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Arranger's Piano Techniques Guide

Arranger's piano involves simple chord voicings that follow a few guidelines. For chords with a top note in the lower treble clef, use three notes ascending and one descending. For chords with a top note higher, use three ascending and two descending, usually the root and seventh. Altered chords may use four ascending and one descending. The document recommends daily practice of 15 minutes, four to five times a week, applying these voicings to tunes learned on another instrument while keeping a steady tempo and groove.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
719 views1 page

Arranger's Piano Techniques Guide

Arranger's piano involves simple chord voicings that follow a few guidelines. For chords with a top note in the lower treble clef, use three notes ascending and one descending. For chords with a top note higher, use three ascending and two descending, usually the root and seventh. Altered chords may use four ascending and one descending. The document recommends daily practice of 15 minutes, four to five times a week, applying these voicings to tunes learned on another instrument while keeping a steady tempo and groove.

Uploaded by

Heidi Li
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Arrangers Piano

Arranger's piano involves simple voicings on extended and altered chords. Three up, one down on chords with a top note in the bottom half of treble clef Three up, two down when the top note is in top half of clef (two down is usually root and 7th, sometimes root and fth. Never root and 3rd!) Four up, one down on altered chords as needed.

A maj 7

B 2 /D

&# # ?

bn

A 13

# #n

b n bn b b

A 13

G m9

E+ 7#9

Exercise: spend 15 minutes daily, four or ve times a week.


Work with tunes you've learned on your primary instrument. Play these "root position sax voicings" on the changes of tunes. Stay rubato - keep your right hand from jumping from register to register. Do not permit playing the melody to compromise your chord voicings. Add chords and inner movement to the changes; explore your harmonic ear. Play changes in a style, and at a tempo. Start slowly, protect the groove.

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