Return to site

 

How to Develop a Sense of Rhythm

broken image

In lieu of the on-going piano examinations and my experience in conducting Sight-Reading classes for students, many students find developing a good sense of rhythm is one of the most challenging part of playing the piano. Some piano teachers might also find developing a good sense of rhythm in their students is also just as challenging for a teacher. Rhythm is not something that must be maintained as the student progresses to more advanced rhythms and irregular meters. It is something that must be developed and not something that is possessed overnight.

I believe that there at least 3 components to having and developing a somewhat "good sense of rhythm":

  1. A sense of beat: When a student possesses a sense of beat, this means he/she has the ability to maintain a steady beat/pulse. This is invariably the most basic problem and perhaps the most common issue that students encounter when it comes to rhythmic issues in their piece.
  2. A sense of rhythm (eg. note values): This involved being able to accurately differentiate and execute the various note values within a wide range of tempi. Most beginner students may struggle with placing the quaver values within a crotchet beat, while more advanced students struggle with triplet rhythms, playing 2 against 3 or syncopated rhythms. These stem from the inability to develop a sense of beat.
  3. A sense of meter: At the most basic level, not having a proper sense of meter will surface especially amongst beginner students when, for example, a student fails to keep a 3/4 time by prolonging or elongating the third beat so that they actually sound like they are in 4/4 time. When you lose sight of the meter, you fail to feel the big picture of the whole piece.

Thus when a student has a rhythmic problem in one of the pieces, it is good to identify which of these 3 components might be lacking. Many teachers would solves these issues quite differently.

Hence in my sight-reading classes, I provide the opportunity to develop a good sense of rhythm in the students. I give the students activities involving tapping, clapping with one hand or both which develops their sense of beat (see point no. 1). Soon after, students can begin creating various rhythms within the steady tempo and understand how subdivisions of note values work.

I will give them different rhythmic activities within a given time-signatures. Pretty soon, they are able to absorb and feel what these meters sound and feel like. All these are great foundations for dealing with pieces, and they use these and apply them to future pieces.

There are certainly many ways to develop good sense of rhythm in students, but the most important of all is to show students that rhythm can be fun and helpful in their piano playing!

Happy Counting!!!