If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em, right? So why not embrace the power of sports and use sports piano music to motivate your piano students to practice?!
Brand new, and just in time for the upcoming American Super Bowl craze, is an early intermediate piece called “Football Fever!” This piece is loaded with all things that football and sports-loving students want:
- Action on the piano
- The sound of competition
- Fast paced tension
- Powerful victorious sounds
This new piece in the sports piano music series is also loaded with everything a piano teacher wants for their hard-to-motivate students:
- Lots of easy to play patterns
- Patterns that fall easily under the hands
- Pedal (of course)
- All over the piano playing (but it’s easy!)
- Confidence boosting music
- Motivating sounds that make kids excited about practicing
Football Fever
Students don’t take time to practice these days unless you give them a piece about something they  love! Take advantage of the football sports craze and motivate your early intermediate students to practice with this new exciting solo called Football Fever, the newest sports piano music piece.
Football Fever is built with interesting, energetic, but easy-to-play patterns! Students will sound amazing when they play these easy-to-play patterns and will become comfortable moving all around the keyboard. It’s time to embrace our competitors (sports)! Use sports to motivate your piano student with Football Fever!
Buzzer Beater
Buzzer Beater is an aggressive sounding late elementary solo which features a short opportunity to improvise using on G’s. For fun, add a special buzzer sound at the end and surprise your audience. Your student will love it!
Another winner! This piece is a kiddie Khatchaturian Toccata. The same thrilling kind of effects and splashy sounds. I’ve got more than one student who always requests something by Wendy Stevens and, if it would stop snowing around here so people could get to lessons, they’re going to love this one.
Just atrarted it with a student. She says it reminds her of Charlie Brown. I assume that the last note in mm. 18 is a quarter note. If not, forgive me, I changed it.