I NEED HELP
Hey everyone,
I’m brand new to this platform and could really use some guidance.
I’m starting completely from scratch, and to be honest, it all feels a bit overwhelming at the moment.
If anyone has tips on where to begin or how to get started the right way, I’d truly appreciate your advice.
Thank you so much,
Oveem
27 replies
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@Assuming - you said you are starting piano- I started with Ben Laude’s lectures - best to start with some theory.. major,minor scales, rythym and harmony. Ben covers this in about 10 hours .. After this Garrick Ohlsen .. ( Muscianship at home ) ..This can be heard by all levels. It is an incredible overview. Then there are a few repertoire pieces at level 1 - taught by very accomplished pianists .. Past this the doors are all open.. go at your own pace .. I have done about 10 from level 1 to 3 and they were all illuminating .. if this helps ping me and I can give you a list with a progression
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Beginner perspective (only) here..
I really should have mentioned 4a) prior to 5 in the note above
4a) Evan Shinners - Bach Prelude in C and Fugue .. The Fugue is quite tough - I didn't know for many years until I saw Richter play the fugue on (YT) - that it starts with the left hand!.. and then on a little bit of thought .. oh yeah.. that's supposed to be the bass line ( so left hand) even though it is written in the treble line. :-). Evan explains and points out a small error in most scores !. and off course plays both masterfully !. So before Fur Elise..
Also great talking to you over the phone yesterday.. Hope you enjoyed the whirlwind snippets of the concerto, the beethoven sonata 7 and Bach invention.. all work in progress .. :-)
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My teacher usually tells me to listen to a piece and than to read through it at half-tempo, sometimes hands-separately.
Here is my advice:
1. Learn the fundamentals of music theory.
Recommended Tonebase courses: Music Theory Basics with Ben Laude, Rhythm: from Beginner to Advanced with Ben Laude, Harmonic Formulas of the Great Composers with Johnandrew Slominski
2. Work on your sight-reading. I recommend Ben Laude's course Reading and Sightreading Music: from Beginner to Advanced.
3. Choose repertoire at your level. It is completely fine, and also helpful, to learn stretch pieces, but it is important to learn pieces at your level, too.
For your purposes, I recommend Mozart's K 309 and 545, Schumann's Wilder Reiter and Valse Allemande, Schubert's Valses Nobles/Ländler/Wiener Deutsche Tänze/Deutsche Tänze, Chopin's Preludes in B minor, A major, C minor, Bach's Little Prelude in C minor BWV 999, Chaminade's Tarantella, Idylle, and Barcarolle from Album for the Young, Liszt's La Cloche Sonne, Debussy's Danceuses de Delphes and Valse Romantique, Satie's Gnossiennes and Gymnopedies, Mendelssohn's Lieder Ohne Wort and Grieg's Lyric Pieces.4. Find a teacher!
Links:
Music Theory Basics: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/library/skills/fundamentals?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=benjamin-laude-music-theory-basics-pt
Reading and Sightreading Music: From Beginner to Advanced: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/library?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=ben-laude-reading-and-sightreading-music-from-beginner-to-advanced
Rhythm: from Beginner to Advanced: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/library/skills/targeted-skills?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=ben-laude-rhythm-from-beginner-to-advanced
Historical Improvisation with John Mortensen: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/library/skills/historical-performance-and-improvisation?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=john-mortensen-invitation-to-historical-improvisation-pt
Sound and Color with Boris Giltburg: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/library/skills/targeted-skills?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=boris-giltburg-sound-and-color
Harmonic Formulas of the Great Composers: https://app.tonebase.co/piano/home?tbModal=courseModal&tbModalSlug=johnandrew-slominski-harmonic-formulas-of-the-great-composers-pt