@lobstershack.kw: #لوبستر_شاك #kuwait #kuwait🇰🇼

🦞Lobster Shack
🦞Lobster Shack
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Wednesday 23 March 2022 16:58:13 GMT
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maria0571989
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2023-11-07 04:36:10
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marammangansakan
Samarudin :
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2023-11-06 16:03:35
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shermina0924
🇵🇭🍎𝙽𝚘𝚖𝚒𝚗🐉🇰🇼 :
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2023-11-06 19:20:51
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ivyjoy..1.15.26
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2023-11-05 17:43:14
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mama_jolie_coul_26
Mama_jolie_coul_26🇲🇱🍒🇰🇼 :
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2023-07-29 21:51:31
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us870000p
❤️ S ❤️ :
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2023-07-31 11:28:36
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rashidchef1
🤙 Rashid Khan :
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2022-06-19 12:09:23
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imlorain
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2023-07-29 21:08:37
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2023-07-31 16:22:00
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asoral96
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2023-11-05 17:12:13
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jehanburger16
🍔 :
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2023-11-05 17:33:07
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queenhabibi415
꧁𓊈𒆜queen😘habibi𒆜𓊉꧂ :
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2023-11-05 20:46:26
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retchydelacruz
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2023-11-05 22:06:45
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🌸Ethel🌸 :
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2023-11-06 16:20:27
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If you want to grow as a keyboardist, focus less on “learning many songs” and more on understanding how music works underneath. Strong players usually build five areas together: chords, scales, ear training, rhythm, and creativity. Here’s practical advice that helps most keyboardists improve consistently: 1. Know Your Major Scales Thoroughly Every chord and run comes from scales. Practice all 12 major scales: Right hand Left hand Both hands together Slowly first, then gradually faster Focus on: Correct fingering Even timing Smooth transitions After major scales, learn: Natural minor Pentatonic scales Blues scales Modes later on 2. Understand Chords, Don’t Just Memorize Shapes A good keyboardist knows why a chord works. Master: Major chords Minor chords Diminished and augmented chords 7th chords Suspended chords Extended chords (9ths, 11ths, 13ths) Practice building chords in every key. Example: C major = C E G D major = D F# A E minor = E G B That understanding makes transposing much easier. 3. Practice Inversions Daily Inversions make your playing smoother and more professional. Instead of jumping around the keyboard: Use nearest chord positions Train your hands to move minimally Exercise: Play: I – IV – V – I in all keys using inversions. 4. Train Your Ear Your ears are more important than speed. Practice: Identifying intervals Singing notes before playing them Playing songs by ear Recognizing chord progressions Common progressions to master: 1–5–6–4 2–5–1 6–2–5–1 5. Slow Practice Builds Fast Playing Fast runs come from controlled slow practice. Use a metronome: Start very slow Increase speed gradually Keep notes clean and even Messy speed creates bad habits. 6. Learn Licks in Every Key Don’t only practice in C major. Take one lick and move it through: All 12 keys Different tempos Different rhythms That builds real freedom on the keyboard. 7. Focus on Rhythm as Much as Notes Many keyboardists know chords but struggle with groove. Practice: Playing with drums/metronome Syncopation Different rhythmic patterns Left-hand timing A simple chord progression with great rhythm sounds better than complex chords with poor timing. 8. Use Dynamics and Expression Music is emotional, not mechanical. Practice: Soft vs loud playing Accent control Smooth phrasing Sustain pedal control Great musicians make simple notes sound alive. 9. Learn Songs Analytically When learning a song, ask: What key is it in? What progression is used? What scale fits? What voicings are being used? What rhythmic style is it? This turns every song into a lesson. 10. Record Yourself Often Recording exposes: Timing issues Uneven runs Weak transitions Overplaying Listening back helps improvement faster. 