Music Information

How to Play What you Feel


Many students think that being able to play what you feel is difficult. They believe you must have years and years of training in improvisation and theory.

The truth of the matter is that playing what you feel is easy when you understand what feeling is. Feeling is not emotion, yet it contains emotion. For example, If I'm in an ecstatic state of happiness and rush over to the piano and play, what I am doing is tapping off of the emotion.

To play what you feel does not require high or low emotional states. On the contrary, feeling is always with us and to just sit down and play is all that is required. Our feeling is what comes out of us in the moment. It lies in wait but is always there. Think of freewriting as an analogy. To put pen to paper and just write what comes to mind, the writer is expressing feeling. Emotions may come up during this process, but they gradually return to the pool of feelings from which they came.

To play what you feel requires nothing more than being present at the piano and having a little skill in being able to improvise. For example, in creating Lesson #35: "Moss Garden" certain decisions were made in the beginning. The sound was determined (pentatonic). Chords were chosen and a technique was chosen too (broken chord).

With these decisions out of the way it becomes a matter of playing around with the possibilities. And from this playing comes a music that is not forced or willed into being. On the contrary, feeling is allowed to be expressed normally and naturally. It becomes an easy thing to do, just like freewriting.

Edward Weiss is a pianist/composer and webmaster of Quiescence Music's online piano lessons. He has been helping students learn how to play piano in the New Age style for over 14 years and works with students in private, in groups, and now over the internet. Stop by now at http://www.quiescencemusic.com/piano_lessons.html for a FREE piano lesson!

  


MORE RESOURCES:

Music: It's in your head, changing your brain
CNN
By Elizabeth Landau, CNN Bassist Victor Wooten says you don't need to start with the rules of music in order to play an instrument. (CNN) -- Michael Jackson was on to something when he sang that "ABC" is "simple as "Do Re Mi." Music helps kids remember ...

and more »


Morocco hosts world music festival while imprisoning dissident artists
Washington Post
RABAT, Morocco — Morocco's glittering Mawazine international music festival wraps up this weekend with performances by Mariah Carey and Lenny Kravitz, after nine days of showcasing the North African kingdom's cool factor — even as dissident Moroccan ...

and more »


Telegraph.co.uk

Zimbabwe arrests British music presenter
The Associated Press
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Organizers of a classical music festival in Zimbabwe say authorities arrested a prominent British music personality at a concert in the second city of Bulawayo. The city's Academy of Music said Saturday that Petroc Trelawny, ...
BBC presenter held by Zimbabwe police after arrest at classical music concertTelegraph.co.uk

all 110 news articles »


City celebrates Africa Day with dance, music
New York Daily News
New Delhi, May 26 — A night filled with mesmerising dance and music marked the Africa Day celebrations in the capital as artists from India and Africa took centrestage to commemorate 49 years of the continent's resurgence. The celebrations marked the ...

and more »


Can't stop the music rights reclamation: Willis suit draws attention in the ...
Chicago Tribune
His suit drew attention in the music legal community because it is one of the first to come to court over a provision of the Copyright Act that allows writers and artists to reclaim their works 35 years after handing over a grant to their copyright.

and more »


Music Review: Xavier Rudd - Spirit Bird
Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog)
Well, even music critics can be fans. I know that sounds like a stretch to some of you. It's cool to think critics hate music and only exist to run down your favourites or to say nasty things about people you like. Well, I can be as nasty as the next ...

and more »


AppPicker.com

Sony Brings Streaming Music Service to the IPhone
PCWorld
By Jay Alabaster, IDG News Sony on Friday released an iPhone app to access its streaming Music Unlimited service, part of its efforts to expand its online platforms to devices from rival manufacturers. The app allows users to listen to and manage ...
Sony releases app for streaming musicAppPicker.com
Sony Music Unlimited Service Comes To iOSITProPortal

all 28 news articles »


Musical couple donate talent to Habitat for Humanity in Newington
Seacoastonline.com
Brandy Irish-Gerjuoy and her husband, Leif Gerjuoy, of Dover play music for customers every Saturday at the Habitat for Humanity ReStore in Newington. The couple play the organ and the washboard.Rich Beauchesne/rbeauchesne@seacoastonline.com By Joey ...

and more »


New Republic

Spooky Music, Steelworkers, and American Flags: A Brief Taxonomy of the ...
New Republic
The fateful marriage between TV advertising and presidential politics that was consecrated 60 years ago with a crudely drawn black-and-white cartoon endorsing Dwight D. Eisenhower—the amateurish off-screen musical narration: “You like Ike. I like Ike.
Obama campaign taps two Michigan educators to criticize Romney class size ...The Saginaw News - MLive.com

all 3,561 news articles »


We Love DC

Arena Stage's 'Music Man'
Washington Post
Kate Baldwin's memorable Marian the Librarian draws us in to Arena Stage's endearingly melodic if unfortunately costumed revival of “The Music Man.” Marian Paroo (played by Kate Baldwin), left, and Amaryllis (played by Heidi Kaplan) perform a scene ...
Playhouse's 'Music Man' a square dealMerced Sun-Star
We Love Arts: The Music ManWe Love DC

all 4 news articles »

Google News

Article List | Index | Site Map
All logos, trademarks and articles on this site are property and copyright of their respective owner(s).
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest is Copyright © 2006 CanadaSEEK.com - All Rights Reserved.