My first question is whether or not melodic instruments are boring after piano.
Besides the instrument itself which may make beautiful sounds, is the music itself enough to keep you interested and practicing over time?
My second is regarding which instrument. Perhaps strangely, I am quite drawn to a Bassoon.Like most people I love the sound of a Cello as well. I tried one for fun once and I am sure I would be fine at it, having had no problems getting good sound of it (I thought), but I have other issues about it. The Bassoon is an interesting sound to me (the Oboe is just a touch to high a pitch for me to really love it.) But what I read tells me it is quite a hard instrument to learn. I see quite a reasonable repertoire for it too. Anyone have any experience with the instrument? Its technique is surely also so far removed from piano that it will teach a whole lot of new skills.
I have also considered an alto recorder perhaps for its portability. But to be honest I have no idea of its repertoire.
I started learning classical guitar and it is a blast. It is in some respects harder than piano. It is very different in a lot of areas but at the same time, my experience at piano has allowed for me to better troubleshoot technical difficulties on the guitar.Also, another thing is that it is well-known once you get into guitar, you acquire a syndrome for it, meaning you want to keep buying more guitars. Unlike piano, the guitar is a physically intimate instrument and nice to hold / hug it while playing it. It looks very beautiful and is a sight to behold just laying it around or on a stand or even in its case.But beware, as like violin I heard or trumpet, guitar can consume you and overtake your time from piano, perhaps replacing it as your main instrument.I don't think this is the case w bassoon or recorder or any of the other lesser instruments.
Which of the recorders is another question. I expect I'd want a tenor or even bass recorder for the deeper sound. But soprano or alto are the more common ones right? I assume I can easily enough transpose music to fit the instrument.
learning an instrument that's only capable of producing one tone at a time--you will be a phenomenal sight-reader.
Not sure there are any instruments like that.(I met Jen this weekend. amazing player, and lots more than one tone at a time.)
What you will have trouble with is listening to others and blending your sound with theirs... pianists are notoriously bad listeners because we weren't brought up in an ensemble situation-- most of the time. Pianists tend to think that as long as they are counting they are with the rest of the group...lol.. yikes...
guitar vs piano@brianthe guitar is so much more personal -- it fits against your body and you feel the vibrations--on stage it's so freeing--I can walk around and play instead being tethered to the keyboard.. I can connect with the audience when I play the guitar in a way that I am not able to do with the piano. It's far easier to sing with the guitar--it's possible to devote enough brainpower to both the voice and the instrument so neither suffers. Not so easy with the piano. My husband is a guitarist who plays the piano--and he is fearless when he plays. The other day he was picking out Leibestraum 3 by ear from hearing me play it. It was damn close, too. He has had no piano training whatsoever save for piano classes at university--he majored in jazz studies/arranging. His technique, however, is rock solid. my guitar skills are pretty decent but he plays the piano---way better than I play the guitar.... it pisses me off sometimes how easy it is for him... Guitarists are somehow free from the musical neurosis that is so prevalent among pianists. He never stresses the gig... ever. lol. I have been playing music with him for 26 years and not once have we ever argued about who f__ed up or came in late--he forgets it as soon as the gear is packed. I used to lay awake at night reliving every sour note while listening to him snore away without a care in the world... big jerk. lolanyway--since we were talking about secondary instruments and that guitar is so pretty I just thought I would throw that out there.and brian I would very much like to hear you play the guitar--we should have a string for secondary instrument performances here. Please post something... Malaguena would be lovely.. maybe one of the Vivaldi lute concertos... or please... Concerto de Aranjuaz oh please I am married to a die-hard jazzer... and I love classical guitar.
Excellent points, and too often neglected. There are some pianists who do put four beats in every measure. I wish I could convince them to make those four beats all the same length, but it aint gonna happen.But when you play too much all alone, you can train yourself not to notice if you're not careful.
Long ago and far away in a different universe I really enjoyed playing it and singing the folk music which we all sang back then --and we certainly were a laid back bunch! Gigged all over New England, from busking in subway stations in Boston (not New York -- they weren't friendly) to coffee houses from New Haven to Burlington VT..."Those were the days, my friends, we thought they'd never end..."
guitar has allowed me to see music
"Those were the days, my friends, we thought they'd never end..."
I wish I could do this. That would be the life. I am sometimes tired of this office 40+ hour week life.
we'd sing and dance forever and a day well have you ever tried performing for a living? maybe you can and you just don't know it. being able to play like a monster is preferred but certainly not necessary. Connecting with audience is first and foremost.
It adds so much to your musicianship when you take your piano skills and utilize them on the guitar. Your ears get razor sharp because you tune your instrument--pianists can't do jack about the tuning so they ignore it.
found myself attentively watching and listening to each instrument and thinking about how much I would love to make that sound. I sometimes dream of the physical feel of drawing a note out of a cello. Hearing it, feeling the vibration of the string etc. Very good imagination me. The same feeling goes for the bassoon. I can imagine the feel of a note. Of course never having played one my idea is likely very wrong!
When I play a wind instrument, my feel for a cadence might be in the "Ti Do" and the phrasing.
Except call it Ti Doh.
I have never seen it spelled that way. Are you sure?Actually I just did a google search, and the only spelling I could see anywhere was "Do".
Recorders are easier to play technically than a lot of instruments, which is why little kids routinely start with the recorder in some countries. But their range is limited - I can get two octaves minus one note out of mine. You can't produce dynamics, because as soon as you try to get louder or softer, the pitch changes, and if you go too far you get either a squeak or a lost sound.
One thought for anyone considering both guitar and piano (assuming guitar played with the fingers rather than strummed with a pick) - how do you reconcile the need for long fingernails for the one, and short fingernails for the other?
Irrational (love that name - aren't irrational numbers the ones with infinite possibilities?)
Appreciate all the positive responses for classical guitar. To me it makes more sweet and romantic music than piano (and more 'sweltering hot' music as well). My innards are more sensitive to the delicacy of (well-played) guitar music.I just wanted to share this but here is a pic of my guitar I love it:
-- dcstudio delighted me by getting the next line of the song) --
your fingernails don't have to really be that long to play classical guitar and I play a steel string so it's not an issue for me. I knew a guy at UNT who played both and he would make finger picks out of ping pong balls he had cut up somehow. He glued them on with super glue and played his guitar juries--then ripped them off and played the piano juries. His teacher gave him 5pts bonus for his inventiveness. The next semester he made them for all the classical guitar guys because they sounded better than fingernails.
Well done! I am not learning folk or fingerstyle but it sure was cool to see. When was that video taken , in the 60s?? Just kidding , video texture is intended to look like that I guess. I was expecting you to announce emphatically that this piece was some sort of "THIRD MOVEMENT" with your three fingers up. Unfortunately you did not. I was disappointed.