When You Just Want to Enjoy the Piano Again
If you’re an adult with little or no piano experience, you’re not alone. Maybe you took a few lessons as […]
If you’re an adult with little or no piano experience, you’re not alone. Maybe you took a few lessons as […]
“He Never Finishes a Song!” — that’s what I used to hear as a kid. But fragments were never a flaw for me; they were my way in. Sometimes a few notes are enough — no pressure, no expectations, just sound. This is the spirit behind After Hours: a quieter way to come to the piano.
I was never trying to finish the song. A few seconds at the piano were enough to change how I felt—and they still are.
“A thoughtful look at animated piano keyboards versus real‑hand teaching, and why a more human, ear‑focused approach can deepen musical learning.
Easy piano for adults who want to play without pressure. A gentle, welcoming approach for adult beginners and returning players who want music to feel personal, calm, and enjoyable again.
Why Most Piano Lessons for Beginners Get It Wrong You’ve probably heard it before: “You need years of practice.” “Master
When I first learned chords, they felt like fixed shapes, locked in place by tradition. But discovering chord voicings shattered that mold—and opened a door to expression I didn’t know I was missing. This post is a tribute to that shift: to questioning old truths, embracing new textures, and letting musical growth unfold through bold curiosity.
A personal invitation to those who’ve always wished music could feel simple, soulful, and theirs. This is not your average
Mike walked into my studio with zero piano experience and one bold desire—to sound good in front of his colleagues. Within minutes, triads turned into music, and self-doubt gave way to joy. His story proves that expressive playing doesn’t require theory, training, or time—just curiosity, courage, and a willingness to have fun.
New at playing standard tunes on the piano? When it comes to coming up with a left hand pattern, take a lesson from Beethoven…