Posts Tagged ‘lesson’
Read Key Signatures in Music
Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Ready to tackle the next lesson for learning to read sheet music? Musical key signatures are not all that difficult to understand when put into perspective. Just like a scale, music notes go up and down but in half steps instead of full.
Natural notes appear by themselves in written music. But sharps and flats have their own symbols:
![]() |
Sharp |
![]() |
Flat |
On a keyboard, a sharp note is the black key that’s one note higher than its natural counterpart (the white key). A flat is a black key that’s one note lower than its natural counterpart.
When sharps and flats are written into music as needed (next to the notes), they’re called accidentals. But sometimes they are shown at the beginning of a stave, right after the clef. In this case, they indicate a key signature.
Key signatures show which notes are to be played or sung as sharps or flats throughout the song. So if there’s a sharp sign on “F” and one on “C”, every “F” and “C” note throughout the song should be played as a sharp. There will be no “F” or “C” natural unless specifically indicated by a natural symbol:
![]() |
Natural |

Key signatures (in this case, D Major) indicate the general tone of a song, as well as where its basic scale begins and ends. For example, a song in the key of D is based on the D Major scale, which begins and ends with “D” — with “F” and “C” played sharp throughout. However, the same song can be written and played in different keys.
Key signatures are a type of musical notation that indicate which key the song is to be played in. But key signatures, despite the name, are not the same thing as key.
Key signatures are simply notational devices; just as a note is the notational name for a pitch, key signatures are the notational names for keys. It is what it says it is: a signature, a simple piece of information that tips you off to the physical form (the key) to be played.
What does it mean to be “in the key of F”, or “in the key of Bb”?
It means that the composer based the composition on the scale of F (which has 1 flat in it), or the scale of Bb (which has 2 flats in it).
Key signatures appear right after the clef (before the time signature) and show a sharp or flat on the line or space corresponding to the note to be altered. Key signatures placed at the beginning of songs will carry through the entire song, unless other key signatures are noted after a double bar, canceling out the first.
For instance, it’s entirely possible to start a song in the key of F but end it in the key of E flat; it all depends on the key signatures and where they’re placed throughout the song (a key signature can change at any point).
Accidentals can also show up throughout a song and only once or twice flatten or sharpen a note that was not previously indicated; this cancels out the key signatures, as well, but only temporarily, for as long as the accidental lasts.
Beginners just learning to read music often have a hard time with key signatures because the key itself is not expressly written, and it’s sometimes difficult to remember what goes where.
Key signatures with five flats or sharps have been known to terrorize new musicians — how in the world, they think, are we supposed to remember all these note changes while we’re playing the song?
It’s obviously possible, though, and there are some rules that can help beginners identify and remember the key as it relates to the key signatures, rules that go beyond rote memorization. If there is more than one flat, the key is the note on the second to last flat.
If there are any sharps at all, the key is a half step up from the last one noted. F major, a key frequently found in beginning sheet music, only has one flat (B), and C major has no sharps or flats at all. Key signatures, when viewed in light of these rules, are much easier for beginners to digest, ensuring that a proper knowledge of key signatures is on its way through the door.
One fact that most people don’t realize is that sharps and flats always occur in the same order:
The order of the flats is B, E, A, D, G, C, F.
The order of the sharps is just the opposite — F, C, G, D, A, E, B.
So if there is one flat in the key signature, it is always B. If there are two flats in the key signature, they are always B and E. Three flats are always B, E, and A. Four flats in a key signature spell the word BEAD. And so on.
It’s the same in sharps, too, except backward. If there is one sharp in a key signature, it is always F. Two sharps in a key signature are always F and C. Three are F, C, and G. And so on.
So once you have memorized the order of the flats, all you have to do is apply the rule mentioned earlier: the next to the last flat is the name of the key. For example, if you have four flats in a key signature, they are Bb, Eb, Ab, Db. The last flat is D, so the next to the last flat is A. So the key is Ab.
With sharps, just mentally go up 1/2 step from the last sharp, and that is the key. For example, if a key has 4 sharps, they are F#, C#, G#, D#. One-half step above D# is E, so the key is E.
