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| From: eMedia Category: Software
List Price: $59.99 Buy New: $48.95 You Save: $11.04 (18%)
New (2) Used (2) from $40.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 1589
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Nt, Macintosh, Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Xp, Windows 95 Media: CD-ROM Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Operating System: Windows NT Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 7.6 x 1.9 eMedia Piano and Keyboard Method CD-ROM offers everything you need to learn how to play. Over 300 step-by-step lessons start from basics such as hand position, rhythm and playing on black keys, and move on to music notation, sight reading, scales and much more! Piano teacher Irma Irene Justicia, M.A., who has taught at the renowned Juilliard School of Music, guides you with over 70 video demonstrations of techniques. Learn songs and exercises from either the music notation or an animated keyboar
MPN: eg01031 Model: EG01031 UPC: 746290010311 EAN: 0746290010311 ASIN: B0000C4M1W
Release Date: September 12, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
New product February 25, 2007 4 out of 14 found this review helpful
Excellent service, and the product worked extremely well. The only criticism I would have is the cost of Postage. it was ridiculous, the product came in a big parcel, and inside was a dvd.
Okay, I guess November 3, 2006 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
This program is okay, if you are motivated enough. The lessons are pretty easy to follow although the female instructor is pretty annoying, especially when she sings along to the songs. I bought a MIDI cable that did not work very well with the program. I kept getting errors when I would have my performance reviewed. It could have just been my computer, but it got pretty frustrating. I now have a basic knowledge of how to play technically, but I wish there were exercises on how to strengthen your fingers so that they actually hit the right keys.
Great for learning to play simple songs August 18, 2006 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
I am an adult trying to learn Piano. This program is great for learning simple songs and does have a very good feedback system. The lessons are taught with plenty of simple songs which you can play and the feedback system will track how well you play. The feedback system tracks your key presses, rythem, and note length. However, it does not track the strength of your key press. I would like to see more exercises to develop better basic skills, instead of just playing simple songs. Also, the feedback program can be very discouraging for children as it is very sensitive and report very minor error. Overall, this is still a great program to have for self learner, but in no way will it beat a real piano teacher.
Good instruction software, but has some minor bugs and doesn't fully replace a live teacher June 27, 2006 17 out of 17 found this review helpful
I got this on request as a Christmas gift last year, along with an M-Audio KeyStation 61es keyboard. The combination of the two works really nicely on my PowerMac. I didn't really start going through the lessons until about a week ago due to shoulder surgery I had at the beginning of the year, but so far so good.
For the record, I studied music for about 10 years when I was younger, though not piano. While I still remember much of that earlier training (in particular, how to read music) there's plenty new about piano so that I'm not feeling these early lessons to be too easy (though they may be slightly easier).
I do have a few complaints about the program. First, as another reviewer noted, you cannot turn down the volume of the accompaniment / instructor. This makes it impossible for me to hear my own playing when going through a lesson, even with the KeyStation's volume cranked all the way up. So what I do is play the instructor audio once to get the idea, then play solo so I can hear all my flubs and faults (and also when I get it right! ;-D).
Second, the program seems slightly crash-prone running on Mac OS X 10.4 (a.k.a. "Tiger"). I've found it will crash at least once in any given practice session, and when I re-launch I'm right back where I started for that session. True, I can just click the right arrow until I get to where I left off, but if I'd been going for a half-hour and managed to get through several screens it's a little irritating.
Third, though not a bug, is how the music is displayed on screen. As another reviewer noted, the programmers / designers seemed to feel that 640 x 480 was plenty of resolution, but this means that many of the songs you play cover multiple screens. "When the Saints Go Marching in" took up 3 screens, which seemed ridiculous when I'm on a 1280 x 1024 monitor. Yes, the pages auto-turn for you when you to the end of one, but the first time or two through a song it's very irritating as I'm trying to read ahead and figure out what fingers need to move next.
But maybe most importantly, I'm finding that this software, while it certainly teaches the fundamentals of playing well enough, still doesn't fully take the place of a real, live instructor sitting there with me. In particular, I can tell that my hand position is not completely right because when I play the fingers in my right hand (especially my ring finger) get sore rather quickly, like I'm straining the muscles/tendons on the top of the fingers. I've got large long-fingered hands, and even with the full-size keys of the KeyStation I find it hard to get all five fingers seated on the keys without at least two fingers curling quite a bit. Maybe this is normal when you start playing piano, but it would be nice to have someone there to confirm whether I'm doing it OK. I'm certain a live instructor would see anything I was doing wrong right away and help me correct it right then and there. Videos showing proper posture are all well and good, but the program can't see me or tell me that I have a posture problem. All it can do is say that I played a wrong note or that I held a note too long / short.
I'm hoping that I'm not developing any other problems with my technique, since I do plan on moving to a live instructor at some point when my schedule opens up and I've become certain that I can devote the time to serious practice. I'd hate to develop some decent playing skills only to find I have to start over because my core technique is all wrong.
So, five stars because of the generally good quality of the technical instruction, minus one star for not being able to point out purely physical problems with my playing. Not the program's fault, but I can't give five stars to something that can't perfectly replace a live teacher.
An affordable option for Mac OSX March 30, 2006 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
I received my eMedia Piano and Keyboard Method today and it's not a bad program by any means, however I have two gripes with the software:
First, either the "full screen" option in Preferences doesn't work or eMedia feels that 640x480 counts as a full screen, so if you have your monitor set at a higher resolution (and what Mac user doesn't?) you'll need to lower it in order to read the lessons' text, and since you most likely won't be sitting as close to your laptop/monitor during these lessons, this is kind of important.
Second, You need to have the program CD in your computer to get the sound and video to play, and the whine of my optical drive is mildly annoying while trying to study/practice. There are workarounds to bypass this type of copyright protection silliness, but it makes me mad that I need to resort to doing this. If eMedia's so paranoid about theft of their product, why don't they just stream the program's media portion from their website? At least it wouldn't be noisy that way.
Other than these two flaws, the program is excellent for self-starters like me. Plus it seems to be the only complete, low-cost piano/keyboard instruction software out there for Mac OSX. I would have wrote this review after a few weeks of lessons instead of my first day learning but the optical-drive issue really bothered me.
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