Learn to play
piano, hands together.
The most difficult hurdle that anyone has
to overcome when they learn piano techinque is to play
different things in the two hands at the same time. At
the end of the day, this is what piano playing is all about
and so it’s something we all have to overcome if we’re to
succeed.

I
have known very intelligent adults despair to their piano
teacher that they’ll ever get anywhere and I’ve known tiny
little tots take to it like a duck to water.
It’s one of those totally unfair
situations when some brains seem to be set up right whilst
others have the wiring right for most things but askew for
piano playing!
But don’t despair when taking piano
lessons.
By
following the steps below anyone can learn to play piano.
Some will take longer and some may have to keep repeating
and repeating whilst feeling they’re getting nowhere, but in
reality there is improvement; it’s just very slow
Let’s look at the three steps.
First, make sure that the piece you’re
attempting to play isn’t too difficult. If you’re trying to
run before you can walk, you’ll get nowhere fast! As adults,
we all tend to look at first pieces in a book and think we
can achieve something much harder.
Remember that it’s not just about training
your fingers for the piano keyboard, but your brain has to
cope with many, many new commands. So, take your time and
take each piece steadily. Think about the hare and tortoise
and when you start to play the piano, slow really is the
best policy.
Secondly, make sure you can play each hand
absolutely perfectly and you feel totally confident, so that
someone very special walking in to the room wouldn’t
distract or put you off for a split second.
You should be able to play the left hand
and sing the melody of the right hand at the same time or
perhaps you might like to try playing the right hand and
talking to someone at the same time. In other words, it must
become part of your subconscious, so that your hands will
just carry on, wherever your mind may be!
Thirdly, take it slowly (I’m not talking
about jumping sections in the book but the actually speed of
the piece). If we can take a piece at a good pace hands
separately, it doesn’t mean that we can play at the same
speed when we put the two hands together.
As
soon as you start to play with both hands, cut the speed in
half (way slower than you think you could play it or that
you know it should go) and be very, very precise over how
you play the notes. Watch the fingers playing the notes and
be aware that you’re in control of every movement they make
(you are, aren’t you?)!
By
following these simple steps, you will learn piano very
quickly. For some people it will happen almost
instantaneously whilst others will have to struggle, but if
you persevere and keep repeating these steps the hands will
eventually seem to know instinctively which piano notes to
play and when.
7 Steps to Learn
Piano Notes
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