Memorize the order of the flats and sharps and those two simple rules, and you’ll be able to identify what major key any song is in quickly and easily
A, A. Four, A. So, accidental, Accidentals, amp, app, art, B, bar, base, bb, BEAD, Beginners, beginning, black key, Board, C, C Major, c natural, c note, C. Three, car, case, change, clef, com, composer, composition, counterpart, D, D Major, door, E, E. Three, end, exam, example, F Major, F., fact, first, flat, Flats, Flatten, form, format, G, G. And, general, half, half steps, Identify, information, instance, Key, key signature, key signatures, keyboard, knowledge, lack, Learning, lesson, light, line, Long, major, memorization, ment, music, music notes, musical key signatures, musical notation, musician, name, natural, natural counterpart, nature, notation, notational, note, order, part, perspective, piece, pitch, place, Play, point, rent, right, rule, scale, second, Sharp, Sharps, sharps and flats, sheet, sheet music, sign, signature, signature key, Signatures, song, space, spell, start, step, sym, symbol, tempo, terrorize, thing, Time, time signature, tion, tone, two sharps, type, US, use, war, way, white, white key, word, world
Music Learning | Comments Off
Techniques and Strategies for Practicing Piano
Saturday, September 19th, 2009
Different amounts of practice time are required to learn piano at various ages and levels. Recommendations also depend on the student’s ambition and repertoire.
Inadequate practice is the number one complaint piano teachers (and other music teachers) have about students. Without practice, frustration mounts as students simply don’t progress in their piano lessons. Arguments about and resistance to practice is one of the main reasons children stop music lessons.
Each instrument has different practice requirements because of the physical demands of playing it. Practice recommendations also depend on age, level, and ambition. The following recommendations are for students learning to play piano.
How Much Should a Child Practice Piano?
Many piano teachers suggest that the student’s lesson length be a preliminary rule of thumb for a daily practice goal. For example, a common recommendation is that a piano student taking half-hour lessons should practice half an hour a day; a student taking hour lessons should practice an hour a day.
This rule of thumb is most appropriate for the earlier levels. At more advanced levels, piano practice requirements can be much higher, depending on the student’s ambitions. For instance, an advanced high school student who intends to major in music at the college level might take an hour lesson a week, but may well practice two or three hours a day, or even more, depending on the level of commitment and the school to which the student is applying.
But these students are exceptional, and well into the self-motivated stage. For average students, matching the lesson time five days a week will give consistent and rewarding progress.
Every pianist, indeed, every musician, develops a series of possible practice strategies to deal with different types of mistakes and to learn difficult passages so they can be brought up to speed and played fluently.
Whether just beginning to learn to play the piano or an accomplished virtuoso, pianists should look at these strategies as part of their “toolbox.” If one doesn’t work, try another. Experience tells pianists which strategies are best for which problems, but quite frequently, a pianist will try a number of practice techniques to master a particularly stubborn passage.
Mechanical Strategies for Piano Practice
Mechanical strategies are those that teach the players’ hands where to go. They deal with issues such as finding the right notes, using the right fingers, and coordinating the hands. these strategies help develop piano technique.
- Play with hands apart. Practice one hand at a time if it makes musical sense to do so. Then play with hands together.
- Play in small sections: Practice the piece in small bits, one phrase at a time. Phrases are the equivalent of sentences in the grammar of music. They are sometimes less than a line of music long, and sometimes more, just like a sentence on this page is sometimes shorter than a line, and sometimes longer. Practicing in phrases makes more musical sense than practicing by the line.
- Combine all the elements in small phrases: Practice each phrase by playing one hand, then the other, then both together.
- Study the fingering. Fingering choices should always be deliberate and intentional. Pianists must remember that good fingering involves not only getting to the note in question, but getting to the next note, and the next after that. Issues of how to tackle a series of similar motifs that start on different notes also come into play, as well as issues of musicality, which can justify fingerings that at first may look awkward. Students who have not yet mastered fingering techniques should run any changes past a teacher.
- Break the music into even smaller chunks: Music can always be broken down into its component parts. If the phrase is too long, break it into two. Or practice a single measure. Identify the weak spots where mistakes are habitual, and practically those spots until the mistakes are eradicated.
Remember, piano mistakes don’t go away by starting at the beginning and trying again!
Rhythmic Strategies for Piano Practice
Rhythmic practice techniques force the player to do all the tasks in strict time, which raises the difficulty, and also makes it very obvious which parts of the piece need more work.
