And together. There is not really much I can say either that that you just have to play them together. Just do whatever you need to do to make them stick together. That is much as I can say on that but not that there are other exercises you can use to basically help your hand independence because basically what is happening is your brain cannot think of both hands at the same time and that is having a trouble putting in together. So you need to do is let your, you have to develop more like in your brain it is all as if it has a partition or other like, separate part in your brain that one controls one hand and one controls the other. But before you can do that it is actually best to think. I am going to play.
(Piano Demo)
And when ever I hit, say I see where the C on the bottom, I am just going to play with my left hand and hit this G here. So I am gauging my left hand based on what my right hand is going to do. Actually let us do it, so when I hit the G on top here then I am going to play a G with my left hand down here
(Piano Demo)
And then every one or two we could just play the C together.
(Piano Demo)
So when I am thinking of this I am actually engaging it and when the right hand lead and then the right hand hits this G then the left hand is going to come in. So what I will do is keep my right hand steady and that will keep everything steady.
(Piano Demo)
Now I have drawn out some exercises here one of them is called, this ones are a little bit more advance. So this would be, say we are going to play one note here, we are going to play two C but this sound is going to be played 8th note and this is going to be playing quarters. For ever one left hand note I am playing, I am going to be playing two right hand notes like this.
(Piano Demo)
You can probably see by that, that I was just in every second note I am thinking C, D need to go down and then when I hit E I am going to play G here and then from G goes down I am going to play this together
(Piano Demo)
Now all I am thinking is I have to keep this steady.
(Piano Demo)
So my right hand is leading and my left hand is an accompany note, and that is basically what you are doing, you are focusing on one hand more and that way you can still feel like you have one brain focusing on something but then it is just kind of like a reminder. It has to come on that time too.
So it is a lot of mental stuff. So that is what that does so you can alternate that, you can do it so the right hand is going to your notes
(Piano Demo)
Just like that and you can also do it to lot that just 2 notes in right hand and just do more.
(Piano Demo)
So that is one exercise and the other one is you can actually play, now this is good for getting independent hands so that when you are playing you can separate your mind. So this one is good, you play it 5 notes
(Piano Demo)
And now all you are going to do is you are going to make one hand Stocatto and one hand to Legato. Sound like tired, we will see. So I am going to play Stocatto with my right hand and Legato with my left. So like this.
(Piano Demo)
It might look simple and it is pretty simple but what that is going to do is get you to like you could almost test it and feel which part of your brain is controlling your right hand and which is controlling your left and then you can kind a bail the channel of your thoughts into those different hands. And then we can do the opposite so we are doing left hand Stocatto and right Legato.
(Piano Demo)
And then the really tricky one once you have mastered this is altering in between. So I am going to start with my right hand Stocatto and then when I get up here I am going to switch it, so it is Legato all the way back down.
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