judyhawkins Posted April 20, 2013 Share Posted April 20, 2013 (edited) Chapter Two, Judy's harum scarum Hayden Tutorial.--------------------- Section One ----------------[For those of you with minimal musical background.]Adding the left hand to The First Leaves of Spring.Using your button chart, find the lowest "C" note on the left handside.Hold it down -- play it -- while playing the tune in your right hand.This is a grand old traditional technique known as the "Drone Note" --bagpipes are one of the more familiar instruments that use drones.It's very easy, but gets old pretty quickly, and the way concertinareeds are, the low ones tend to overpower the higher ones: they'rejust putting a lot more energy into the air waves, being longer andheavier than the high reeds.So here's a more interesting thing to do in the left hand:Put your THIRD finger on that C note, and just play it for the firstthree notes of the tune: like this:right hand: C D Eleft hand: C - -Now put your LEFT index finger on the "E" note on the left side, andplay it for the next three notes of the tune:right hand: E D Cleft hand: E - -MUCH more interesting... Keep doing that alternation for the rest ofthe tune: C D E E D C D C D E D C C D E E D C D E D C - -C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - and when you get to the end, bask in the lovely sound it makes, as thetwo different notes create a simple chord.Now play it again.IF you are finding it difficult to coordinate your hands, just keep atit. Me, when I first picked up the Hayden, about the fifth instrumentin my lifetime, I still had a hump to get over to get the two hands towork together. If this is your first instrument, it'll take a bit oftime to get used to, so just stick to it. Getting both hands working together soon is a really good thing thatwill help you along a lot more than just about anything else.If you're finding it really frustrating, try setting the instrumentdown, putting your fingers on the edge of the table, and just silentlytapping the patterns. That means you aren't also trying to work thebellows; it's a way of simplifying the problem and just working on onepart of it at a time.There's a very, very, very, very important principle there: when introuble SUBTRACT.If you're trying to learn three things at once and finding it heavygoing, subtract one (the bellows) and just learn two: left handworking with right hand to create a pattern.At some point, doing the pattern on the table edge will start to feelmore ok; now try it on the instrument again -- you could do itsilently, not working the bellows, until it is comfortable there; thenadd the bellows motion.But the most important thing you can learn right now is this principleofWHEN IN TROUBLE SUBTRACT.It is a learning principle that has served me well for decades, andI'll return to it again and again as I scramble this tutorialtogether.-------------------------- Section Two -------------------[For those with more musical background [and who came back formore...]]If you really did the whole thing, you found out just how quickly yourun into trouble with the keys further around the circle of sharps, onthe Hayden. There's a principle here: all musical instruments havelimitations, and it's worth knowing them, so you can figure outwhether this particular instrument is going to be able to play themusic you want to play.Here's a couple relatively simple tunes to start exploring intervalswith. The Old Mole has interlocking triads that I find delightful toplay and it is also a very good learning exercise, when transposedinto all the reasonable keys. There's a principle here: find simpletunes you can listen to a million times and still like them, and usethem as finger exercises.[Cut and paste to the abc converter here.]X:1T:The Old MoleS: The Barnes Book of English Country Dance Tunes, IM:6/8L:1/8K:G|: "Transposed to G" G2G E>FG | A2F E2E | G2G E>FG | A3 c3 || B2G E>FG | A2F D2D | E>FG F>EF | G3 G3 :|The Chanter's Tune has more challenges, and also lends itself toexperimenting with expression. I suppose I ought to make a video ofwhat I do.... but I'd rather leave it to you to invent your own approach.Noodle around and find what you like. I play the first two lines withshort sharp notes, especially the repeated notes, and then play thesecond two lines much smoother, more legato. I like the contrast.X:1T:The Chanter's TuneS:The first edition of O'Neill's Music of Ireland, #143M:2/4L:1/8K:G(c/A/)\| GG d(c/A/) | GG =f(e/f/) | gd d(c/A/) | =fe d(c/A/) || GG d(c/A/) | GG =f(e/f/) | gd d(c/A/) | (G2 G) |||| (B/c/)\| dd/e/ =f(e/f/) | (d/c/d/e/) =f(e/f/) | gd .d(c/A/) | .=f(e/f/) .d(c/A/) || GG .d(c/A/) | GG =f(e/f/) | gd d(c/A/) | (G2 G) ||Ok, yes, there's no left hand on these. Well: depending on your levelof musical expertise, you can come up with your own... or... gee, mytutorial is starting to bifurcate again... all these folks atdifferent levels! So: here's a suggestion for people who aren't surehow to go about creating their own left hand:1) Start with the same left hand as in The First Leaves of Spring. If itdoesn't sound good, rearrange the notes until you like them better.2) If that gets boring, try adding another note from the same key.------------ And again:Play these tunes in every REASONABLE key on the instrument (you figureout what "reasonable" means to you, it's a good exercise), looking atthe written music and getting your head around two things:1) be thinking about what ACTUAL key you are playing in (yourbutton/note chart will come in handy here!)2) meanwhile using the written notes to tell you when to go up andwhen to go down. Use the written notes as a kind of graphicalrepresentation. It's an exercise in transposition, in ignoring theabsolute pitch information that's written on the page. You'relearning a new instrument, it'll be easier now than any other time.[if you aren't familiar with abc, there's an abc converter onconcertina.met]----------------------And: not getting lost in the wasteland where there the playing fieldisn't split up into chunks, like on a fiddle, or right under yournose, like a piano, or laid out so every finger pattern is a differentnote, like on wind instruments-- it's easy to get lost on the Hayden system. Which note is this button I'm playing? is hard to answer if you don't have perfect pitch and don't want to look over the side and see where you are.