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First, a disclosure is in order: I grew up with a concert pianist, my father Morton Estrin who taught piano in our home. He was my piano teacher as well. He still teaches in the house where I grew up on Long Island! My sister Coren Mino is also a pianist. My life is centered around the piano and always has been, so my viewpoint is definitely focused on the piano!
If you are serious about studying music, the piano can be an essential tool for developing a deep understanding of music theory. If you attend a music conservatory, a minimum level of piano proficiency is required of all music students from composers, conductors, performers, teachers – everyone is required to learn to play the piano. What is so important about the piano?
One reason is that the piano is one of the only instruments in which you can easily play multiple notes at the same time. Most instruments can only play one note at a time. In fact, all brass and woodwind instruments are monophonic. (However, there are alternative techniques to get around this usually involving singing.) The piano is also quite different from other instruments because there is a vast repertoire of music which requires no other musicians to be complete!
The piano lends itself to fostering a deep understanding of the structure of music. On the piano, you can not only see the chord but you can hear it (with absolute certainty) as well. For example, assuming the piano is in tune, if you play a C, it will be a C. If you try and play a C on another instrument – let’s say a French horn – there are a lot of different fingerings that can get very different notes; a piano will play a note with certainty as well as visual feedback. For singers, it can be invaluable having a piano nearby to check pitches of vocal parts.
Another point is that playing a note on a piano is incredibly simple. Even a young child can walk over to a piano and play a note on the keyboard. Just try and do that with an oboe or a flute; you will need a substantial study of embouchure (lip position) breathing, fingering and more just to get a sound!
The piano is a wonderful instrument for everyone even if they don’t have formal training. I personally know people who have never had a lesson in their lives but still enjoy playing the piano. There are even professional musicians who have never taken piano lessons but have been able to play by simply watching people around them and learning by ear. This is particularly true of styles of music involving improvisation such as rock, pop, country, new age, and even jazz.
The piano truly is a universal instrument. Unlike other instruments relegated to being closed up in a case in a closet, the piano is a substantial piece of furniture in people’s homes beckoning to be played!
Thanks again for joining me, Robert Estrin at LivingPianos.com: Robert@LivingPianos.com – (949) 244-3729
3 thoughts on “Why Everyone Should Learn to Play the Piano – You Should Learn the Piano”
When I was about 10-11 years old, I had been playing a bit “by ear”. My father, who did not play but sang well by ear, bought for me a course in “Piano by ear” by a Jean Leonard in Hollywood. Leonard had a radio broadcast on Sundays, and I did well enough to play several times on that show. He taught everyone to play in F#, which is logical. Melodies are often mostly pentatonic, all black keys. Chords lookk very different from each other. We used 15 different chords learned by number.
This was a great help to me and I subsequently studied music at USC and UCLA and earned a B.Mus and M.A. as well as having a happy successful life as a pianist-entertainer-composer.
I enjoy and look forward to your emails.
Dear Mr.Estrin, I really enjoy your articles on piano playing and knowledge of the piano’s mechanism.Thank-you for sharing this with us.
best wishes,
Andrew Rodell
A very good and useful message here, Robert. Thanks for the video, and for broadening our appreciation of the pinao as “the universal instrument.
Your video presentations are always special…in one way or another.