Inspirational piano music to listen to advice
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Inspirational piano music to listen to advice
Post by silvermist »
I would like to introduce my children to beautiful and moving (not too heavy) piano music but I have no idea what cds to buy or where to start.
I am a blank page, so to speak, as to classical piano music and musicians/composers, although occasionally hear things in films etc and think 'that was great' but never the wiser as to who composed it etc. I believe if I get some great music, apart from being fantastic to listen to, it will help to let my children hear how expressive the piano is and what they may be able to achieve with perserverance when they start lessons.
Does anyone have any great albums they could suggest I should buy and listen to.
I want to keep my nearly 7 year old inspired whilst I continue desperately try to find a piano for around 500 pounds (that is worth having and near enough to go to see! - I look in the for sale ads on this site and ebay all the time). I couldn't get him off a baby grand piano in a local shop (I couldn't afford it unfortunately) and he has always been fascinated when someone plays the piano and will watch them for as long as they play and he really does seem genuinely interested in music. He started playing the recorder last November and he plays it incessantly, I am not exaggerating. He asks me all the time about his music when he comes across new things ie what different marks are against the notes eg slur lines and staccato dots and I so I feel his enthusiasm for the piano must be kept fresh.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Many thanks.
How brilliant that you not only notice your son's enthusiasm but are keen to develop it - you'd be amazed how many parents I come across who think it is enough to deposit their offspring on me for half an hour a week and they'll just turn into the next Horowitz!
Music, like children themselves, is so diverse that you could very well be exercising a lot of guess work and spending vast amounts in the process to little avail. Of all the odd things to capture my daughter's imagination, as a toddler she used to love me playing Brahm's Gminor rhapsodie and would dance around the room to it for as long as I would play it. She still refers to it as "her Brahms" now she's 9 and a half!
I would suggest you have Radio 3 and Classic FM on around him as much as possible and note the type of music that captures his attention and prompts a reaction, then it would be much easier to suggest some specific pieces. My just turned 2 year old amazed me in the car the other day when I looked in the rear view mirror and saw him head banging for all he was worth to Prokoviev's violin concerto!
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Post by silvermist »
Thank you so much for that, it is something I've tried immediately - my children, boy nearly 7 and daughter 3 ate their cereal this morning listening to Radio 3!
I used to learn to play the piano but our cheap piano was so heavy keyed for my little fingers I was always relieved to play my teacher's piano. Sadly a lot of my home encouragement became "you better practise because I'm paying for the lessons"! From this experience I realised that if I want to give my children a real chance at something I must also get excited and keep the interest fresh. Learning is a fun and natural process for children afterall , they are programmed to learn instinctively those things which are important in their family so I just want to encourage this fantastic opportunity! I will also try to relearn the piano at the same time as my children and because they always want to do what I'm doing I probably won't get a look in!
I've set up a music area where I am teaching myself the guitar and saxophone, and I have bongos and xylophone set up for them and they can play my little electric keyboard too. I am hoping to get a little baby grand piano to make it even more fun by making the under side a den, so it includes my daughter (and her dolls and teddys) and make the piano even more versatile fun and good use of space!
I will be checking out for Brahms Gminor rhapsodie and if you have any other specific piano music you might suggest it would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks again for replying!
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Post by silvermist »
These are also a great suggestions and I will endeavour to get hold of these ELP and YES albums/tracks to listen to.
I have to confess my children don't get much exposure to Trash FM as we tend to only play my cds over and over, which is a limited collection, so my son hums Smoke on the Water a lot!
This is the reason for asking advice here - I do need to expand my knowledge of the musical world especially where the piano is concerned as I have tended towards tracks with good guitar solos!
Thank you for replying.
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Post by Gill the Piano »
Jacques Loussier's interpretation of Bach for piano is catchy (piano playing 'jazzed up' but intrinsically sound Bach, with double bass & drum support).
