Piano music

How to Quickly and Easily Block out Entire Sections of Music


Most of you don’t want to go to college and learn theory, harmony, and composition techniques. Not only is it tedious and for the most part -boring, but it’s also unnecessary.


That is, if you want to compose atonal music or whatever the latest fad in academia is, go to college. If you want to capture your ideas and quickly put them down on paper, you only need to learn how to think in phrases!


This is what most improvisers/composers do anyway. For example, many of you have heard me speak of using 8-bar phrases as a cornerstone to both improv and composition. Why? Because it’s a very easy space to work in! You can very quickly complete 8-bars and have both

CD Jewel Case Prices
...are comparatively lower than polypropylene CD jewel cases. Well Glory Industrial, TDK, and Verbatim are some of the top brands in CD jewel cases. CD Jewel Cases provides detailed information on CD Jewel Cases, Double CD Jewel Cases, Slim CD ...
your theme and the first section of music.



By working this way, you don’t have to worry about what the final form of the piece will be. Many composition books suggest you block out the entire structure of the piece first including harmony, climax, etc. This is one way of working with music. It’s not the only way.


Especially for beginners, it can be daunting to say the least to have no idea where you’re going and what to do next. But, and here’s the really good part, by working with 8-bar phrases, you learn how smaller sections are built into larger sections and so on. In other words, you learn how composers think.


Here’s how I do it. I start by improvising

The Piano Keyboard and the Open Position Chord
...modern sounds immediately. And I could use it to improvise my own music - something I've always wanted to do.Once I learned how to play this special chord structure, I learned how to move it up and down the piano ...
and see what comes up. If I feel like I’m on to something, I just write out 8-bars on a sheet of paper (any paper will do) notate what key I’m playing in and the time and write out the first 2-bars of the melodic idea. Next, I’ll play through and write out the chord changes. For example, if the piece is in the key of F Major, the first 2-bars may be an F Major chord, the next 2-bars, B flat Major and so on.


By working this way, you can quickly complete an 8-bar section of music and you’re ready to add more sections working the same way!


Edward Weiss is a pianist/composer and webmaster of Quiescence Music’s online

Patriotic Music: Surprising Secrets About Those Flag-Waving Sounds
..."You're A Grand Old Flag," George M. Cohan, 1906. "Over There," George M. Cohan, 1917. Known as "the man who owned Broadway," Cohan was a superstar before the term was coined. While his film biography is called "Yankee Doodle Dandy," ...
piano lessons. He has been helping students learn how to play piano in the New Age style for over 14 years and works with students in private, in groups, and now over the internet. Stop by now at http://www.quiescencemusic.com/piano_lessons.html for a FREE piano lesson!




Comments are closed.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.