String Theory Chords Media Library

Showing posts with label technique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technique. Show all posts

Piano Scales Fingering Technique

The proper technique for playing scales on the piano! These exercises will show you how to form your hands in the correct posture while moving higher or lower on the piano keyboard. You'll also learn the logic behind fingerings and different scales.

By understanding scales you will have a high advantage when playing musical pieces or improvising. It will also help you improve your piano-playing motor skills to play faster and smoother.



Keep practicing and don't forget to leave a comment by clicking on the comment link or entering them in the form below!

Guitar Fingerpicking for Beginners

This video tutorial jumps right into fingerpicking for the beginning guitarist. It teaches you the terminology, notation and proper technique which first and foremost must be understood before you begin learning how to fingerpick.

Remember to start out keeping your hand steadily hovered over the strings and then naturally pluck each string with the finger directly above it without moving your right hand. After it begins to feel more natural, try speeding it up a bit while concentrating on keeping your right hand steady and making your fingers do the work.


Keep practicing and enjoy and don't forget to leave a comment by clicking on the comment link or entering them in the form below!

Free Online Music Games!



Here are some free and simple interactive online music games which can help you fine-tune your musical technique and have fun at the same time!


These can be great for ear training. Let us know how you do!

Practice Piano with Your Hands Separate



One mistake that many new students of piano make is to practice new pieces on the piano using both hands at the same time. It is a great misconception that you can enhance your coordination by learning music and practicing using both hands at the same time. In fact, for beginners, practicing new songs with both hands can lead to much more frustration and fatigue of the hands. Entertaining the same amount of time separately on both hands can lead to much higher levels of developmental proficiency.

When learning new songs or difficult passages begin with the right hand playing a bar or two of the melody line and before it tires, quickly switch to the left hand playing the more rhythmic pattern of the same bar set. Do this switch once every 15 seconds or so. Soon you will find that you are not as bored by the repetition and that your hands are actually eager to continue practicing!

Why Are Guitarists So Bad at Guitar Hero/Rock Band?



Like many experienced guitarists that I've spoken to, I'm "digitally deadlocked" when it comes to playing guitar (and scoring well) on the Guitar Hero and Rock Band video games. I just can't seem get my fingers to work right and my rhythm is constantly off. It's as if I'm right back at the start again!

And in a way I am --

Whenever I hear the sound of the song quickly becoming derailed by my finger fumbling, I find myself asking, "why can't I do better than this, I have years of experience?" First of all, it should be noted that Guitar Hero and Rock Band (like any other video game) are constructed based on a simulated environment given by:

Visual feedback via a video screen and user interface + manual response via an input device (such as a controller mimicking a guitar in our case).

As we interact using our input device we are actually only providing data to a computer program which reads it in and passes it through programmed code to create an on-screen response. Not too surprising...This interaction is much like what we would expect to be occurring with a guitar fed into an amp through an effects pedal. The difference lies in the limitations, however great or small, specific to the video game program. Software applications are only programmed to respond to a "finite" or fixed amount of input triggers. Us humans are little more complex.

To explain a bit further, imagine a robot. Robots are run by a computer program which can sometimes be programmed to mimic behaviors and mannerisms of a human. Thousands upon thousands of subtle human qualities and tendencies can be reproduced by the robot. In a way, it would seem that we are interacting with a real human being, but it's the subtleties that humans can pick up on that tells us that it's not actually "alive".

Just the same, this very mechanical man-to-machine extertion produces motions that are very automated and more cause-and-effect rather than more fluid and improvisational which we are used to when playing an actual instrument. And that's not all, many musicians find that they are constrained by the choice of only five frets on the screen and that their brains don't seem to give orders to their hands to carry through properly -- Just like when a guitarist is picking up the new instrument for the first time!

But Why?

All of this is true because experienced guitarists have wired their brains to subconsciously feel out their musical surroundings "in real-time" and adjust tempo, pitch and even musical progressions accordingly. With a touch-and-go type of routine, musicians find it hard to re-train their brains to perceive music in a strictly methodical manner (and thus tell their hands to act accordingly). We feel the urge to pop out a solo, or break the chain of commands with a subtle tempo change.

So What Can All of This Teach Us?

The secret to understanding the language of music and mastering an instrument lies in the subconscious brain. We can study theory all we want, but it's the technique that you must ingrain into your mind that allows you to channel music through the mixture of sonic vibrations provided by the instrument out from your fingertips.

Proper technique is essential
, especially very early on, and having a good and legitimate grasp on it is invaluable to your development on the instrument (as it becomes second nature). You will build upon the foundation that you create early on, and you'll find that breaking out of a bad habit is in opposition to everything you know up to that point. Make it a point to take the time to learn to do it the right way.

One final note, some have the argument of, "why would you want to play Guitar Hero or Rock Band if you're a serious musician?" The answer is simple -- they're actually pretty fun to play and (as obviously discussed above) a challenge for anyone! I don't believe that they're really meant to be a guide or lesson on playing the actual instrument. If nothing else, they can help with finger dexterity and rhythm!

So what do you think -- Can musicians really learn anything from Guitar Hero/Rock Band?