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#piano lessons
shadowpusen · 26 days
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While I play piano, Shadow comes into the livingroom from where ever she is and lies down and relax the whole time I play. She is so precious 🐈‍⬛🩷
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lydiaplain · 2 months
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ekranonishere · 5 months
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Resakent Evil
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electronicsquid · 5 months
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Evening piano class as part of adult education
(Hansel Mieth. 1938)
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peanuts-fan · 1 year
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ask-the-becile-boys · 2 months
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Fic: Piano Lessons (Crosspost)
Word Count: 3501
Summary:
It’s 1918, and a young Hare has been sent to teach piano to Ignatius Becile, his maker’s oldest estranged son. But Ignatius is thirteen, full of that age’s anger and desperation, and in Hare he sees an opportunity to impress the father he’s never met.
With thanks to BlueSpine for the prompt and some ideas, and to Dionysus for helping break my writer's block!
  1918.
  “So, you and Pops was pen pals?” Hare asked.
  The Widow Becile’s lips twitched up in a faint smile. “He’d never call it such. But yes, we initially traded correspondence while he was incarcerated. His letters were dictated, of course, due to his injuries.”
  The Widow Becile was not, in truth, a widow. Thadeus Becile was still very much alive; Hare had seen him just that morning. But notoriety made waves, and the Widow was a quiet woman.
  Hare didn’t know anything about Delilah Morreo beside her name, and he couldn’t have started to guess why Pops had liked her so much. But he could see why Pops liked this woman enough to marry her on the sly: she was smart, distant, and her eyes were cunning as knives, just like him.
  Why they’d had two kids together, and what strings they had pulled to make the first one happen while Pops was still behind bars, Hare didn’t dare ask.
  They sat in the Widow’s garden at a little tea table with a glass top. The two-story townhouse it surrounded was painted pale yellow, with little patches of decorative ivy crawling up the sides. The flowers were bountiful and the bushes long in the tooth, and Hare watched white butterflies dance above the leaves. It was small compared to the Becile Estate where Hare lived, but it was just as silent, like a painting no one could touch.
  Hare, the Widow, and the baby Norman had been sitting there for half an hour, he judged by the church bells. Hare tried to be polite as he could be for the lady as she patiently grilled him with question after question, Norman sleeping silently in her arms. How old was Hare? Just over a year, ma’am. (That made him about a year younger than Norman.) How long had he played piano? Most of his life. Did he enjoy playing? Oh, yeah, loved it. Loved performing, too. She should come see, sometime. Was he good? Well, he liked to think so.
  Good. The house was too quiet for a boy Ignatius’ age, a hale thirteen. He needed something to do with his hands beside tinkering.
  The wooden gate clattered close behind a row of bushes nearby. Hare turned in his seat, already watching the space when Ignatius came around the corner. The boy was halfway into his growth spurt, a little lanky but not yet tall, features starting to sharpen under his short curls and large glasses. His school uniform was clean, if slightly wrinkled, but the bulging backpack over his shoulder was well-loved. Ignatius pulled up short, seeing Hare, and his face flashed darkly for a second before dissolving into a carefully practiced blank.
  If the Widow had caught the piercing look, she didn’t react. “Ignatius, welcome home. You remember I asked your father to send one of his robots to teach you the piano. This one is named Hare.”
  “Pleasure’s all mine, kid,” Hare said affably, standing.
  Ignatius nodded slowly. There was a second-too-long pause before he said, “Nice to meet you.”
  Oh boy, Hare thought. Hare might have been young, but he had a knack for reading people, and this boy was simmering.
  “Go drop off your school books and change your clothes,” The Widow Becile said to Ignatius calmly. “You may have a moment to breathe while I show Hare the piano.”
  The new stand-up had been placed in the parlor next to a large window, angled perpendicular to the wall. Hare had stuffed his vents with filters to minimize his dark smoke, not wanting to pollute what he’d correctly assumed to be a lovely residence, but he was relieved to see the window all the same. He swung the frames outward and sat down on the piano bench, lifting the fallboard and casting his green eyes over the keys. The ivory was as white as clouds and shone in a way Hare had never seen on another instrument. He tentatively pressed middle C and smiled at the bright tone. Giddy at the opportunity, Hare set his hands on the keys and began to play ragtime, improvising a riff. He almost didn’t hear the floorboards behind him creak.
