One of the most important things that makes your playing interesting is how you move your left hand bass and chords. This is especially so when playing as a solo pianist, when you’re basically ‘on your own’ to try to bring out the following elements of a song :
- the melody (E.g., from the main vocal, instrument, orchestra)
- accompanying or counter- melodies
- the chords
- the bass
- the underlying beat of the song.
While music notation show tempo signatures like ¾, 4/4, etc., I suspect that not too many students learning piano the conventional way are actually taught how to play the piano in accompaniment to drum/rhythm beats such as Bossa Nova, Swing, Rock, Cha Cha, Shuffle , Disco, Slow Rock (watch demo). These are common beats in contemporary ‘percussive and piano-friendly’ music (I use ‘piano-friendly, because some music just sound awful when played on the piano, regardless of whether a music sheet has been published for it!)
Thinking back, I feel very fortunate now, for having a background in playing the electronic spinet organ, where from day one I had to play songs to the accompaniment of the different drum beats available on the organ’s ‘rhythm box’ (picture below), at the same time stepping on any of 13 pedals on the left bottom section of the organ to play the basses.

The reason I brought this up is because when teaching myself the piano, I realized that part of the left-hand movement involves replicating what I used to do on the organ with the bass pedals and my left hand, in synchronization with the drum beat that is constantly pounding away. In the typical oldies 4-piece (3 guitarists and 1 drummer) band, your left-hand on the piano is like the bass guitarist, strumming guitarist and the drummer combined, while your right hand is like the lead guitarist playing the main melody.
While people hardly play the organ these days, rhythm beats are now to be found:
- built into some higher-model digital pianos (see above);
- in a modern-day digital Drum Machine (picture), a small power-operated unit that costs anywhere from $50 (used) upwards on eBay, and contains factory-preset rhythm beats, or you can otherwise program your own beats.
My own experience with the few drum machines I’ve bought is I’ve found them very complicated to use due to the need operate a cumbersome dial, difficulty of getting to desired beats and adjusting the tempo. You just need to program stuff that’s hard to get to while performing at the same time.
This could perhaps also explain why the ‘old days’ (1970-80s) rhythm boxes (picture below) currently fetch quite attractive ‘vintage value’ prices on eBay - not so much because they are collector units, but because they are that much easier to operate at a press of a button.
To illustrate, I’ve been buying a few of these ‘vintage’ units (like the one below) on eBay, and am having fun playing the piano with them. Here are a few of my samples at YouTube played with a Yamaha CP33 piano and a Roland TR-66 Rhythm Box (under $80):
If You Leave Me Now
Wave
And I Love Her
My Girl
TEAC Rhythm Box

(By the way, if you ever spot a box like the Roland TR-68 above for <$100, GRAB IT, because it fetches at least US$250 on eBay!!)
- there are also drum machine sounds that now downloadable as software on your computer, and even for the iTouch and iPhone, but I’m not too familiar with their operation.
- best of all, for the purpose of learning the piano by hearing drum beats are commonly offered in a relatively-inexpensive electronics keyboard like the Casio CTK series that I had mentioned in my learning-by-hearing tools. You can select from a last range of built-in drum patterns.
What’s great is the fact that when you hold your left hand in the automatic accompaniment mode (‘fingered chord’) and with a beat switched on, you can hear how the bass and chords are being played together to follow the beat. You can practice following what you hear on the piano.
To illustrate, let’s take a simple beat like March or Swing, which sounds like ‘tom-chac-tom-chac….(and so on continuously)’.
On the chord of C, your left hand would play the following pattern:
- (1st Bass) C bass for the first ‘tom’!
- (Chord) E and G held together for the first ‘chac’!
- (2nd Bass) G bass for the next ‘tom’!
- (chord) C and E held together for the next ‘tom!’ …. and so on
I know it may be hard for you to conceive what I’m talking about above. I’ll do a few videos on this subject later.
When a song calls for it, the more skilled you are in switching between playing your left hand like a beat while also moving in arpeggio, the more interesting your playing should sound.
The next step when you become well versed with the song, perhaps you might want to try playing it with a drum beat. You can use a drum machine or a Casio keyboard connected to an amplifier, or whatever method that we’ve discussed above. If you are stuck always try and refer back to the song to listen closely to the drummer, bass and chords. Remember though, that not all songs have a drum beat.
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