The Home Keys and A to G
You can start by learning where to put your hands. There
are a group of keys toward
the center of the keyboard called the Home Keys. These are
nine keys where your
hands should rest as you prepare to play.
You might wonder why there are only nine Home Keys when
you have ten fingers. The
reason is that both thumbs rest on middle C. Middle C is a
reference point that will be
referred to over and over as you are learning and studying
the piano. It can be
recognized by looking at the pattern of black and white
keys at the center of the
keyboard. Look at the picture of the center of a piano
keyboard below. Take notice of
the keys that do not have a black key to separate them.
This is how you recognize the
pattern.
5 4 3 2 C 2 3 4 5

--Figure A--
The middle C, where you will put your thumbs, is marked
with a C. The keys with
numbers under them are where you put your fingers. The twos
are for the index fingers
of your left and right hand, the threes are for your middle
fingers, the fours are for your
ring fingers, and the fives are for your little
fingers.
Place your fingers on the Home Keys of your piano
keyboard. Play to the right up the
keyboard from your right thumb to your right little finger.
Now play down the keyboard
from your left thumb to your left little finger.
You can even play a few songs with your hands in the
Home Keys position. Try to pick
out a song you know well. For example, you can play Mary
Had a Little Lamb with the
right hand when it is in the Home Keys position. Try to use
your memory of the sounds
to choose the right keys. (Hint: start with your right
middle finger.)
Now, try using the Home Keys for a reference point. Put
your fingers on the Home
Keys again. Look up the keyboard, to the right, for the
next pattern that looks just like
the Home Keys. You know where middle C is - now try to find
the C of the next octave
up. Look from middle C to the C above middle C. This is how
you will gauge your
place on the keyboard.
In the beginning, you should always take a long look at
the keyboard when you sit down
to play. Once you can recognize the home keys, you can
begin any song from that
reference point. When you have learned more, you will take
one glance at middle C
and know exactly where to put your fingers no matter where
they should go up or down
the keyboard.
Next you need to learn the names of the keys, A through
G. You know where middle C
is now. Start two white keys below that and you will be at
A. Each white key up, or to
the right, goes up a letter in the alphabet until you come
to G. Then, it starts over at A.
Therefore, the middle finger of your left hand is resting
on the A in the Home Keys
position. As you go to the right, you will reach G by the
time you get to the little finger of
your right hand.
So, what are the black keys for? They are just as
important. They represent the
sharps or flats. Interestingly enough, the same key can be
either a sharp or a flat.
When you go up from a white key, the black key is a sharp,
and when you go down
from a white key, the black key is a flat.
To try an example, go again to middle C. Go up to the
black key to the right of middle
C. This is C sharp. Now, move one white key up, to the
index finger of your right hand.
This is a D. Go to the black key to the left of D. This is
D flat. Amazing, isn’t it? C
sharp and D flat are both represented by the same key on
the piano.
As you learn more, you will discover that both the black
keys and the white keys are
equally important in piano music. There would be few
opportunities to have half steps
on the piano without black keys, and most songs have some
half steps in them. Also,
there are many instances where the black keys are some of
the main keys in the
predominant scale being used.

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