Dudley Moore playing 'And The Same To You' is hysterical, especially if you can get a video recording of it (You Tube, perhaps?) and ditto Victor Borge. There was a You Tube thread on the 'Pianos' bit of the forum entitled 'Rachmaninov Had Big Hands' which made me howl. Humour is an excellent antidote to the sometimes prissy and po-faced attitude of some people who should be encouraging sprogs, not alienating them.
If you can't find your ideal piano, then get an old piano from anywhere to let them bash on until they're ready for proper lessons; they won't be so inclined to bash the 'real' one when it gets there, and you won't be dancing around on tenterhooks telling them to wash their hands/not to hit it/be careful etc. Don't be seduced by the baby grand thing; it's just an image thing and unless you're extremely lucky you'll be paying way over the odds for a piano that sounds the same as/worse than a small upright, but takes up twice the floorspace.
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Post by Gill the Piano »
Don't know how to do link things, but that's how I found it!
You just HAVE to go to You tube and see Rachmaninov had big hands. As Gill says, it is hysterical - I cried laughing at it and still chuckle just at the thought of it!
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Post by Gill the Piano »
Excellent bloke; great loss.
Another one which is popular with kids but not piano is The March of the Montagues and Capulets from Prokoviev's Romeo and Juliet. Really, anything with a strong beat and dramatic effect works.
Debussy's 1st Arabesque goes down well with my two, very dreamy, atmospheric stuff. Oddly enough, my two year old also likes the Schubert Impromptus, especially the one in Gflat.
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Post by silvermist »
My whole family loved Rachmaninov Had Big Hands and my son was positively hooting! I have today been introduced to You Tube and will be spending a bit of time exploring it further.
So many wonderful ideas and suggestions I am delighted - I will definitely try the painting to music this week though knowing my 3yr old only two well I think I will suggest eyes closed another time in the summer when we can do that outside!
I am off to the Library this week with a list of your suggestions to see if I can get hold of some of your suggestions and will keep you posted. I've never heard of Jordan Rudess or of the 1st Arabesque by Debussy, or Schubert's Impromptus and Saint Saens Carnival of the Animals sounds just up my daughter's street - she loves animals!
As for the piano, I know I can't afford to buy a decent instrument yet and I take the point about the baby grand - I haven't ruled out uprights but I don't like modern looking pianos and some of the old uprights can be a minefield of problems too and I feel a little out of my depths. I just can't get the looks out of my head of their faces as my children immediately sat at a baby grand in a secondhand shop and I could not tear my son away - I just hoped I could get an OK one with the promise that in another life I might be able to get a decent one when they get to higher grades.
I am still hoping that something will turn up and glad of all your help and advice to lay the foundations in as best and appealing way as possible.
It is unlikely that I would have easily come across any of these suggestions, if at all, without you introducing me to them.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Good luck in your mission.
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Post by silvermist »
This one is priceless and I too have taken several minutes to recompose myself, I haven't laughed so much in ages.
But you know, now I just can't help looking forward to the summer because it actually does sound like a lot of fun - for outside!
I will be retelling this tale for years to come! You are a gem Celestite.
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Post by silvermist »
dave brum - you came up with an exciting suggestion - but, (here's me getting it wrong again as usual)... I went to You Tube first and was a little lost for words with their version of Sparky's Magic Piano (gladly my children didn't see it, although I am sure it would have gone over their heads!).
Realising this was probably not the version you had meant, I checked on Amazon and we ordered a copy from today! I can't wait for it to arrive.
Fantastic suggestion dave - thanks!
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Post by silvermist »
Piano hunting is limited to waiting for something local to me to turn up on this site for sale or ebay at the moment - I placed a wanted ad here but I expect most people will laugh at my budget! I just want to make sure I can afford the delivery after purchase. Please don't get me wrong, I am not penniless just a housewife on a budget - I could wait and save more but I just want to grab my son's interest now whilst it is ripe.
There is a local second hand piano shop but everything too modern, or suitable for grade 1-2 only - the rest are completely out of my price range and I saw nothing that I would enjoy looking at in my house. I saw a German upright for around 600 pounds which they say would stretch to grade 7-8 but very dark wood and quite imposing. The baby grand I liked was suitable up to grade 5-6 and was their lowest price - a Waldberg;unfortunately it was 300 pounds more than I can pay. My children liked it and of course they particularly liked the shiny black gloss grand in the window! They do have a trade in option but I hate getting rid of things, especially musical instruments - they sort of become part of the family to me so it is difficult!