(Of course, if what you really want to do with the Hayden is to justpick a comfortable key for singing along to, you're golden: you don'tneed this section, you can just learn wherever you happen to be andyou can ignore everything I have to say about transposition.)But, if you want to play with other people, it helps to be able toland on G without a lot of struggle, experimentation, and exasperation(yours and others...))I will describe what I do to not get lost on the English system, whichhas a similar, though not as severe, shortcoming (i.e, you get lost atthe distance of a fifth, which is much easier to figure out andcorrect.)SO: Holding the instrument, look at your button chart, and focus on thebottom row of notes on the right side (but don't be peeking over the end of the instrument to look at your fingers!!!)Curl your fingers under and touch the handrest.Brush them back up and find the left-most button on the bottom row.(This may take some practice, to get it in one shot. In classicalviolin training, they call it target pracice.)When you've got that button, you're oriented.You can work from there to find the button that you want to play,lightly brushing the tops of the buttons to stay oriented, and whenyou get to that G, or F#, or whatever, you'll have complete confidencethat you will not be committing an error when you start the tune.IFFFF -- this a big IF -- IFFFFF you practice this a LOT, you willbecome so fast at it that you can get lost in the middle of tune,re-orient, and get back to playing without losing more than a note ortwo.But you have to practice it a lot, and NOW is the time to do it, whenyou are first learning the instrument and getting those habits worninto the deepest crevices of your long-term memory.Do it on the left hand: do them simultaneously, become (over the longterm) able to find two different notes, one on the left and one on theright, without hardly having to think about it.No more lost in a wasteland with no sign posts. Edited April 22, 2013 by judyhawkins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Barnert Posted April 21, 2013 Share Posted April 21, 2013 MUCH more interesting... Keep doing that alternation for the rest of the tune: C D E E D C D C D E D C C D E E D C D E D C - - C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - Judy, a suggestion: If you want to line up the left hand line and the right hand line so that simultaneous events are over and under each other, use a monospace font (all characters are the same width, like a typewriter). The most common ones are courier and monaco. The simplest way to do that on this forum is to use the "code" function by first selecting the text you are concerned about, then clicking the icon above the editing window that looks like this: < > You will wind up with this: C D E E D C D C D E D C C D E E D C D E D C - - C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - C - - E - - Good seeing you (and the innards of the Beaumont) at NEFFA, however briefly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
inventor Posted April 21, 2013 Share Posted April 21, 2013 On my larger Hayden Concertina I had the natural button tops made with a white material, and the sharps and flats made with a black material. I am sure I suggested this to Rich Morse. Had Button Box considered this option ?. On the Bass of a Piano-accordion the Bass C is indented and some others have criss-cross patterns, might that be an option ? Inventor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spectacled Warbler Posted April 21, 2013 Share Posted April 21, 2013 Those black and white buttons are VERY useful! Bit of a learning curve after I bought a concertina with all buttons the same... Joy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
judyhawkins Posted April 22, 2013 Author Share Posted April 22, 2013 (edited) Hmmmm... I can see the attraction of different colored buttons, especially when you are new at it and feeling more lost, but, well: from my experience playing English, again: playing at speed there's not a whole lot of time to be looking over the end of the instrument to figure out what note you're on, anyways, so it's kind of not the best thing to depend on looking. You're going to have a much more satisfying experience if you get a map of the instrument into your head, and let it become part of your own long-term memory sense of how the instrument works. That's why I put forth the orientation technique: that's something that will get so quick, so automatic, if you practice it regularly (like any musical skill) that you won't need to look. Simple tunes played with attention to where you are on the instrument will help to get you there. And, any time that you do get lost, spending that little extra bit of time and effort to orient your fingers _without_ looking -- that'll develop your tactile sense of where you are faster, and you'll be playing better sooner. Judy Edited April 22, 2013 by judyhawkins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Geoff Wooff Posted April 22, 2013 Share Posted April 22, 2013 (edited) Regarding the use of a GPS/F ( Guided Positioning System/ Fingerings): In an ideal world we would each start with a "Standardised" instrument where the patern and exact position of the keys never varied from instrument to instrument. If this were the case we could all start to learn a new instrument by purchasing a beginner's model and see how we get on with it.This was generally the case with ECs made during the 'classic' period. Any Treble EC from Wheatstone and Lachenal had a default position for all the notes. Duets, however, tend not to be so strict in this regard. Even my two current ECs do not have the comfort of one exact position; the Treble is normal and the Baritone/treble's buttons are displaced by a fifth in their alignment to the thumb straps. This causes