Popular Articles External Links | MarketplaceMy Heart Will Go On Piano Sheet Music Piano lesson: Learn To Play Bells of Jingle Without the Music of Leaf of PianoIn this piano lesson will learn us to play the piano the music of Christmas. We will use the notation of label of piano if you do not need to read the music of leaf of piano. Bells of jingle are one of the secular songs of Christmas more popular in the world. The party the done more play the song is the refrain than we will concentrate on in this piano lesson. The bells of jingle, the bells of jingle Clink completely! O what entertainment is to take In one a horse opens the sled In this piano lesson will learn you to play Bells of Jingle without the usage of music of leaf of piano. After this learns to play the piano the educational software that you will be able to play the melody with the two hands! Instead of the music of leaf of piano will use us the notation of label of piano that will say you where to place your fingers as you play the melody. The first thing that we will do is to localize the C. of grade. You will find the grade C on a lot of places on the piano. This is the white key to the black left of two keys. Now this is the time to localize the C. environment. This is the C in the middle of the the keyboard. On an ordinary standing piano that this is close to the hole of the lock. In our piano lesson will number us the keys. The C of the environment in our notation of label of piano is called 1. What does 1 means? When you see the number 1 you are to support in two C once. The white key to the right of C is called 2, the next 3 and so on. Leave play us the piano the grades of label: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Now you played a ladder c-majeur with the true grades C D E F G A B. We to allow proceeding in our lesson of piano and plays the first grades of Bells of Jingle! The Bells of jingle, Clink Bells 3 3 3 3 3 3 This is the first party of the refrain. Easy? I guess that you hear that the grade of third and sixt must be a little longer to create the Bells of Jingle of melody. So far we used only the right to play the melody. How can you use your left hand? We to allow doing this piece a little more difficult and also more to reward to play while using the left hand for the low grades. The grades of C to the next C are called an octave. The keys are grouped this manner on the entire keyboard. You have also these grades to the left of the C. environment. We can call these grades the left octave. If you use the grades 1-7 in the left octave to play the low grades with your left hand can us notate the melody in the following manner: 3/1 3 3 3/1 3 3 The grade to the right of the slash is the low grade. 3/1 average that as you play the first number 3 with your right you play simultaneously number 1 in the left octave with your left hand. I guess noticed you that you play only of the low grades together with of grades of melody. We to allow continuing this piano lesson with the next line: Clink completely! 3/1 5 1 2 3/1 Which fingers should you use as you play? You can and maybe you already use your indices on the two hands to play but this will be easier to find your grades if you cultivate the habit to use all your fingers. On your right you can use your thumb to play number 1 and your index to play number 2 and so on. The next label of piano seems of this: O what entertainment is to take 4/4 4 4 4 4/1 3 3 If you want to use tact on your left hand you place your small finger above the key number 1 and your thumb on number 5 and the other fingers consequently. This is the time for the last label of piano: In one a horse opens the sled 3 3 3/2 2 2 3 2/5 5 In fact this is not the last label of piano. Now you supposed to play abstains from it the beginning and when you come to the last game of line it in the following manner: In one a horse opens the sled 3 3 5/5 5 4/5 2 1/1 I suggest that you learned this song of Christmas by heart. To memorize it a line and appreciates at once the present of spirit of Christmas when you play the song for your friends! Posted on February 7, 2010.
CommentsThere are no comments.Leave a Comment |