  “Mother won’t be happy if you teach me that music,” Ignatius drawled. Hare turned to see him standing in the doorway, arms folded, head slightly cocked to the side as he regarded Hare through his glasses. “She says ragtime and jazz are for scoundrels.”
  Hare paused, then lifted a brow. “Yeah? And what do you think?”
  “I think it’s a glaring over-generalization, and I don’t see how music could predicate moral fiber,” Ignatius said. “After all, Mother says my father prefers classical music, and he’s a bastard.”
  Hare whistled an impressed, sliding note. “You kiss your mother with that mouth?” Hare said, readying himself to spar.
  “Of course I do. If she doesn’t know I swear, she can’t know the difference,” Ignatius said, walking into the room. “All the same, I’m not interested in offending her over something so trivial, so you’d best stick to teaching me the classics.”
  “Is that what you’re interested in?” Hare asked. “’Cause I was gonna teach you theory, first, unless all you want is to play by rote.”
  That gave Ignatius a moment of pause. “Theory? Like science?”
  “You could spin it that way,” Hare said.
  “I’m surprised you know that much,” Ignatius said frankly. “Were you programmed to know it?”
  “Nope. But I got better recall than most humans. Makes learning patterns real easy.” Hare scooted over on the bench and nodded toward the empty space next to him. Ignatius grimaced slightly, hesitating, before he sat down.
  -
  Ignatius was a quick study when it came to principles, and Hare could see the growing wear and tear on the study books he lent the boy, but he got frustrated when his muscle memory couldn’t keep up. Hare came back twice a week, and he tried to be friendly, tried to be encouraging. But Ignatius kept him at arms length, his gaze always calculating when he looked Hare in the eye. Occasionally Norman would toddle into the room and watch them, ever silent, often chewing on his thumb or a part of his shirt. Ignatius would pointedly ignore him.
  “This one’s a Hare Becile original,” Hare said, placing a few sheaves of sheet music on the stand. The notes were written in sharp, inky scratches. “I made the arrangement easier than the way I play it, but the melody line’s the same.”
  Ignatius looked the papers over, his lips slightly moving as he worked through the solfège and rhythm. He narrowed his eyes. “You don’t have to dumb your music down for me,” he said bluntly.
  “Ain’t ‘dumbing down,’ Ig’, it’s adapting,” Hare said.
  “How do you play it?” Ignatius challenged.
  Hare rolled his head to the side in a feigned stretch, smirked, and started playing. It was a dark sound, minor and slick, with high trills and a low, continuous rumble. His hands flashed across the keys, jumping between octaves, and when it was over, Ignatius was wide-eyed and silent.
  “How am I supposed to catch up to you?” Ignatius eventually blurted out. “I’ll never be able to play like that!”
  “What, giving up before you’ve tried?” Hare asked. “That ain’t the Becile way.”
  Ignatius shot him a pointed look. “You’d know better than me,” he grumbled. “But what’s the point if you’re always going to be second best?”
  Hare thought for a moment. “You enjoy being alive?”
  “Of course,” Ignatius said moodily.
  “You ever feel more alive than usual? Even in a bad way?” Hare laid a hand gently on the piano keys. “That’s the point. Your ‘best’ isn’t about being better than someone else, it’s about the ride.”
  “You say that,” Ignatius said slowly. “What about Walter’s band of robots?”
  Hare stiffened up. “What about them?”
  “My father made you to compete with them, didn’t he? I saw them at the World’s Fair. It doesn’t take a genius to see the connection.”
  Hare felt the fire in his chest burning hotter. He hadn’t seen Rabbit for most of a year-- not since her conscription into the war overseas. For all he knew, she’d never return. Maybe if she didn’t, their rivalry would stop haunting him-- but then he kicked himself. Wishing for Rabbit’s destruction was a step too far. “Look, that’s… complicated. More complicated than I wanna talk about. You don’t got that problem.”
  “Don’t I?” Ignatius muttered.
  “What’s that supposed to mean?” Hare asked.
  “Forget it. Let me hear the simplified arrangement so I can get started practicing.”
  -
  “Piano’s getting out of tune,” Hare said a few weeks later.
  Ignatius quirked an eyebrow and stopped playing. “It sounds fine to me.”
  “It ain’t by much, but it’s there, in the low notes.” Hare looked out the window that was directly to the piano’s left. “It’s probably from the weather.”
  “Well, we have to keep it open for you during lessons,” Ignatius said. “I don’t want to choke.”
  “This may be a shock, Ig’, but the temperature around windows is always a bit more like the other side,” Hare said. “Even when the pane’s closed.”