- Use the metronome: At its most basic, the metronome helps pianists keep a steady tempo. Metronomes can also be used to help a student work out technical elements by forcing the pianist to play in time and gradually raising the tempo. Playing with a metronome reveals any weak spots in the piece. Metronome practice is especially valuable for ensemble players.
- Vary the rhythm: An effective way to smooth out bumps in long technical runs of very fast notes is change the rhythm. For example, a stream of 16th notes cold be played as alternating dotted 16th and 32nd notes, and then the player can try the reverse and play the section as 32nd notes followed by dotted-16th notes.
- Addi beats. A difficult series of chords can be practiced by by inserting one or more beats of rests in between them, then gradually, getting rid of the extra beats.
- Change the tempo: Playing very slowly and very fast are also good practice techniques. Playing one hand much faster than the target tempo secures the muscle memory of the passages, which makes the piece easier to play with two hands. Playing slowly helps pianists make fingering and articulation choices that are conscious and deliberate.
Finally, if mistakes persist, change the practice strategy! The worst thing is to keep doing the same thing and making the same mistake. Try to go about the problem in a different way.
A, advance, age, ambition, ambitions, amp, app, Arguments, art, Arts, B, bb, beat, beats, beginning, Break, C, change, child, Children, College, com, Combine, commitment, Common, complaint, component, D, day, difficulty, E, Eat, effect, end, ensemble, equivalent, exam, example, exception, experience, finding, Fingering, first, force, frustration, frustration mounts, G, goal, Good, grammar, GRE, habitual, half, half an hour, half-hour, hand, hour, Identify, Inadequate, instance, instrument, Learning, learning to play piano, length, lesson, lesson time, level, line, Long, loo, major, Master, May, measure, Mechanical, ment, metronome, Metronomes, music, music lessons, music teachers, musicality, musician, note, number, page, part, passage, phrase, Phrases, physical demands, pianist, Pianists, piano, piano lessons, piano practice, piano student, piano teachers, piece, Play, player, Prac, practice, practice goal, practice recommendations, practice strategies, practice time, Practicing, PRELIMINARY, progress, question, reason, recommendation, Recommendations, rent, repertoire, requirement, Requirements, resistance, reverse, rhythm, Rhythmic, right, rule, rule of thumb, school, section, sense, sentence, series, stage, start, stop music, stream, student, study, take, teacher, technique, tempo, thing, thumb, tice, Time, tion, toolbox, type, uate, US, use, virtuoso pianists, war, way, week, work
Music Learning | Comments Off
MASTER OF MUSIC DEGREE
Tuesday, September 15th, 2009
The purpose of Master of Music degree work is to hone performance skills and/or capabilities in
writing music or writing about music. There are five fields of study within the Master of Music
program: composition, conducting, musicology, performance, and performance and pedagogy.
Various options are available in conducting (choral conducting, choral conducting with voice,
orchestral conducting, and wind symphony/band conducting), in performance (harpsichord,
organ, piano, piano with accompanying and chamber music, string instruments [including guitar
and harp], voice, opera, voice with choral conducting, brass, woodwind, and percussion
instruments), and in performance and pedagogy (brass, piano, string instruments, voice and
woodwind instruments).
All plans of study for the Master of Music degree meet National Association of Schools of Music
recommendations: a minimum of 30 total semester hours, a minimum of 10 semester hours in an
NASM-approved major, and a minimum of 10 semester hours in other studies in music. The
performance and pedagogy programs are double majors; they meet the minimum requirements
for an NASM-defined major in both areas. Other options include a secondary emphasis of at
least eight semester hours. The Master of Music degree requires a minimum of thirty graduate
credit hours. Music courses applicable to this degree must be numbered 5000 or above.
Nonmusic courses must be taken at the 4000 level or above. The usual time for completion of
the master’s degree is two years. Degree work must be completed within four years of first
registration.
The required Introduction to Music Bibliography and Research and a three-hour course each in
musicology and music theory are intended to lend scholarly support to performance as well as to
strengthen competency for research. Introduction to Music Bibliography and Research should be
taken either the fall or spring semester of the first year. Students must be taking the second of, or
have completed, the required history and theory courses at qualifying examination time.
The Master of Music thesis consists of two projects, for two hours credit each; these projects
vary according to the emphasis. Specific requirements are listed for each field of study on the
degree-plan descriptions.
