Confessions Of The World’s Worst Piano Player

Remember the old ad that used to run endlessly in magazines and newspapers:

"They laughed when I sat down at the piano…but when I started to play…" ?

I remember very well the first time I played piano for a group. They DID laugh. It was a disaster. I overheard the leader say "Let’s get somebody with some rhythm in there to play."

Ouch!

That hurt. But I told myself right then and there that I would learn to play the piano so well that no one would ever laugh at me again.

Guess what?

Nobody laughs anymore. And they don’t laugh at my students, either.

Why?

Because I discovered…

— The BACKDOOR to piano playing –

What in the world is the "backdoor to piano playing?

Chords.

There is a "backdoor" to playing the piano that is both fun and quick — it involves using chord patterns: years and years of scales, drills, rote practicing, etc. Chords are really a shortcut to understanding and playing music without all the formal training.

Formal training is fine if you have the time and money. But most adults don’t want to wait forever before they can play something enjoyable on the piano. I took lessons when I was a kid, but found it boring. Not only that, but all I could do was play the written music exactly as it was written. Without the sheet music in front of me, I didn’t have a clue what to do. I hung it up for a few years until this happened. But shortly after that, I had the opportunity to play in a school combo — but to do that, I had to learn chords, and learn them fast.

I didn’t really know where to turn, so I sent for a $2. in some mechanics type magazine I saw this ad for a chart of chords and soon I was playing chords such as Em7 and G7 with both hands. Talk about excited! Within a few weeks I could play dozens of songs using chords. And I discovered that my sight-reading speed greatly improved at the same time, because now I understood what I was seeing on the printed page!

So I came in through the back door instead, and now I enjoy what I used to hate! Why? Because I understand what I’m doing because now I understand chords and chord progressions. I eventually went on to get advanced degrees in music and literature from Southern Oregon University — and it was easy because of all I had learned about music theory and harmony due to playing and understanding chords.

Can you do the same? There’s really no reason why you can’t if you have the desire. Start looking at sheet music with new eyes: look for notes that make up chords and then analyze those chords. Before long you’ll start seeing a pattern of recurring chords – in other words, chord progressions. Do this for a few months while simultaneously learning about chords and how they are formed, and music will take on a new dimension for you. Why be tied to the written music score when you can view music like a "road map" that takes you from here to there.

By: Duane Shinn

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A fabulous free online email newsletter on "Exciting Piano Chords & Chord Progressions" is available at PlayPiano.com by Duane Shinn

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