The Old and New Tunes Jazz Piano Adult Beginner Practice Guide - Deborah Sacharoff
The Old and New Tunes Jazz Piano Adult Beginner Practice Guide - Deborah Sacharoff
The Old and New Tunes Jazz Piano Adult Beginner Practice Guide - Deborah Sacharoff
By Deborah Sacharoff
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE INTRODUCTION DAILY PRACTICE Q & A ALL ABOUT INTERVALS MAJOR SCALE PRACTICE EXERCISES CHORDS, TRIADS & IMPROVISATION 3 6 11 22 58
Introduction
Welcome to the world of jazz piano. This practice guide is meant for you if you are a beginning or returning adult piano student. Perhaps you began piano lessons as a young child, but quit and never picked it up again. You might be an adult who never played any instrument, or who played one instrument but never the piano. Or you may have taken a few classical lessons many years back. The focus of Old and New Tunes Jazz Piano Adult Practice Guide and lesson series is to help you hear music and develop skills playing by ear. The exercises are meant to help you learn music as a language, the way you might study a foreign language. The approach we take is very different than many of the traditional approaches for learning piano. The emphasis is on listening, hearing the sounds, feeling it in your fingers and seeing the visual pattern on the keyboard. Although you will use music theory as you learn, there is no theory to memorize. Instead, you will gain an understanding of music relationships as you practice the scales and exercises.
10
11
12
Start with F this time, and continue to sing and then play the first two notes of the song are you sleeping. Write down the two note pairs you find. If you start with F, for example, the second note will be G, so you would write F, G.under E, F#. Continue to sing, find and note the two note pairs, starting on F#, G, G#, A, A#, B, C, C#, D, and D# until you are back to E.
13
C to D is a Major Second
When you are finished, you should have 12 different pairs written down. Now, take a paper and hide the right side of the column. Play the first note, sing both notes, and see how long it takes you to find the second note in the pair. Finding the two note pairs may seem simple at first. The quicker you can find the two notes, without looking at what you wrote, the better off you will be. You can practice finding the second note of two note pairs at any time in your music practice.
14
C to D is a Major Third
15
16
C to F is a perfect fourth
Now, take a paper and hide the right side of the column. Play the first note, sing both notes, and see how long it takes you to find the second notes in the pairs. Twinkle Exercise P5 Think of the tune Twinkle, twinkle little star. The first twinkle is a note that repeats. The second twinkle is a note that also repeats. Hum one long note as you hear the first twinkle and then another long note for the second twinkle. On a fresh page, write Twinkle Twinkle and P5 on the top of the page.
17
C to G is a perfect fifth
Now, take a paper and hide the right side of the column. For each pair, play the first note, sing both notes, and see how long it takes you to find and play the second note.
18
C to A is a major sixth
Sing the first two notes of the song, starting on every note of the octave. After you play the first note of the pair, try to guess on the first try which note is the second note of the pair. On a fresh page write down the song name you will use and M6. For example, if you start on C, you would play and write down, C, A.
19
20
21
22
23
How to Practice the C Major Scale with your Left Hand Start at the C one octave below middle C. Follow the diagram below to practice the correct fingering for the left hand.
C Major: Going Up with the Left Hand: C D E F G A B D E F G F A B C 5 4 3 2 1 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 3 2 1 C Major: Going Down with the Left Hand: C B A G F E D C B A G F E D C 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
3 B
4 B
3 B
4 B
4 B
3 B
4 B
1T B
32
3 B
2 B
3 B
2 B
2 B
3 B
2 B
3 B
D Major: Both Hands Together The D major scale is only slightly more complex than the C major scale. Practice each hand separately going up and down the two octaves as slowly as you need to. When you can play each hand separately and evenly, try to speed it up. Then when you feel you are ready, try playing both hands together. Do not try to rush yourself to go faster than you really can.