confusion for me because I tend to play the BT at home and the Treble when I am at a session or playing with the band. In the Noisy environment of public music making I can be heard playing along in the wrong key or even one hand wrong and one correct! Since taking up the Maccann I have had five instruments in my hands and each one was different. Some have a variance regarding the position of the Eb key nearest the hand rail and they all had overal positioning différences regarding the 'stretch' from the hand rails to any note that one considers as the datum. This can be confusing and the beginer who desires to fix their GPS/F and burn it into their memory bank would be best to start their career with the THE instrument that they hope to play for a long time. Perhaps it is not a real concern if an instrument has more notes at the extremities but the central core wants to be standard. I find that I like this standardisation at the top end of the left hand of all the Maccanns I have tried. Another point that ,at least, for me I find important is the chair I am sitting on. The height of this can affect the position/angle of your hands to the keyboard so I try to find a chair that allows a comfortable angle for my thighs, horizontal if possible. Edited April 22, 2013 by Geoff Wooff Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
inventor Posted April 22, 2013 Share Posted April 22, 2013 I am very pleased to see that Judy is getting notes on both hands as soon as possible. This is why I wrote this into my little Duet tutor right from the first page, even inventing and modyfying tunes to get only 1, 2, 3, & 4 notes on both hands at once. Wim Wakker also naturally does this in his Tutor for the Elise. On another matter I tryed very hard to keep the instruments as standard as possible, however as I am not a manufacturer or maker this has been very dificult. Inventor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shades Posted April 24, 2013 Share Posted April 24, 2013 Unlurking for my first post, after much deliberation I went down the Elise route and bought one from our friendly local music shop in Yorkshire. Unfortunately the shop couldn't find the tutor book so it is on back order. Also unfortunately, my left hand Bb would only speak one way so it has gone back for some attention. When I do get it back, I'll get started using these two guides until the manual arrives from CC in America. (A Jackie I tried last week also had a similar problem so I got a chance to see inside whilst they took the end off the bellows). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Łukasz Martynowicz Posted May 2, 2013 Share Posted May 2, 2013 (edited) I play Elise, and after almost two years of learning it (I started with almost no musical experience), I can share a different approach to learning note layout, fingering and playing: 1) make a dent or glue something to the top of the button to mark the middle A buttons on both sides and use this buttons as a reference point. Depending on the key you'll play in, this button will fall under different finger. The G-A-D triangle is crucial to not getting lost on the keyboard. My resting hand position is on Am chords on both hands with middle fingers on As, as this is position closest to as much different chords as possible (on the Elise) 2) at the begining don't focus on the key you're playing in but the scale you're playing - on Hayden layout (limited by the number of buttons of course) major and minor scales and chords always look the same, so practice the shapes of scales and chords until they are in your muscle memory and moment of switching row is natural to you. Get used to using your little finger: use it on the row which has 4 notes in it - second in the major scale and first in the minor scale. (Minor scales are a little bit easier to play in my oppinion..) Later on, when playing melodies and not just scales, melody will often force you to change fingering patterns or allow you to use only three fingers. Little finger is usually the only one which can reach to far sharps, so you'll end up using it sooner or later. 3) practice chords and chord progressions with both hands - music is built around chords more than around scales (in my humble oppinion) and practicing chords also get you familiar with intervals. Practice chords as simple "umpa" rythms, then as single note fingerings (think of them as "beating patterns"). I usually practice new chord fingerins on two progressions: Em', Am', Dm'' and D', C', G' (both up and down repeatedly). Then try mix different chords and make all kinds of different progressions. On Hayden system, progressions within music always make some kind of a "circle" on the keyboard (all the buttons needed are confined to some geometric shape). Try to start and end each of your learning sessions with just messing around with chords. Try to work out a fingering, that allows playing chord progressions without noticeable pauses, so try to avoid jumping with the same finger on two subsequent notes 4) when learnin new tune, first learn the melody with your right hand, then play it with both hands simultaneously - hands tend to work together naturaly. Then learn chord progressions with both hands (I often begin with this step, as I play a lot of modern rock, so it gives me base on which I try to transcribe melody). Then try to accompany melody with simple, single button "chords" (just the base for each chord). Once you're comfortable with it, switch to whole chords played without rythm - add rythm to the accompaniment as the last step. When you play with whole accompaniment and find a difficult spot, concentrate on your non-dominant hand, as the dominant hand will do just fine left alone I hope that someone will find this approach useful Edited May 7, 2013 by Łukasz Martynowicz Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shades Posted May 7, 2013 Share Posted May 7, 2013 I hope that someone will find this approach useful I certainly did, thanks for this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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