D-F
Bb /
Eb / Eb-G-Bb-D
/ Bb
F / C-E-A-C
C /
F /

Verse 1 (my version):

/ C, D *Go to Chorus from here
Bb / A-C-D-F
F / Girl, I'm
Bb / in love with you
/ A-C-D-F
Eb / F-G-Bb-D
Eb (2x) / This ain't the honeymoon
Bb /
Eb / F-G-Bb-D we're
Bb / past the
Eb / F-G-Bb-D infatua-
/ F-G-Bb-D tion
F / G-A-C-E phase
C /
F /
(repeat)

Chorus:

Bb / A-C-D-F
F / We're just
Bb / C-D-F-A ordi-
/ C-D-F-A nary
Eb / Bb-D-F-G people
Eb (2x) /
/ Bb-D-F-G
Bb /
Eb / Bb-D-F-G
Bb / We don't
Eb / Bb-D-F-G know which
/ Bb-D-F-G way to
F / C-E-G-A go
C /
F / C-E-G-A
/ D-D
/ C-C
(repeat)

Verse 2:

Bb / Ab-Db-F Maybe we'll live and learn
Eb / G-Bb-Db-F Maybe we'll crash and burn
F / G-A-C-E Maybe you'll stay, maybe you'll
F / G-A-C-E leave, maybe you'll return
(repeat)

Go back to chorus chords and play it through. End on the Fmaj7 chord, F / G-A-C-E.

I suggest playing the chords without trying to match words to it first because it's kind a hard to match every word exactly with every chord.

* Buy Ordinary People by John Legend





Look inside this title
Ordinary People - sheet music at www.sheetmusicplus.com
Ordinary People By John Legend. Single for voice, piano and guitar (chords only). 8 pages. Published by Cherry Lane. (HL.2500823)
See more info...




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