A minimal full-time course load is five hours of graduate-level work per semester; registration
for eight or more hours is expected. Students taking individual applied-music or composition
lessons must also carry at least one other course in that semester in order to show adequate
progress toward the degrees.
PRELIMINARY EXAMINATIONS. The exams are given at the beginning of each semester;
exact dates are posted on the graduate bulletin board. Students should take the “prelims” at the
beginning of their first semester of study and complete the requirement by the end of the first
11/8/2004 td
year of study. The theory exam, approximately 1½ hours long, covers written theory and aural
perception. For some emphases, exams in analysis and counterpoint are also required. The
history exam, about two hours long, contains questions based largely on Western art music. The
exam in the major field is a written exam scheduled for a three-hour period. Candidates who fail
parts of the exams should retake those parts the following semester or take remedial course work,
on the advice of the evaluator. The preliminary exams must be passed completely before the
student may take the qualifying exam or complete the thesis projects.
QUALIFYING EXAMINATION. This exam, a written one, is taken after students are well into
their programs, normally the third semester of study or the semester or term before the one of
expected graduation. The exam is given on a Saturday at approximately the middle of each
semester or term; dates are posted on the graduate bulletin board. The exam is formulated by the
student’s advisory committee, which consists of the major advisor (or a substitute), another
professor from the major area, and a third professor from outside the major area. Questions in
the major take approximately three hours to answer; questions outside the major area take
approximately one hour to answer. Students should consult with their committee members about
preparation for the qualifying exam.
APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION TO CANDIDACY. Before taking the comprehensive-final
oral examination, masters degree students should file an application for admission to candidacy.
On this form are listed all of the courses and other requirements for the degree. The student’s
committee chair and the Associate Dean for Graduate Studies must approve the application
before it is sent to the Graduate School for approval. The application for admission to candidacy
must be filed at least ten weeks prior to the comprehensive-final exam.
COMPREHENSIVE-FINAL EXAMINATION. This exam, an oral one administered by the
student’s committee and taken in the final semester, is usually an hour in length and is based
upon the student’s course work, thesis projects, and work done on the qualifying exam. This
exam should be scheduled within a two-week period close to the end of each semester. Students
must arrange the time and place of the exam with their committee members and must notify the
Associate Dean three weeks in advance of the examination. The Dean’s office then notifies the
Graduate School to prepare the form on which the committee certifies the student for graduation.
Consult separate sheets for specific course requirements in each of the above specialty areas.
Further information on the Master of Music degree is found in both the Graduate School and
College of Music sections of the University Catalog as well as in the Graduate Studies in Music
Handbook.
A, ADMISSION, advance, advice, advisor, air, analysis, answer, app, APPLICATION, approval, area, art, Arts, Associate, Association, B, band, base, beginning, Bibliography, Board, book, brass, brass woodwind, bulletin, C, CANDIDACY, candidate, Candidates, car, chair, chamber, choral, close, College, com, committee, competency, completion, composition, COMPREHENSIVE-FINAL, conducting, counterpoint, course, credit, D, D Major, date, day, Dean, degree, degree work, Description, double majors, E, E Major, edu, emphasis, end, evaluator, exam, Examination, EXAMINATIONS, fall, field, Fine, first, form, format, G, graduate, graduate credit hours, graduate school, graduation, GRE, guitar, hand, Handbook, harpsichord, history, hour, hours music, information, instrument, Instruments, introduction, introduction to music, lab, length, lesson, level, load, Long, major, Master, master of music, May, ment, mid, middle, minimum, music, music bibliography, music degree, music recommendations, music theory, musicology, NASM-approved, NASM-defined, National, non, Nonmusic, number, office, opera, option, orchestra, order, organ, part, pedagogy, perception, percussion, percussion instruments, performance, period, piano, piano string, place, point, port, PRELIMINARY, preparation, professor, Program, program composition, progress, purpose, QUALIFYING, question, recommendation, Recommendations, registration, remedial, requirement, Requirements, research, research introduction, retake, SAT, Saturday, scholarly support, school, Schools, schools of music, second, secondary emphasis, section, semester, sheet, sion, sity, specialty, spring, string, student, study, substitute, support, sym, symphony, symphony band, take, term, theory, thesis, Time, tion, uate, Univer, university, US, voice, war, week, wind, wind symphony, woodwind, woodwind instruments, work, year
Music Learning | Comments Off


