(No email required. Just instant access to the 5-page cheat sheet.)
As you dive deeper into the PDF, you discover tips and tricks for creating your own piano progressions, including:
: Play the root note of the chord in your left hand (either as a single note or an octave) while your right hand plays the triad or four-note chord.
To download your copy, click the link below to save the file directly to your device or print it out for your piano music stand:
A 30-day practice tracker to log your speed, accuracy, and key mastery.
Chord 1: Silence. Chord 2: Resolution.
Elias stood in the doorway, terrified. He watched the keys depress themselves. The piano was playing the music from the binder—the music that required hands larger than any human possessed. The sound was beautiful, a cascade of crystal-clear harmonies that defied music theory. It sounded like weeping.
Elias looked at the keys. He understood now. He wasn't meant to play the notes. The book wasn't a guide for the piano; it was a guide for the room itself.
Whether you want to compose original songs, master classical pieces, improvise jazz solos, or play your favorite pop hits by ear, understanding how chords flow into one another is essential.
There was no binder on the rack.
Vance’s face went pale. He slowly shook his head. "Elias... I never sold you a binder."
It was the final progression. It wasn't written on paper. It was written in the air.
Instead, lying flat on the piano bench, was a single sheet of paper. It was crisp, fresh from a laser printer. At the top, in standard Arial font, it read: Piano Progressions PDF - Page 1 of 1.