About Jacques & Piano In 21 Days
How Long Does it Take to Learn Piano?
Many people ask, “How long does it take to learn piano?” Jacques Hopkins spent 12 years of his childhood being taught piano through traditional classes. At the end of his lessons, he realized he only knew how to play two songs. There had to be a better way to learn piano fast.
Does this sound like a struggle you’ve been through? How many times have you thought “I want to learn how to play piano,” only to find even basic piano lessons tough, boring, or too slow to see real results? Or maybe lessons begin to feel like a drag, instead of the creative outlet they’re supposed to be.
The problem isn’t with you – the problem is with your piano lessons.
In fact, you can learn piano online in just 21 days – less than one month! How? By focusing on learning chords you want to play, not just the same boring notes and old-fashioned exercises. After all, most of us aren’t trying to play piano in classical music. We want to play modern songs, the popular music we hear and enjoy every day.
On a sunny day in New Orleans, Louisiana, I make my entrance into the world.
My full name is Gregory Jacques Hopkins. Jacques was my great-grandfather’s name, who was Cajun-French. It’s a great name for a piano teacher, don’t you think?
Classes on Piano Basics You’ll Actually Enjoy
After he quit traditional piano lessons, Jacques spent several years during his career in engineering thinking about the fastest way to learn piano. After all, there had to be a faster way than learning two songs in 12 years. He took the 80/20 principle to heart, which states that 80 percent of results comes from 20 percent of work. He sifted through the traditional fluff and discovered the key to creating the best piano lessons for beginners. The result was this: an online piano course that helps you learn to play piano quickly through a natural 80/20-based framework.
Learning techniques like piano inversions doesn’t have to be boring. You’ll learn how to play easy songs on the piano, not just repeat sheet music. You’ll learn a framework to understanding piano chords, and best of all, you’ll be able to learn any song you want to. You’ll learn how to make piano practice fun.