Saturday, October 30, 2010

"Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"

Worked today on "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes." Interesting how the strong desire to play piano kicks in. Here's "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" (copy and paste):
http://www.box.net/shared/8p0sn4z0j5

Thursday, October 28, 2010

"Wichita Lineman"

Here it is with closed and open voicings, along with a run adapted from the book "Tons of Runs" by Andy LaVerne. Copy and paste:
http://www.box.net/shared/k7j3g3ov8g

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Closed Voicings (Again)

Went thru "Just the Way You Are," and struggled thru it!
Working on "Wichita Lineman" with closed voicings....but here's the cool part: Sudnow made sense not emphasizing closed voicings over open voicings. Cool to play the left hand closed voicing form with the right hand open one. Also using a book to help with a little piano run during the song.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Closed Voicings

Update: I've been working recently on keeping "Just the Way You Are" in my hands. I haven't really been working on "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes." But yesterday at the piano warrants reporting:

I listened to David Sudnow's teaching of closed voicings recently, and I tried to put some of it in action yesterday. I kind of surprised myself with how many I was able to get in hand relatively quickly: C, Bb, D, Gm, Dm, Am, and G. I tried playing "Wichata Lineman" using the closed voicing. interesting. One thing What ffrustrating was using the right hand to play the melody; I was fumbling with not only playing the correct right hand melody notes, but also with using a fingering that was not clumsy. The other frustrating thing was trying to get timing down correctly using these closed voicing. Sudnow calls these voicings "Stride," and for good reason; to get it sounding really good, I guess you need at least two beats per chord. It's frustrating for me trying to get my timing right.

But on the other hand, these closed voicings add a great addition to how to make sounds at the piano! Of course I've been tempted to buy another piano method, but Suds' emphasis on self-learning makes sense to me. I'm still not convinced there are any "easy" methods of learning to play the piano sophisticated out there. David Sudnow's approach (to me) offers the student ways of making sophisticated sounds at the piano, but it forces the student to put all of his pieces of knowledge together in a self-learning kind of way. Sometimes blending various pieces together in one tune (open voicings, closed voicings).

So......because these closed voicings can add to a tune, I'll keep learning them. My piano buddy has told me how they are key, and I agree.