Sorry I haven’t posted anything this year. This week, I started a new blog called Composer’s Journey where I am composing music for the piano. Please visit me there.
Category Archive: Classical Piano
I composed this song on the computer last night. Lullaby in the key of E. 24 measures, 1 minute. I haven’t even played it on the piano, but you can listen to the synthesized version and perhaps learn it yourself if my note patterns are not too exotic. 
Download synthesized MP3 (1:00, 1MB)
Download sheet music (PDF, 2 pg., 30KB)
Download MIDI sequence (1:00, 3KB)
Download Sibelius 5 score (42KB)
This is a new composition I’ve been working on for the past week. It’s very basic: it’s in the key of C with no black notes at all. But I think I came up with a good tune that’s fun to listen to and to play.
The song is mostly broken C, F, and G chords with a small A minor section and some interesting melodies and embellishments.
Download synthesized MP3 (2:35, 2.5MB)
Download sheet music (PDF, 3 pg., 30KB)
Download MIDI sequence (2:35, 7KB)
The MP3 above is synthesized. I can play this on the piano but I don’t have a good microphone. Call me if you want me to play it for you. 
This is a song I composed for the piano titled “Adventure.” Very exciting!
Download MP3 (1.7MB)
Download sheet music (PDF, 44KB)
This is a song I composed for the piano titled “Inferno.”
I chose the title because the rhythm is a series of sixteenth notes without rest, reminiscent of a blazing fire. The right and left hands are mostly inverses of each other, though there are distinct melodies in serveral places. Enjoy.
Download MP3 (500KB)
Download sheet music (PDF, 32KB)
Download synthesized MP3 (2MB)
I’ve been playing the piano again recently. Found this song, Comptine d’un autre été: L’après-midi by a French composer, Yann Tiersen. It translates to “Nursery Rhyme of Another Summer: The Afternoon.” I wouldn’t have titled it that, but it’s an appealing melancholy song nonetheless.
The song is famous for appearing in the movie Amélie. I haven’t seen it, but it sounds interesting / thought-provoking.
It just took me two days to learn this, which is faster than normal. As soon as I abandoned the score and played it from memory, I was able to play much better because I could watch my hands instead of guessing or looking back and forth. That’s a step many musicians don’t reach, because they’ve been taught since childhood that you should not look at your hands and just read from the sheets. Phooey. It’s good to know how to read notes to learn new songs, but after practicing for days you should memorize every note. If it doesn’t happen, you’ve got a hard song so change that to weeks. Don’t try to memorize a song; if it doesn’t happen naturally play it more often, and if it still isn’t burned in your mind maybe you can’t memorize songs (!). Keep practicing always, as long as piano holds your interest.
The hard part is the arpeggios in the right hand, mainly because you have to balance them with the accompaniment in the left hand. The accompaniment is eighth notes and the arpeggios are sixteenths, so you have to play them twice as fast, alongside and synchronized. Your mind doesn’t like that and wants both hands to be moving at the same pace, but if you can disconnect your left brain from your fingers by spacing out, it becomes easy. Then polish …
Songs by me on the piano at a recital on 2008-01-04. I’ve been playing for five years; Rustles of Spring is the newest one, which I started on a year ago. I still can’t play the middle part at tempo, but it’s coming along. The Entertainer is quite entertaining, and I’ve perfected an abridged version of Turkish Rondo (Alla Turca); the beginning is cut off as my Dad started recording too late.
Turkish Rondo, abridged [Mozart]
Rustles of Spring [Christian Sinding]
The Entertainer [Scott Joplin]