33
The Eb (E Flat) Major Scale The Eb major scale has 3 flats, which are the 3 black notes. The notes of the scale are: Eb -,F- G- Ab - Bb C- D. The notes on the Eb major scale are shown for two octaves, with the proper fingering for the right hand going up and then down, and for the left hand going up and then down.
2 B
3 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
3 B
34
3 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
3 B
2 B
3 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
3 B
2 B
2 B
3 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
3 B
35
36
F#
G#
C#
D#
F#
G#
C#
D#
2 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
2 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
2 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
2 B
37
F#
G#
C#
D#
F#
G#
C#
D#
4 B
3 B
3 B
2 B
4 B
3 B
3 B
2 B
D#
C#
G#
F#
D#
C#
G#
F#
2 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
2 B
3 B
3 B
4 B
E Major: Both Hands Together Even though the E major scale has four sharps in it, when you play both hands together, the hands go up to the black keys at the same time. If you look at the fingering: the mountains (or going up to the black keys) come at the 2nd and 3rd and 6th and 7th notes, going up or down.
38
Bb
Bb
39
Bb
Bb
F Major: Both Hands Together Practice each hand separately until you can play the scales smoothly, evenly and without errors. Start slowly and gradually build up your speed.
40
41
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
42
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
1 W
43
44
G Major: Going Up with the Left Hand: G A B C D E F# G A B C D E F# G 5 4 3 2 1 3 2 1 4 3 2 1 3 2 1 Going Down with the Left Hand: G F# E D C B A G F# E D C B A G 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5
45
46
47
48
49
50
A Major: Going Down with the Left Hand: A G# F# E D C# B A G# F# E D C# B A 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 B B B B B B How to practice an A Major scale with both hands together Because the A major scale has a familiar fingering pattern, and black notes that require no special positioning, this scale should not pose any unusual challenges. Try to play the scales with both hands together only after you have learned to play each hand separately. Start out slowly playing both hands together. Speed up when you are ready. If you find, when practicing both hands together, that one hand is actually slower, go back and practice that hand, until you have each hand playing separately at the same level and speed.
51
52
How to practice the B Major scale with both hands together As always, be sure you have mastered how to play each hand separately before you attempt playing the hands together. When you first try to play the two hands together, start slow, much slower than you can play each hand separately. As you build up speed you will discover where you still need practice with one hand. You will also find just the right speed at which you can play both hands well.
53
54
B Cb
C# Db
D# Eb
E Fb
F# Gb
G# Ab
A# Bb
B Cb
55
56
57
58
59
60
Eb Major Chord: The photo below shows the Eb major chord with the major triad of Eb, G and Bb.
61
Jazz Piano Adult Practice Guide E Major Chord: The photo below shows the E major chord
with the major triad of E, G# and B.
F Major Chord: The photo below includes the F major chord with the major triad of F, A and C. The pinky is reaching up to play the next highest F.
62
The G Major Chord: The photo below shows the G major chord with the major triad of: G, B and D.
63
The A Major Chord: The photo below shows the A major chord with the major triad of A, C# and E. (and pinky reaching to A)
64
The B Major Chord: The photo below shows the B major chord with the major triad of B, D# and F#. This is the same chord as the Cb Major Chord. You can spell this chord as: B, D# and F# or Cb, Eb, and Gb.
65
66
Find the fifth note, or G, in the scale of C. What are the notes in the G major chord? They are G, B and D. If you start on C, and then play a G chord of G-B-D, you are playing a 5 chord in the key of C. Practice playing the C chord, then the 4 chord (or F chord) in the key of C, and the 5 chord (or G chord) in the key of C. After a few minutes, proceed to learn what you will do next with the 1-4-5 skills you just learned.
The Music Recipe Exercise: This Music Recipe exercise is like a cooking recipe, except instead of using teaspoons or tablespoons, we will use beats. Your left hand will play the chords. Before you begin, tap the beat with your foot in the lively 1-2-3-4 rhythm.
67
68
69