Baseball Piano Chord Game
The baseball piano chord game is an easy way for kids to understand chord progressions. Chord progressions are groups of chords moving from one to another. They must also learn to listen to the progressions, and assess how the chords sound and relate to one another. C Am F and G. That’s a chord progression. (C, A minor, F and G.) Four chords in a row.
All kids understand baseball, and additionally grasp the idea of “home base” from many games. Baseball is the only game I know of where the object is to end up where you started (home base). This just happens to be the objective of classical harmony and chord progressions: End up where you started.
Four Chords, Four Bases
In music, we start and end on a C chord (in the simplest beginner’s explanation) just as we start and end on home base in baseball. The similarities of music to baseball are very curious:
- C chord is home base.
- Am chord is first base.
- F chord is second base.
- G chord is third base.
Teach Yourself Piano
In baseball you run through the sequence of bases, but must follow the order, Home, first, second, third. You don’t skip bases in baseball unless you want to make the umpire really mad. In music, it is exactly the same. You run through the sequence of chords. C Am F and G. In this case, four chords.
But music is infinitely more flexible than baseball: you are allowed to skip bases (chords) and you can insert entirely different bases (chords) if you want.
Play Take Me Out To The Ball Game
Most Songs Use Three Chords
Notice, the song uses only two chords, C and G. Countless songs are constructed with two or three chords, making the child’s job much easier. There are many ways to make this into a piano game: Teach the child four chords, C Am (A minor) F and G. They are all white keys and the child can use two fingers to play the lower two members of the chords.
Now have them play the chords in order. After a while, ask that they spend exactly four beats on each chord. This requires more skill. I usually play HEART AND SOUL while they play these chords. I get the child to just play two chords, say, C and G.
Now I have them play them in pairs, like this:
- C G C (pause)
- C G C (pause) Repeat several times.
Then try other combinations:
- C F C (pause)
- F G F (pause)
Repeat each one a few times so they start to build the visual habit of anticipating the next chord. Kids love the baseball game. Increase the speed as time goes on!
BOOKS FOR YOUNGER KIDS
REFERENCES
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Turn Your Piano Into A Toy
Follow The Leader Visual Piano Games
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The Piano Dice Game
Piano Hand Position Games
Chordomatic Piano Game
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Baseball Piano Game
Quarters Piano Game
Mozart’s Favorite Movie
The Impossible Kid’s Piano Game
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Piano Games for Kids