Jan 21 2010

Accompany Yourself On Piano

How to Accompany On Piano


accompany-piano

How to Accompany Piano

Have you ever wanted to accompany yourself or others while singing? The desire to do so is one of the key motivations for a surprising number of piano students. How will you ever learn to sing at the same time – and carry a tune?

The ability to accompany yourself on piano while singing is a skill like any other. If you already have a good grounding in piano basics, such as knowing the notes, knowing your scales, reading music – great! You have a very firm foundation for learning how to accompany yourself. Now you can learn to read a “lead sheet,” which is a kind of musical shorthand.

A lot of pop, rock, country, and other contemporary music is noted down in this non-classical format. These lead sheets are collected in books called “fake books.” In its simplest form, the lead sheet consists of a single line of notes that pick out the melody, accompanied by chord notations above.

In accompanying yourself or others using a lead sheet approach, the vocalist takes the melody, and the accompanist plays the chords. The singer has the melody, the voice has the spotlight. If the piano is plunking out the melody underneath, it pulls attention away from the voice.

If you want to sound great when you’re accompanying yourself, you’ll need to try something called “chord piano.” This is, as the name implies, a style of playing in which the piano plays primarily chords, and leaves the melody to the vocalists, or perhaps another instrument.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

LEAVE A COMMENT

Subscribe Form

Subscribe to Blog

Hi, I'm from Indonesia, the country of more than ten thousand islands. As a musician, I love musical instruments gadgets. So... I created this blog as a guide to help you find all the best in musical instruments.

If you're looking for honest evaluations of the newest musical instruments gadgets offered, I'm confident you'll find my reviews helpful!**

CHAT BOX