Technique
Fingering, hand positions, playing hands together, arpeggios, dynamics, and articulation.
20 articles
Dynamics, Slurs, and Articulations
Play Clementi's "Sonatina in C Major" while learning dynamics, slurs, articulations, and cut time to shape phrases with smooth, separated, loud, and soft notes.
Introduction to Boogie-Woogie Styles
Discover the fast tempos and driving left-hand patterns of boogie-woogie, the percussive blues-rooted style pioneered by Albert Ammons, Pete Johnson, and Meade Lux Lewis.
More Advanced Left-Hand Patterns with Arpeggios
Expand your left-hand accompaniment with open triad arpeggios, spreading chord tones beyond an octave to create richer, fuller broken-chord patterns from fake-book symbols.
Arpeggios
Break left-hand chords into flowing arpeggios in a new version of "Wonderful Tonight," working with a metronome and the damper pedal for a lush pop-ballad sound.
Pop and Classical Tunes
Tackle real repertoire with arpeggios and triad voicings across Eric Clapton's "Wonderful Tonight," Dire Straits' "Walk of Life," and classical works by Clementi and Satie.
Moving Your Hands to the Notes as Needed
Break free of fixed five-finger positions and learn to move your hands freely to the notes, looking ahead to anticipate register changes.
Adding Triads in the Left Hand
Accompany the melody of "Buffalo Gals" with full left-hand triads, practicing the 5-3-1 fingering and the back-and-forth hand shifts between F and C chords.
Adding Single Notes in the Left Hand
Give your right-hand melody a left-hand bass line in "Ode to Joy," with a finger-crossing move that makes the two hands sound truly independent.
Playing the Melody with Both Hands
Play your first true hands-together song with "Jingle Bells," doubling the melody an octave apart in both hands while staying in C position.
Moving Hand Positions While Playing
Shift between hand positions mid-song to cover a wider range, using thumb-turns and finger crossings on the Beatles' "All My Loving."
Extending the Basic Five-Finger “G Position”
Extend G Position so both hands can stretch up to E, then play the spiritual "Michael Row the Boat Ashore" with smart fingering for repeated notes.
G Position
Find your way into G Position, placing the right thumb on G and the left pinkie two octaves below, building on the positions you already know.
Extending the Basic Five-Finger F Position
Stretch your thumb and pinkie out of the basic F Position to reach extra notes, then put it into practice with the folk tune "Marianne."
F Position
Set up F Position with both hands, resting your right thumb on F and remembering the B-flat the key of F requires, ready to move beyond the basic five-finger shape.
The Left-Hand C Position
Move your left hand into C position and play your first left-hand song, the spiritual "Dry Bones," while mastering fingering, steady counting, and a tricky pickup measure.
Fingers and Finger Numbers
Start developing left-hand technique and bass-clef reading with the 1-to-5 finger numbers, keeping both hands progressing at the same pace from the outset.
The Right-Hand C Position
Set up the right-hand C Position, resting your thumb on middle C and pinkie on G, the anchored five-note shape behind your first one-position songs.
Fingers and Finger Numbers
Learn the 1-to-5 finger-numbering system for both hands and why beginners need fingerings marked beside the notes before playing their first songs.
Warming Up Before Playing
Prepare your hands and mind with warm-up routines built around scales and arpeggios, so you arrive at any performance ready to play your best.
Best Positions for Your Back, Arms, and Hands
Set up relaxed, healthy posture at the keyboard, from a straight back and level forearms to the correct bench height for your hands and wrists.