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Pyramids Variations - Lesson Two
Adding Left-hand-over Patterns


Looking at the Pyramids chord sequence, we can see two places where there are two bars on the same chord.

They are bars 7 and 8, on the E major chord, and bars 15 and 16, on A minor.

In these two places, instead of just playing the six basic music-making position (BMP) notes from bottom to top twice, we can use a more interesting twelve-note pattern called the ‘left-hand-over pattern’.

We are going to learn the left-hand-over pattern in our home chord of A minor. In the lesson performance, we showcase it in an added Introduction.

Here is your lesson performance.


Pyramids_L2_M1

The left-hand-over pattern

This is what two ordinary bars of A minor BMP notes look like in written-out music.


Pyramids_L2_M2

In the left-hand-over pattern (which lasts the same amount of time) the left hand passes over the right hand to play just one note, and then you play back down again.

Here’s what that looks like in written music.


Pyramids_L2_M3

Here’s an illustration showing how to find the left-hand-over note in A minor.

Pyramids_L2_M4

The left hand goes over the right hand to play the next ‘A’ going up the keyboard, then you play the notes back down again to fill up the bar.

In popular music, chords are our first priority. Along with the Basic Music-making Position, the LH-over pattern is one of the many useful chord shapes you will learn in the Pyramids Variations material...

We are going to play two LH-over patterns in A minor as an added-on Introduction to our improved Pyramids Variations performance.

(section video)

The left-hand-over pattern introduction

Here is the Introduction written out, with instructions following:

Pyramids_L2_M5

Read this ‘walk-through’ to make sure you understand LH-over patterns.

  1. First play the six A minor BMP notes from the bottom (LH5) to the top (RH5). This fills the first bar.
  2. For the first note of the next bar, bring the left hand over, leave two unused white keys and play the next ‘A’ key up.
  3. To fill the second bar, play downwards from the top RH note (RH5), just five of the regular A-minor BMP notes. Because the left-hand-over note takes up a note’s space in the second bar, the LH-over pattern ends on the middle left hand note.

Remember to leave two unused white keys on the way down when you’re looking for where to put your left hand thumb.

Practice the pattern over and over. Notice any difficulties you have. Try to work out what your difficulty is and if any of the instructions or illustrations here can help you with it.

The left-hand-over pattern in E major

For bars 7 and 8, we need a LH-over pattern in E major. It’s just the same ‘shape’ as the A-minor patterns above.

First play the six-note E major BMP pattern a few times to remind yourself of the notes to use. The middle finger of each hand (finger 3) plays the black key G sharp.

Here is a keyboard diagram showing the keys we use.

Here is what the LH-over pattern in E major looks like in written-out music.


Pyramids_L2_M6

Follow the same instructions as before to play the LH-over pattern in E major.

  1. Play the six E major BMP notes going up.
  2. Bring your left hand over to play the LH-over note ‘E’.
  3. Play five BMP notes downwards to fill the bar, leaving two unused white keys between your thumbs and finishing on the left hand G sharp.

Use the performance files to help you practice the LH-over pattern in E.

(section video)

A left-hand-over ending

To finish, we want an A minor ending in bars 15 and 16 that uses the LH-over pattern. But if we play a full LH-over pattern, the last note will be C, the middle left hand note.


Pyramids_L2_M3

This is not a satisfactory ending. Note ‘A’ is a better note to end on.

There are two possible A’s we could finish on in the A minor LH-over pattern. The first is the LH-over ‘A’ at the top of the pattern:


Pyramids_L2_M7

The other ‘A’ we could finish on is the RH thumb note, halfway back down the LH-over pattern:


Pyramids_L2_M8

Try both of these endings. Neither of them is a full 12-note LH-over pattern.

(section video)

The LH-over performance chord chart

The new Pyramids performance uses the LH-over pattern in A minor, played twice, as an introduction. Here is the new chord chart.

Here is the lesson performance again, with the parts subtitled.

Listen to the lesson performance audio and see if you can follow in the chord chart. (Give yourself a few goes if at first you don't succeed...)

Pyramids_L2_M1

Here is the performance MIDI file playing on MidiPiano with the Piano Roll pane activated.

Watch it on MisterMusicarta YouTube

A performance walk-through

Here is a ‘walk-through’ of the Pyramids with LH-over Patterns performance. As you read it, find the part of the chord sequence that is being described in the chord chart above and the Pyramids with LH-over Patterns music in your workbook.

  1. You play an introduction of two full A minor LH-over patterns. Remember that the last note of the Introduction is a C (left hand, middle finger).
  2. Then you play six-note BMP patterns for six bars as shown in the chord sequence chart (exactly as for the first lesson performance) until you get to the two bars of E major at the end of the first half.
  3. For bars 7 and 8, you play one LH-over pattern in E major (black note – G sharp). (Remember that the last note of this pattern is G sharp, the middle finger of the left hand.)
  4. Go back to playing six-note BMP patterns for six bars starting bar 9 as shown in the chord sequence chart.
  5. For the last two bars you play the A minor LH-over ending you have chosen from the two alternatives given.

Work through the lesson performance walk-through.

(Section video - Performance Walk-through)

Here is the MidiPiano/scrolling music video with the sections named for you.

Your performance

Try to play this new LH-over version from the chord chart only. Only three small parts are different to the Lesson One performance: the Introduction, the LH-over pattern in E and the LH-over ending in A minor.

Don't worry if  the music you're playing isn't exactly the same as in the audio clips. Use the combined Basic Music-making Position and left-hand-over patterns as a springboard to your own compositions. Remember that ‘getting lost is the music’ is part of the plan.

Now go on to Lesson Three.

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