  “Can you even feel temperature?” Ignatius asked.
  Hare blinked. “No. I just… know that.”
  Ignatius rolled his eyes. “Fine. Do you want me to stop playing?” he asked, lifting his hands from the keys.
  Hare hummed thoughtfully. “Well, now I gotta think. I don’t want you getting used to an off tune. But if you can’t hear the difference yet, it shouldn’t matter. It’s gonna drive me batty, though.” Hare performatively stuck his pinky finger in his ear, as if trying to shake out a bout of tinnitus. “Course, it really comes down to your mother paying for a tune up.”
  Ignatius was quiet as Hare talked. His eyes followed Hare’s hand as he lowered it from his head.
  “Hey,” Ignatius said. “Could you take off your gloves? I want to see how your hands work.”
  Hare startled at the request. “Uh, sure, I guess,” he said. He peeled his gloves off gingerly. He never touched a piano without them on; his fingertips were too thin to hit the keys correctly and so sharp as to leave scratches. “Mind the blades.”
  Ignatius seized his right hand first, turning it this way and that. “You don’t have a lot of plating here,” he observed. “The mechanics are exposed in places, like you’ve been flayed. Fascinating.”
  “Flayed? Gross,” Hare said. “They’re just like that so’s they’re easier to fix.”
  “And the gloves act as sheathes,” Ignatius mumbled. He ran an index finger along the length of one of the blade edges, then pulled back with a hiss, blood blossoming on his fingertip.
  Hare jerked his hand away, head starting to swim in an unfamiliar way at the sight of the blood. “I told ya’!” he said, standing. “Criminy, you know where the bandages are? Kitchen? Bathroom?”
  “Kitchen. But it’s barely a papercut,” Ignatius grumbled.
  “Don’t care, we’re patching it up anyway.” Hare stuffed his hands back into his gloves and headed for the kitchen. “I ain’t going back to Pops to tell him you got lockjaw ‘cause of me.”
  Hare didn’t reply when, as he stepped out of the room, he heard Ignatius quietly say, “Like he’d care.”
  -
  Things continued in their passable way for a few months. Ignatius’ playing improved steadily, if not quickly. He even guardedly asked for pointers on composing his own music, scrawling out fragments on scrap paper and collecting them in a folder. Hare thought they were making progress, and he didn’t think much of the occasional times Ignatius asked to look at his hands.
  Then the Widow was invited to see Pops.
  Ignatius’ face was dark as storm clouds as Hare helped the Widow into her coat. He sat at the piano, chewing his lower lip, glowering at the sheet music in front of him.
  “Watch your brother, Ignatius,” the Widow said over her shoulder to his back. “If there’s any problems, the neighbors are home.” Only Hare caught the slow turn of Ignatius’ head, how he stared at her with one eye.
  Hare offered the Widow his arm as they left the house, and she took it. He tried to keep her talking as they walked to the streetcar, hoping it would be enough to distract her from Ignatius following them. All things considered, the kid was stealthier than Hare expected, but he chose amateur hiding spots. Hare guided the Widow to a seat on the streetcar so that she faced away from the way they’d come, and he thought they lost Ignatius there.
  They met The Skull at the gates of the Becile Estate. He doffed his hat for the Widow, muttering a quiet, “Ma’am.” He then led them up the remnants of the gravel trail to the house, pausing to take the Widow’s coat and hat at the door, and through the halls to Pops’ study.
  After the door to the study clicked close behind the Widow, Hare grabbed The Skull’s arm and started pulling him down the hallway. “Listen, Skulls, we gotta do a sweep. Their oldest kid, the one I’ve been teaching piano, he was following us part of the way.” Hare said quickly. “I don’t know if he caught the next trolley after us, but Pops’ll have our hides if the kid shows up uninvited.”
  The Skull nodded, and they split ways at the parlor. Hare searched one wing of the house, while The Skull searched the other. Hare could hear The Jack practicing his violin in the basement as he passed by the stairs, and he decided not to get him involved.
  A muffled shout caught Hare’s attention. He ran to the noise to find The Skull holding a struggling Ignatius by the open kitchen window, some of the clutter from the counter knocked onto the floor around their feet. Ignatius, seeing Hare, slowed his flailing and sullenly glared at him from under his brows. He wore his ragged backpack, the straps barely hanging onto his shoulders after his fight against capture.
  “What’s a’ matter with you? You hate your old man,” Hare said in a hushed tone. “Your mom’s gonna rake you over the coals for leaving Norman alone.”