11. Build Daily Discipline Even 30–60 focused minutes daily is powerful. Good routine: 10 min scales 10 min chords/inversions 10 min ear training 10 min licks/runs 10 min songs/improvisation Consistency beats occasional long practice. 12. Don’t Overplay Advanced keyboardists know when NOT to play. Leave space. Support the music. Serve the song first. Simple, clean, musical playing is more respected than nonstop flashy runs. 13. Play With Other Musicians You improve faster when playing with: Singers Drummers Bassists Other keyboardists It develops listening, timing, and musical maturity. 14. Study Great Keyboardists Listen carefully to players like: Cory Henry Richard Tee Herbie Hancock Joe Sample Chick Corea Study: Their voicings Timing Touch Chord movement Simplicity 15. Be Patient Musical growth is gradual. Most strong keyboardists improved through: Thousands of repetitions Consistent practice Listening deeply Playing regularly over time Progress compounds when you stay consistent.#Keyboardist #PianoLessons #MusicTheory #GospelKeys #KeyboardPlayer
If you want to grow as a keyboardist, focus less on “learning many songs” and more on understanding how music works underneath. Strong players usually build five areas together: chords, scales, ear training, rhythm, and creativity. Here’s practical advice that helps most keyboardists improve consistently: 1. Know Your Major Scales Thoroughly Every chord and run comes from scales. Practice all 12 major scales: Right hand Left hand Both hands together Slowly first, then gradually faster Focus on: Correct fingering Even timing Smooth transitions After major scales, learn: Natural minor Pentatonic scales Blues scales Modes later on 2. Understand Chords, Don’t Just Memorize Shapes A good keyboardist knows why a chord works. Master: Major chords Minor chords Diminished and augmented chords 7th chords Suspended chords Extended chords (9ths, 11ths, 13ths) Practice building chords in every key. Example: C major = C E G D major = D F# A E minor = E G B That understanding makes transposing much easier. 3. Practice Inversions Daily Inversions make your playing smoother and more professional. Instead of jumping around the keyboard: Use nearest chord positions Train your hands to move minimally Exercise: Play: I – IV – V – I in all keys using inversions. 4. Train Your Ear Your ears are more important than speed. Practice: Identifying intervals Singing notes before playing them Playing songs by ear Recognizing chord progressions Common progressions to master: 1–5–6–4 2–5–1 6–2–5–1 5. Slow Practice Builds Fast Playing Fast runs come from controlled slow practice. Use a metronome: Start very slow Increase speed gradually Keep notes clean and even Messy speed creates bad habits. 6. Learn Licks in Every Key Don’t only practice in C major. Take one lick and move it through: All 12 keys Different tempos Different rhythms That builds real freedom on the keyboard. 7. Focus on Rhythm as Much as Notes Many keyboardists know chords but struggle with groove. Practice: Playing with drums/metronome Syncopation Different rhythmic patterns Left-hand timing A simple chord progression with great rhythm sounds better than complex chords with poor timing. 8. Use Dynamics and Expression Music is emotional, not mechanical. Practice: Soft vs loud playing Accent control Smooth phrasing Sustain pedal control Great musicians make simple notes sound alive. 9. Learn Songs Analytically When learning a song, ask: What key is it in? What progression is used? What scale fits? What voicings are being used? What rhythmic style is it? This turns every song into a lesson. 10. Record Yourself Often Recording exposes: Timing issues Uneven runs Weak transitions Overplaying Listening back helps improvement faster. 11. Build Daily Discipline Even 30–60 focused minutes daily is powerful. Good routine: 10 min scales 10 min chords/inversions 10 min ear training 10 min licks/runs 10 min songs/improvisation Consistency beats occasional long practice. 12. Don’t Overplay Advanced keyboardists know when NOT to play. Leave space. Support the music. Serve the song first. Simple, clean, musical playing is more respected than nonstop flashy runs. 13. Play With Other Musicians You improve faster when playing with: Singers Drummers Bassists Other keyboardists It develops listening, timing, and musical maturity. 14. Study Great Keyboardists Listen carefully to players like: Cory Henry Richard Tee Herbie Hancock Joe Sample Chick Corea Study: Their voicings Timing Touch Chord movement Simplicity 15. Be Patient Musical growth is gradual. Most strong keyboardists improved through: Thousands of repetitions Consistent practice Listening deeply Playing regularly over time Progress compounds when you stay consistent.#Keyboardist #PianoLessons #MusicTheory #GospelKeys #KeyboardPlayer

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