I'm trying to remember one Sesame Street bit. Here's what I remember:
Dark blue room; toys; tinkly toy piano music
Weird clarinet or trumpet m...
I’m trying to remember one Sesame Street bit. Here’s what I remember:
Dark blue room; toys; tinkly toy piano music
Weird clarinet or trumpet music playing what I refer to as "Dixieland on acid".
Robot claw spells SESAME STREET with blocks
Robot claw plays piano
Stock footage of Rockets
Could anybody fill in the gaps and details, and if possible, does anyone know when it was first shown, it’s title, it’s director, and if it is an international clip? Maybe what the music is?
I’ve been playing the piano for eight years now and it’s all classical and yeah i’m getting sick of it. I’m not really a fan of classical music but I’ve managed to get into an advanced level.I had about three teachers now and I’m not yet a master note reader. I can read notes but quite slow I cannot do it on-the-spot. I taught myself how to play Chords and I usually play by ear. Now I want to quit classical piano and learn how to play like those pianists on cruise ships and hotels. I wanna play modern music like songs that people know or even jazz/blues/soul kinda music. Can I learn how to do that without a teacher? Do I need to stay on Classical to be able to play these kinds of songs? If I stay with a classical teacher will I get to play these kinds of songs?
btw the latest classical piece I’ve played is Sonata in C k545 by Mozart
I seriously want to enter a different genre of piano music but my dad says i need to stay on track with the classical before I get to play any modern
I need some music sheets for the piano for the following songs, I can’t find them anywhere. Please don’t give me general links, but more preferred a direct link.
Songs -
"So Much Love" by The Rocket Summer
"Cold as Ice" by Foreigner
"Bigger Than Love" by My Favorite Highway
"What Are You Waiting For?" by My Favorite Highway
"Augustine" by Nevertheless
Please help, it will be much appreciated. Remember, I need PIANO music.
A jazz piano improvisation tutorial based on A Foggy Day (chord progression below!), by George Gershwin. In this tutorial I look at basic jazz piano techniques such as creating complex chords, developing right hand runs and the different types of bass part and left hand you can use. My view of jazz piano and piano improvisation in general is that although it isn’t necessarily easy, it’s not some sort of God-given gift: you can learn the basics fairly easily, and after that it’s just a case of doing as much practice as you can to become fluent. It’s also really important to develop your own style: my approach to piano is quite blues oriented, and that’s really reflected in the way I play jazz, which is closer to mainstream and swing styles than to more contemporary “cool” styles. If you have any questions on this particular improvisation, or any other aspect of jazz piano, feel free to ask. By the way, here’s the chord progression so you can get straight to the keyboard and start improvising for yourself: F | Ebm | Gm7 | C | F | Abm7 | Gm7 | C | F | F7 | Bb | Bbm | F | D7 | Gm7 | C | F | Ebm | Gm7 | C | F | Abm7 | Gm7 | C | F | F7 | Bb | Bbm | F | Gm7 | F | Gm7 | Dm7 | G | Gm7 | C … One thing I don’t really mention in the video is that this is a pretty interesting chord progression to improvise on. There’s a reasonable amount of repetitition, and it’s in a reasonably easy key for pianists (F major). At the same time there are some really interesting chords that you can …
My school is having auditions for jazz band, so I picked up the piano music to see if maybe I had a shot to get in, even though I’ve never even looked at jazz music before. After looking at the music for a while, someone recognized my obvious confusion and explained to me why there were only notes written in for one hand and chords written on top. Obviously I have along way to go in learning this. Anyway though, I’m confused about what I’m supposed to do. I know you’re supposed to improvise, but how do you do that? I know what notes I’m supposed to play, but how do I play them? Should the rhythm follow a certain pattern, should it match the right hand notes? Do Ijust play whatever I feel like, or do I just play the chords as they’re written? I know these are probably dumb questions, but I’ve never taken a lesson in jazz before and I have no idea what to do.
Any help, or links to websites would be really helpful, thanks!
Video Sample-Artwork – Video Art with my own Music, Sample scenes and put it in a new concept. Composition and Video Play are something new and difference. Jas DJD Lounge records.
so i was curious about some different composing techniques to maybe help writing piano music a little easier. i was curious if there was specific composing techniques (like the ‘mannheim rocket’ used in Beethoven’s 1st piano sonata), or maybe just common strategies used with scales (not chord progressions though, i already understand that).
i kinda wanna play around with different types of techniques and experiment with them, rather than just writing line after line with no real variation and the sheet music itself doesnt look very interesting
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Piano music is typically notated in two clefs, and I am unsure of how to play jazz piano when it is written in only one.
The specific music I am looking at is written so that it looks as if music was written for a wind or stringed instrument.
It is written in bass clef and just has octaves. Above the first octave, it says "w/Bass"
So I am kind of confused. What is the "bass"? And do I play with just one hand?
No, it doesn’t note the chord.
For example, the first measure is:
eighth rest, eighth note (a Bb octave), quarter note, quarter note, eighth note (an A octave).
In 4/4 time, obviously.
This is what’s confusing me. Does that just indicate I am playing only these notes?
And for clarification, I do have a "real book." How can I use that to help, though?
Thanks.
***in explaining the first measure, I left out an eighth rest. My apologies. Not that it’s important to the concept, but just so it’s accurate.