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Post by Gill the Piano »
Must go...I'm off to check up on Sparky...!
http://www.uk-piano.org/piano-forums/vi ... php?t=4913
Someone asked the question about which was better: acoustic or digital. In short, the purpose of the instrument is the most important point. Basically, a cheapo, crappy, secondhand heap will be an even bigger waste of money than a digital piano for learning purposes.
For the purpose of teaching/learning piano, the downside is that, although some space may be saved by going digital, you'll need something that has a good quality hammer action keyboard and a high quality piano sound sample. These are so important for children, teens, adults, pensioners.... students basically, learning to play the piano when they exceed Grade 4 standard.
By this stage, examiners start to look for engagement with the musical material and a large part of that comes from engagement with the instrument. Digital pianos vary here from no possible engagement to some engagement with the player; things like feeling the vibration of the strings and hammer impact are largely lost on many digitals and completely lost on most of them, although hammer action is still good enough for learning. Of course, any vibrations coming from a digital piano usually comes from the speakers!!
Don't get me wrong! The digital piano does have a place in modern society (I mean, "plastic pigs", Gill??) but certainly has serious limitations if it is the only instrument available for people learning at an intermediate or advanced level of piano playing.
However, better (and consequently more expensive) digitals do look and feel better, but by the time you dole out £1500, you could have invested in a good quality secondhand upright anyway!
I liked that advice, Celestite - I think I could get on quite well with you. Although I think Gill may have to go back on the hitlist after that malicious attack on digital pianos
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Post by silvermist »
Thank you all for your valued opinions, suggestions and concern, I feel I've made some wonderful new friends.
I had thought about buying a digital piano and went to the local music shop to try them out. I decided that really I would need to spend at least 800 pounds and over for a decent one, I preferred the sound of the Rolands I have to say, but excluded this idea for several reasons. Most importantly, I prefer traditional pianos, the look and feel etc but also, I know that my children cannot stop pressing buttons and would find them a distraction. Making, blending and changing sounds is making music and doing this on a piano is limited to the notes and the pedals, on a digital piano it can be done with buttons too! I have a Roland Juno 1 - one of the first midi instruments that came out in the 80's and (I've had it that long!)they mainly press buttons rather that experiment with notes.
There is something about sitting at a traditional piano that makes you have to tinkle about, if you know what I mean, and this is what I want to exploit with my children!
Having said all that, I have taken on board all you are saying and have now decided to look more seriously at the uprights.
Perhaps 500 pounds might get me a good instrument if I go privately and get it checked out with a professional piano tuner first. I could possibly go up another 200 (I've got my birthday coming up!). Few and far between are good ones and I think I will get more for my money buying privately.
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Post by Gill the Piano »
It's a bog in the middle of Ireland...
Hmm, that's a tough call! We need to look at the evidence, methinks:markymark wrote:Well I suppose, taking afternoons into consideration, I also take Years 3, 4, 5 and 6 for music. Question is then, who is barmier: the primary school teacher or the secondary school teacher?
Perhaps we should start a poll on that one!
Primary teachers - prepared to wipe snotty noses, duck flying paint pots, take beginner recorder groups, or, even worse, beginner violinists
Secondary teachers - prepared to stand in the firing line of 30+ year 9 adolescents, unleash Pachebel's Canon on year 7, year after year, take bigger, louder recorder groups, try to act cool and not let on they haven't a clue what some of year 9's more explicit profanities mean
What do you all think out there, folks?
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Post by Gill the Piano »
Or even worse than all that! Introducing orchestra to a group of children from Years 4-6!Celestite wrote: Primary teachers - prepared to wipe snotty noses, duck flying paint pots, take beginner recorder groups, or, even worse, beginner violinists
By the way, no paint pots fly in my classroom! At least not with a child following soon after it!
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