The first few times, you may notice an "interference" condition, where one hand latches onto the beats in the other hand. Then mentally think about the aligned end point on the next beat, not the notes in the hands at all, while they play, so that each hand arrives at the end point simultaneously. Try this for the Arabesque where you play 6 against 4:įirst practice each hand separately in one measure, until muscle memory kicks in. The advantage is that it also works for any number of notes in one hand against any number of notes in the other. I'll mention a technique that has worked for me. 'No Stupid Questions' thread (twice/month)ĮPierre's weekly composition/improvisation challenge IMSLP provides access to free, public domain sheet music. is a great website to learn the fundamentals of music theory. commenting on someone's appearance), and the like, are not welcome and will be removed. Off-topic posts, spam, advertising, blog posts with little contentĪlso, please do not submit more than 3-4 posts per week, and you should not have more than 2 posts on the front page.Ĭomments that contain personal attacks, hate speech, trolling, unnecessarily derogatory or inflammatory remarks or inappropriate remarks (e.g. Requests for transcriptions, identifying chords/notes in a song (use /r/transcribe), what song is this?, requests for sheet music (see FAQ, use /r/musicnotes, /r/transcribe)Ĭommon generic questions covered by the FAQ such as "What's a good keyboard?", "What's my piano worth?", "How do I get started?", unless your question has specific details. (use /r/musicpics, /r/classicalmemes or /r/pianomemes) Image memes, pictures of text, rage comics, etc. The following types of posts are subject to removal:
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