  “I locked him in his crib,” Ignatius said. “He won’t get out before I get back.”
  Hare shook his head. “Cripes, kid. You gotta know Pops won’t see you.”
  “Exactly,” Ignatius said vehemently. “I want to know why.”
  “Ig’, we live with the guy, and we don’t know why he does half the things he does,” Hare said. “He don’t take kindly to questions and takes even less to surprises. You gotta scram.”
  “Like hell,” Ignatius snarled. “You don’t get it. You’re just a machine. Why did he even make you? Why did he give mother Norman when he refuses to speak to me? What am I here for?!”
  Hare stared at Ignatius for a moment, then traded looks with The Skull, before sighing, allowing a cloud of dark smoke to pass his vents. “Pops might not want you around, but your mother does. Sometimes, that’s gotta be enough.”
  “Well, it’s not! Let go of me!” Ignatius demanded, eyes wet. “I’m going to get answers!”
  Hare shook his head. “You got two choices-- you go home with dignity, or we carry you back like a sack of screaming potatoes. Look, I’m sorry. I know it ain’t fair.”
  Ignatius inhaled, meaning to shriek, only for The Skull to clamp a hand over his mouth. The Skull gave Hare a confused look, obviously uncomfortable using force on a child, but held him tight regardless.
  “What do we do?” The Skull asked Hare.
  Hare ground his teeth as he thought. “We gotta get him outta the house. I don’t wanna gag him, but if we’re gonna carry him--”
  “That will be unnecessary.”
  The three froze as Pops walked into the room. The Widow hovered in the doorway behind him, looking at Ignatius with disappointment.
  “The Skull, release him,” Pops said flatly.
  The Skull obeyed, and Ignatius took a teetering step forward, regaining his balance, eyes locked on Pops.
  Hare winced and said, “We tried to take care of things. Figured you wouldn’t want your visit interrupted. We can take him home--”
  “You will.” Pops regarded Ignatius with all the passivity of a wall. “But first, I intend to reduce his reasons to invade my home a second time.”
  Ignatius, his mouth a thin line, unslung his backpack and darted a hand into it. Without a word, he pulled a contraption out of the bag, its parts clicking against each other as he held it out for Pops to see. “I made this,” Ignatius said flatly.
  Hare stared at the thing, not immediately comprehending what he was looking at. Then the bottom dropped out of his furnace, and he felt impossibly sick
  Ignatius was holding a replica of Hare’s hand.
  Pops’ brow lifted a fraction, and he held out his own metal-encased palm to take the replica. Ignatius shuffled forward a few steps and passed it over, watching Pops closely as he examined the construction.
  “Where did you get the parts for this?” Pops asked Ignatius, testing the range of motion of a finger.
  Ignatius hesitated for a second, avoiding his mother’s gaze, before saying, “Junkyards. Scrap metal and broken toys. A few pocket knives.”
  “And you made this to impress me?”
  “No.” Ignatius straightened up proudly. “I made it to prove that I could.”
  Hare wished he could melt into the floor tiles. The Skull was avoiding looking at him, his hands nervously clenching.
  “I see,” Pops said. He gave the replica back to Ignatius. “I’m loathe to reward you for breaking in. But I suppose if you’re going to pursue mechanical engineering under the Becile name, I would rather oversee your development. You’re old enough now to not be a nuisance.” Pops looked down at Ignatius through his glasses. “I’ll discuss a schedule with your mother. Bare in mind that you’re starting on thin ice. You will not enter this house again without my permission. Understood?”
  “Yes,” Ignatius breathed. He glanced at Hare and grinned. Hare did not grin back.
  The Widow cleared her throat. “I’m not exactly opposed,” she said. “But if it’s all the same, I’d like him to continue his piano lessons as well.”
  Hare frowned and folded his arms, tucking his hands out of view. Before he could protest, Pops spoke again.
  “There may not be time. But we shall see.” Pops looked at The Skull, who snapped to attention. “The Skull, get my guest’s coat for her. You’ll escort her and Ignatius to the streetcar.”
  “Yes, sir,” The Skull said. He barely glanced at Hare as he swiftly left the room.
  The Widow held out her hand to Ignatius, who slowly passed Pops to go to her. They followed The Skull, leaving Pops and Hare alone.
  “You disapprove,” Pops said.
  “Am I weird for feeling weird about it?” Hare asked, a note of pleading in his voice. “He didn’t tell me he was doing it. He didn’t ask. He just copied me like, like a thing, like a piece of homework.”
