How can I play the piano better?
I've been playing for about two years, but it still sounds choppy and uneven. Each of my fingers plays at a different speed and for a different length of time, and it sounds out of step. I can't always press the piano keys; sometimes only two out of three fingers manage. It also sounds so choppy, I think I'm playing the pedals wrong. It also sounds like I'm playing without them, and it doesn't flow at all because everything is so uneven.
So how can I improve all of this?
I would, although it is annoying counting, i.e. at a 3⁄4 clock with a sächzentel one ta and ta two ta and ta three ta and ta at eightels one and two and three and at quarters one two three
Conductors are also good for the technique my teacher is always establishing something new as soon as a dur-tool guide comes.
C major A minor straight (back > four octaves both hands); apart (This is the version that I got later the easier I can explain to you see below) (2 octaves to apart > 2 octaves <> and back > 2 octaves to further > 2 octaves back < apart and back 2 octaves; accord (3 tones), arpeggio (3 tones) ; chromatic
(Was this exhausting, so I send pictures)
(My teacher is not German, therefore mistakes in naming (e.g. of course not natural) or spelling
It goes a lot further. If you want the rest to be incomprehensible, or you can write me privately here.
Contact your teacher and ask for more technology. Technology is important! If it doesn’t get better after that, perhaps the teacher, with me it was a long time so that I was very dissatisfied with myself, what the piano was going on, that was due to the technique. My teachers at that time have never paid attention to this, now I have changed and everything has become so much better.
What you could do are to play audio conductors, first over two octaves in eighth notes, so you can accentuate every second tone, then over three octaves triols, so every third tone is stressed and then over four octaves sixths, then again three octaves triols and finally again two octaves eighths.
That’s normal. Go on. Find, besides teaching, simple pieces that you like. Listen to them, you find almost everything on the Internet so you have a feeling for how it could sound. Try to get this feeling to transfer to your game. It’ll be better and worse, but it’s always better with time.
Finger exercises, slow up. Many people think when they know where the buttons are and can read notes, they can learn every piece. It is much better to play pieces at the level and only to increase slowly. Oh and more finger exercises/exercises. They are usually designed so that both hands parallel play the same sounds in a certain sequence and always go a ton higher
Exactly!
Practicing makes you a Master
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oj8_wufhE28&list=RDWJ3-F02-F_Y&index=21
You would have to practice the right thing. Not something, but above all technology!
It’s like playing football or singing….you can do it or not.
It’s untrue!
Of course you can’t play piano if you haven’t learned it.
That’s not true. You can learn and train everything up to a certain degree.