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- Piano Pronto®: Movement 3
Piano Pronto®: Movement 3
Method Book written by Jennifer Eklund
Piano Pronto Movement 3 is a piano lesson book for early intermediates of all ages featuring fun and motivating pieces that keep students progressing-Pronto!
Method Books
Piano Pronto®: Movement 3 (Hardcopy)
$10.00
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Piano Pronto®: Movement 3 (Digital: Single User)
$8.00
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$8.00
Piano Pronto®: Movement 3 (Digital: Studio License)
$159.99
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Limit one per customer
$159.99
Power Pages
Teacher Books
Audio Products
Product details
Level | |
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Instrumentation | |
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Tonal Center | |
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SKU | PPMB005 |
ISBN | 978-1-942751-55-7 |
Number of Pages | 88 |
About the author
Jennifer Eklund
Jennifer Eklund holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in music from California State University, Long Beach. She is an avid arranger, composer, and author of the Piano Pronto® method books series as well as a wide variety of supplemental songbooks. She is also a Signature Artist with Musicnotes.com with a large catalog of popular music titles for musicians of all levels.
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Customer questions & answers
Question:
Is Piano Pronto an All-in-One course?
Answer:
Not exactly, but it’s pretty close! Each book in the Piano Pronto series includes pieces, explanations about musical concepts and terminology, written music theory exercises, and Pronto Prep sections to help instill the importance of section work. If you want to dive deeper into music theory we suggest using the correlating Power Pages books that include written theory, ear training, technique exercises, composition prompts, and much more. Power Pages books are available up through Piano Pronto: Movement 3.
Question:
I have a teen transfer student who the previous teacher said she was in Piano Adventures level 4.
I have her using Movement 3 and Power Pages. She is really struggling through the Movement 3 book but grasps the theory of Power Pages pretty well. She told me in the beginning that she can’t sight read at all and memorizes everything. She appears to work hard but I would really like to see her not struggle so much. I don’t want to discourage her, but I feel she’d be better suited to Movement 1 or 2. I sure would appreciate your guidance.
Thank you.
Answer:
In this situation I would suggest slowing down the pace you're working through the Movement 3 method book and take some time to do lateral supplementation. She admittedly needs to reinforce her reading skills so I would look for some fun songbooks in our "Method Book Match" section that are aligned with the Movement 2 book. This will give her some time to just focus on improving her reading skills. Nothing says you have to keep plugging along in a method book ad infinitum! By using supplemental books to work on the reading you won't have to move her "backwards" into a lower level method book.
Question:
Is there a backing track with piano for the “Blues Medley”? I’m not seeing it in the sample listening tracks.
Answer:
Yes, there is as part of the Movement 3: Super Soundtrack. I don't always include samples of everything that is included in separate paid products.
Customer reviews
Heidi
I've been using Movement 3 with my intermediate students and also my classes of retired adults. Just about everyone loves the music. It's great that most of the pieces are familiar. The teacher duets are always enjoyable and make students feel like amazing musicians when we play together.
Donna
I love all the Piano Pronto books and Movement 3 is full of great folk songs and nice arrangements of famous classical pieces. When these pieces are paired with the duets, you have music that students love to play!!
Diane
I like the variety in Movement 3. There are quite a few very nice arrangements of classics, as well as many other styles such as blues and folk. This approach helps students attain a well-rounded music education.
Susan
Movement 3 has great classical and folk melodies. The student is playing in different genres and styles.
Michelle
I had a student who was kind of floundering around in their method book and not practicing much, so I decided to change things up and put them in Movement 3. It was like a light-bulb was turned on, and he started practicing again, and really loving the pieces he was playing. He couldn't wait to learn the "Fur Elise", so we did that as soon as possible, and he now calls himself a "Beethoven Specialist".