  “Hare, you are a thing,” Pops said.
  “Yeah,” Hare’s voice faded to a whisper as he looked at the ground. “But he don’t gotta treat me like one.”
  Pops shrugged. “In any case, I expect you to continue to be respectful. Keep your reservations to yourself, and if time allows for your piano training, challenge him.”
  Hare narrowed his eyes. “… You got it, Pops.”
  -
  Over the next four years, Hare and Ignatius’s lessons became more ever more sporadic. Hare never shook the feeling of violation, and while he was not a cruel teacher, he wasn’t proud of the spitefulness that churned in his chest when he was cool in the face of Ignatius’ improvement. It was only when Ignatius formally ended their lessons and Hare felt a wave of relief that he realized just how long he’d held the grudge.
  Ignatius seemed to thrive under pressure-- at first. He devoured the books on engineering Pops assigned him, kept his grades up in school, learned to dance his skilled fingers across the ivories. He was hard-working, prodigious. As far as talent went, he was everything a man could hope for in an heir.
  At seventeen, he broke.
  Hare could hear Ignatius screaming from the other side of the manor, though the words weren’t clear. When The Jack and The Skull started to stand up from their game of cards, he shook his head.
  “You guys really wanna get between those two?” he said quietly.
  The Jack and The Skull traded looks, and they awkwardly sat back down.
  “Yeah, that’s what I thought,” Hare muttered. He looked at his hand for a moment, balled it into a fist. “Let him burn his bridges.
  “I never liked how he looked at me, anyway.”
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thesealanterns · 1 year
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So bowers can play the piano?
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I imagine he plays lullabies on it to get jr to fall asleep
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tellme-o-muse · 6 months
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I FINISHED PIANO AND MY TEACHER SAID SHE WAS PROUD OF ME, AND I AM IMPROVING WELL, AND WAS MIGHTILY IMPRESSED SINCE THIS IS GRADE EIGHT I’M WORKING ON! I was so stunned that I just beamed and soaked in her praise. She even said in amazement: “How is your sight reading so good??” BEST piano lesson ever. Twelve year old me would have been so proud.
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theafterglow83 · 1 month
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Anyone know of someone who can give this boy some lessons?
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historian-in-pearls · 2 months
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First piano lesson since OCTOBER. I'm very rusty after months away (and still a little scrambled from treatment days), so it's back to basics but that's okay. I have some good music theory homework, a Debussy piece, and "Lavender's Blue" from Cinderella (2015). Also scales, arpeggios, and cadence patterns, because fundamentals are the building blocks of fun!
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classicalsqueak · 2 months
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Hello! I made this little zine called Music Theory: A Small Guide of Reminders.
These are shorthand notes, charts, and drawings that I used when I was studying music theory that I now teach my students, approached from the pianist’s perspective. From beginner to advanced, all compact to fit in a pocket or pencil case.
It is one page of notes in the front, with optional second side that includes manuscript paper and an extra keyboard.
This video includes a flip through, instructions on how to fold the guide, and explanations for all the notes: https://youtu.be/mUSc3k4z9qM
Links to download are in the description of the video :)
- For more videos: YouTube (classicalsqueak) / Video Index
For sheet music: Ko-fi (classicalsqueak) or SMP* (published by Ylan Chu)
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Creative logo concept "piano + paint brush" ♡
Write your thoughts about this logo! 💬👇
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nadsdraws · 3 months
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My new ofmd edizzy fic is up!
A sequel to my comic Tell me to Stop (I won't), where once again Ed makes a move on his professor Izzy in the hopes that this time he will be allowed to stay the night:3
Piano Lessons
“Ready for your piano lesson?" Izzy asks carefully. Skirts around the purpose of their meeting like it could undo his past actions.
“No,” Ed says with that self-satisfied smile.
They both know what the boy came here for. They both know Izzy's not going to say 'no'. Not today, not any time soon.
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shadowpusen · 26 days
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While I play piano, Shadow comes into the livingroom from where ever she is and lies down and relax the whole time I play. She is so precious 🐈‍⬛🩷
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jbfly46 · 7 months
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Piano should be mandatory in elementary education before learning to read. It’s the most efficient method of developing and refining a child’s senses. Hearing, vision, muscle memory, kinesthetic senses, and the somatosensory system are all used in playing the piano. Also the piano has the widest range of musical notes that I’m aware of.
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