What's the best way to learn piano on your own?
finelikewine
"ONCE UPON A TIME, I HAD A VINYL." http://www.discogs.com/user/permabulker 1,416 Posts
I want to learn to play the piano, but unfortunatly I don't have the money or time to take lessons. At the moment I'm trying to learn things from tutorial videos on youtube. The ones I have encountered are rather random and lack consistency.
Can anyone recommend me some good online courses or a good book about it?
What are the thing to concentrate on in the beginning?
Thanks in advance!
Can anyone recommend me some good online courses or a good book about it?
What are the thing to concentrate on in the beginning?
Thanks in advance!
Comments
Minor scales in all keys.
Then go on to spelling Maj and Min chords for all.
Get them under your fingers.
Then go for the tastier chords, and look at how tunes are put together around scale degrees.
Then Jazz.
TomO on here is your man, he's a bit good.
I learned major and minor chords and scales in no time.
pinkbrown oboe.Learn all modes in all keys.
This one looks great, thanks. I already can play twinkle twinkle little star :cheese:
if you can get a rhodes cheap, do it. leaning on a rhodes will make all other weighted keys feel like air.
:oh_my:
I came across these videos (as RAJ posted) some time ago as they were recommended viewing on the PianoWorld forums, which is a good resource also. They have some of their own videos on that site as well.
"Can everyone please f*ck off? I am about to learn piano."
Fixed, with one punctuation mark.
And also, because no one said it: not the way, or a way, but the bestest way to learn any instrument is figure it out yourself by accident and experiment.
You might end up finding a much better method; using other body parts like elbows or nostrils, or developing toe dexterity to create 20 digit chord structures, or training your pet chimp to play the left hand bass parts with his ass.
Did dude who built the first piano have YouTube and piano forums and teachers?
No, dude made that shit up as he went along.
BE THAT DUDE.
A family member passed down a Seventy Three to myself several years back, got a local guy to tune it and I play it whenever I need thinking music or when it's raining in the winter. I assume it's possible to make the keys 'tighter'? I'm not as serious with it as the drums, which isn't saying much, but fooling around with different chord combos is fun. At least get Every Good Boy Does Fine / FACE down pat, though.