DVD : Play Piano in a Flash! Full Video Set DVD


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DVD : Play Piano in a Flash! Full Video Set DVD


  

Play Piano in a Flash! Full Video Set DVD

starring: Scott "The Piano Guy" Houston
directed by: Ken Mills




List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $44.99
You Save: $4.96 (10%)
Prices subject to change.


Availability: Usually ships in 3 to 5 weeks



Binding: DVD
EAN: 0747581000196
Format: Color, NTSC
Number Of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: April 20, 2003
Running Time: 140 minutes



Editorial Review:

Description:
For about the cost of 2 piano lessons, this video (both VHS and DVD formats are available) will provide readers with years of musical enjoyment. If truth be known, there is another way to learn how to play piano rather than going to weekly lessons and spending thousands of dollars in the process.

The secret is learning to play the way the pros play. Learning to play in that style is enormously simpler than traditional classical piano lessons. Even better, it takes an absolute minimum amount of note reading ability.

Best of all, your tour guide for this adventure, Scott 'The Piano Guy' Houston, forces you to have fun along the way!

Is this DVD going to prepare the viewer for a career as a concert pianist? Absolutely not! However, if you simply want to play some piano for the simple goal of enjoying yourself, then get ready to knock a lifelong dream from your 'to-do' list. Have fun!

This is the same presentation as seen by millions of viewers on public television stations for their fund raising pledge drives. In addition there is another 80 minutes of bonus material never seen on TV!

There is also a 'Play Piano in a Flash!' book and a 'Play Piano in a Flash!' book examples audio CD available from Amazon to help round out your instructional collection.









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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Money Waster
I learned nothing from the DVD or the Book that I already knew. He does too much talking and doesn't cover hardly anything. I don't even think it would benefit beginners.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Same as book....a lot more expensive
This DVD is pretty much verbatim from the book of the same title. In other words, there is very little substantive content. Houston is a marketer of hope and dreams, not an instructor of the keyboards. The mantra of "play chords with your left hand, and melody with the right" will get you nowhere. Get a good book and take your time. Playing piano is not easy; it requires practice. Houston would have you believe that you can play like a pro. Don't fall for it.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Scott Houston, a great and imaginative teacher
only play the piano to pick out notes for the song or aria and used a metronome for timing. I was thrilled to see how Houston could simplify the playing of a popular song and memorizing the chords for the left hand. I taped the program, and later bought the more complete VHS version of the TV program.


A niece, who was busy but made a half hearted attempt to learn to play the piano, gave me the book she had been using, "How to Play Popular Piano in 10 Easy Lessons" by Norman Monath. Using the theory that Houston taught, I used the Monath book as exercises for playing sample songs such as "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" advancing to "Autumn Leaves." This gave me practice in learning new chords as I progressed.

By this time, I did buy Houston's book, "Play Piano in a Flash!" Was I disappointed? I have to say I was, because Ihad progressed beyond the book.

The next book I was to learn from was "How to play the piano despite years of lessons" by Ward Cannel and Fred Marx." From this book I was to learn much including how to choose chords (from progressions on the circle - elementary classical harmony) and arrange a song after picking out notes of a song I knew by ear.

I was shocked to realize, upon looking into old cartons in the cellar, I had purchased this Cannel and Marx book years and years before, and found it too difficult to understand. However, with what I had learned from Scott Houston, the Cannel and Marx book suddenly became clear. Without Scott Houston, I would never have been able to play popular music.

I have purchased Houston's many additional DVDs: four volumes of "Cheap Tricks and Professional Secrets", book examples of his Audio CD. Am I a talented pianist? Absolutely not! But the joy and pleasure of sitting down and playing tunes on the piano is something I shall always credit to Houston.






Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Play Piano in a Flash
I purchased this item over two years ago and I have watched it several times. The DVD works great. I gave it a four star only because it really did help me get started. I was an absolute ground zero piano beginner at the time....and I was 55 years old.... I would have probably given up on learning had I not watched this DVD.....I give it a one star, or no star, if you think this DVD is going to teach you how to play a piano.....learning to play takes dedication and lots of practice......over two years ago I purchased several DVDs on learning to play the piano.....and they are all junk...what a total waste of my good money.....however, Scott's is probably the best of the DVD bunch.....but you're not going to learn anything in a flash......for me the DVD was more of a motivation thing because after watching it several times, I took the next step and got myself a very good certified piano teacher.....who was willing to teach me to be only a Piano Player using only a fake book. The one thing that this DVD did teach me is that there are really two kinds of people who play the piano.....there are the real Pianist, not me, who spend years and years learning the right way and who can read sheet music like a book and who can play classical music........and then there is the second group.....Piano Players, me......who just sit down at the keyboard and have fun playing the piano...we like to throw in cheap tricks and junk to really spice up the song, etc......real Pianist laugh and throw-up at us Piano Players.....which is what Scott Houston is trying to teach here....I have learned 50 songs in two years by practicing one hour every day.....Us Piano Players don't do much of anything right but at least it usually sounds good enough for my grandkids and we have a lot of fun......I have all the respect in the world for the real Pianist......but I also believe that some of them need to get a real life, loosen up some, and start really enjoying what they already know how to do so well......just play the darn piano and have fun....I recommend this DVD only as a motivation thing to help keep you trying to learn to be a Piano Player.....not a Pianist



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Waste of time and money
There are many issues with the content. Scott would like you to believe that playing the piano is much easier than it really is. The message is play what you like and you will have fun. And so he goes on to playing Amazing Grace. How many people will have a blast playing one note to the beat Amazing Grace, with no harmonics whatsoever?
He would also like the audience to believe that music theory is plain useless, that classically trained player have been learning all of these scales for no reason. Well some theory certainly is useless. But you need a bare minimum. You need at least enough to be able to construct chords.
There is a part that keeps you somewhat entertained. It's what he calls cheap tricks. That's a good way to have fun for a little while. He will show you how to play a simple C Major arpeggio. That's fair. Unfortunately, he falls short of showing you how to use it in a tune. It shows you it can be used, but he doesn't show how...
Perhaps most disappointing, he will show you how if you listen to him, you can play a tune just like him. He picks Misty, a nice Erroll Garner's ballad. Beautiful tune. And slow, so you might be fooled into thinking what he does is easy, and you have the appropriate skills already. He even uses his cheap tricks. How nice. Unfortunately, he only taught you 2 chords, C major and F major. You have no clue what he's really doing there. Not only that but he re-harmonizes quite a lot, alters chord beautifully. He can play, no doubt about it. But I guarantee there's a lot more theory to what he plays than what he'd like the audience to believe.

I seriously doubt anyone will be able to start playing piano after sitting and listening to Scott's lessons. I don't even think you'll be entertained watching the video. It's that bad. He just talks too much.
If you are serious about playing the piano, get yourself a good teacher, one that will understand how to teach adults. The cheaper option is to pick up something like "how to play from a fake book" and start discovering music.





 





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We've covered in too much detail how it's some sort of "open season" on Vonage when it comes to VoIP patents. After dealing with ridiculous and expensive patent lawsuits from companies who failed to actually innovate in the same way Vonage did, the company was pressured by Wall Street to quickly settle the various patent lawsuits filed against the company. Of course, rather than settle matters, that simply opened the door for other companies to go searching through their patent portfolios to see if there was anything they could sue Vonage over. Indeed, following those settlements it didn't take long for AT&T to dig up a patent and sue -- which was quickly settled as well. Thought things were over? No such luck. Nortel just showed up last month to sue and it took all of about a week and a half for Vonage to settle that case as well.

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