Overview of tunes2play4fun.com Site
Heads-Up 1: If you are just beginning to play the button accordion, you may wish to merely skim this overview of the site, perhaps coming back to it for a more detailed look or review after you have completed this Introductory Zoom-based Course.
1. Read This First |
For this site, you will need a button-accordion that you are somewhat familiar with. By "familiar" I mean that you already
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You will also need access to a computer with a good Internet connection and an up-to-date browser, so that you can access this site, participate in Zoom sessions, and control and play youTube videos, without interruption.
Whatever your stage as a learner, it may also be useful to set realistic accordion-playing goals that this site, with Zoom tutorials, can help you meet, and still have fun. Depending on your learning level and interests, such goals may include one or more of:
Whatever your stage as a learner, it may also be useful to set realistic accordion-playing goals that this site, with Zoom tutorials, can help you meet, and still have fun. Depending on your learning level and interests, such goals may include one or more of:
- learning to play favourite melodies, using the right-hand buttons.
- adding a rhythmic beat and/or harmony using the left-hand buttons.
- playing familiar tunes by "ear"
2. Mastering the Accordion: The "Intro" Menu
When you are ready, the drop-down "Tutorial INFO" menu at the top of each page can help you
Of course, all of this, and more, will be covered in this Introductory Zoom-based Course. |
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Morn-ing has bro - ken, like the first morn - ing |
3. Learning Accordion Tunes: Using the Tune Pages
When you feel ready, either after completing some or all of the Zoom course, or after a careful study of the Tutorial INFO pages, you will want to move on to the tune pages, These may be accessed from the four drop-down menu categories that make up the bulk of this web site.
Each tune has its own page, mostly with three parts:
- Musical information, such as time-signature, sometimes a suggested tempo or pace (for some tunes in beats per minute, but often with descriptors such as slowly, moderate, lively, etc.), and the name(s) of its composer(s), included in the header. Extra lyrics and other background information may be included at the end.
- The tune's button-accordion notation, with some lyrics in the case of songs. This notation includes the treble buttons to be played, the duration that each button is held, the bar lines for beat patterns, and, in some cases, the melodic phrasing identified in songs.
- A number of youTube videos of the tune, along with each video's musical key, performer or poster name, and, in some cases, the performance tempo (pace).
How these components are used is up to each person, with his or her individual approaches to learning tunes. Some may dive directly into the accordion notation, and still others may move immediately to the embedded youTube performances. Some may stick with playing the right-hand melody, while others may want to play the left-hand bass and chord buttons as well. Whatever works!
However you do it, do it for fun. A number of short sessions will usually be better than one long tiring one. Also, don't "try" to memorize tunes, as that might make it burdensome; rather, just let it happen, and take pleasure in the progress you are making. Finally, you may want to begin and end each playing session with a tune you already know and enjoy, thus starting with a warm-up and ending with a warm-feeling!
Heads-Up 2: The tune pages assume an awareness (though not necessarily an in-depth knowledge) of the contents of the various "Tutorial Info" pages, especially the introductions to the youTube, the Accordion and Accordion Music. If you are a beginner you perhaps should also look at the "basic" Accordion Music, Button Layout, and Accordion-Notation pages. For those at the Intermediate and Advanced levels of learning, there are additional materials, if you are interested. Don't try to memorize this stuff; a single reading should make you aware of what it is and how to find it again if you need to; you can always come back to it.