πŸ’› Shawn Mendes β€” Summer of Love Piano Sheet Music

 Featuring Tainy.

Simplicity: Easy (A beginner’s guide on practice and performance notes on how to play this sheet music is below)

πŸ’Ύ Download PDF from OneDrive archive (94 kB4 pages)

Preview



πŸ’½ Summer of Love Composition

β€˜Summer of Love’ is a Pop-piece by  premiered on .

Read a Wikipedia entry.

Listen on Spotify while sight-reading the score and marking phrases, rhythm, voicing, articulation, and dynamics.

Pianistically, the score has no technical difficulties:

  • Tempo is 124 beats per minute.
  • A key is B Major, the key that seems β€œpassioned”, the sound is intriguing.
  • Music is colored by moving between minor and major chords: the progression combines B G#m D#m F#. It makes the sound of β€˜Summer of Love’ close to the sound of several songs. You can mix choruses with verses from different songs to develop keen ear, internalize the concept of a key and harmony, or create a  to upload on YouTube. Ear is like a muscle – the more you use it the stronger it gets

    🎭 Learn Summer of Love Sheet Music on Piano

    πŸ“… Practicing

    • Casually glance through to familiarise yourself with the score.
    • Stretch and warm-up every time you play.
    • Touch the keys with fingertips not with whole finger pulps (cut nails short).
    • Practice no more than three repetitions in a row (otherwise you lose focus.)

    πŸ–πŸ» Fingering

    • Add fingering in dense places (on printed pages or use a β€œcomment” feature in your pdf-viewer.)
    • Aim for less change of hand sition. 5-4-3-2-1 is better than 4-3-2-1-2.
    • Play all notes within a phrase together simultaneously β€” you will understand the comfortable fingering.
    • Legato is easier to play with adjacent fingers, and staccato is easier between disjunct fingers over larger intervals.

    π„ž Melody

    • The right hand plays a melody in β€˜Summer of Love’. Shawn Mendes recorded the melody that shines above the accompaniment, so play accordingly.
    • Count out loud. The truth is that listeners are far less concerned about wrong notes than an inconsistent pulse, a lack of rhythmic control, or a sense of rhythmic instability.
      Put the metronome at 50 beats per minute. Then 52. Then 54, etc. until you reach the original tempo.
    • Focus on differences in touch and attack: articulation (legato vs. staccato) and dynamics (loud vs. quiet). Vary them throughout the piece. Manually put down π“Ÿ πŸ™΅ 𝓕 and < πŸ™΅ > markings with a highlighter.
    • Mark phrases with a highlighter in a bubble. Play the first half of any phrase louder than the last half. Accentuate the highest-pitched note in a phrase.
    • Wherever you see a slur (♩⁀β™ͺ), play the second slurred note very quietly.

    𝄒 Accompaniment

    • The left hand plays a supportive and gentle accompaniment. It is always softer than the right hand and has no phrasing, so give every first beat of every measure an accent.
    • Keep the upper notes (played by the thumb) lighter and the lower notes (played by the pinky finger) louder.
    • Put fingers close to the black keys.
    • If you feel fatigue in the left hand, modify the score:
      • leave out notes,
      • transfer the top notes to your right hand,
      • arpeggiate or break the chord in an upward pattern.
    • Move and rotate the wrist, elbow, and forearm.

    πŸ…Ώ Pedal

    Sustaining pedal helps accumulate sound and broaden harmonic effects, it doesn’t make you a better player by hiding errors. Pedal as little as possible to push the melody forward. Like fingering, pedaling marks should be added personally to suit your

    • palm (small palms need help of the pedal to connect large intervals),
    • piano (smaller upright and digital pianos are forgiving to over-pedaling),
    • room size (an open space needs more pedaling),
    • range: when both hands are playing higher, use more pedal.

    Pedal twice per measure or more. Delay pedal pressing for milliseconds to weaken the resonance. Remove the pedal wherever you see a rest symbol.


    🧠 How to Memorize Sheet Music

    Worry less that you can’t learn scores β€” the best pianists in the world learn their concert pieces for no less than two years prior to the first performance. Learning more pieces makes it easier to memorize a single one. I post a score every other day, so sight-read a new song everyday to develop memory.

    Shawn Mendes Summer of Love Piano

    Learn chord symbols β€” usually in the left hand are only several chords in a progression, so it is easier to remember. To learn the progression

    • sing root notes (the first letter of a chord symbol) as a melody,
    • create a word made of the first letters of the chord progression.

    Understand the structure of β€˜Summer of Love’: parts are separated by a double bar line (β€–). Work on the hardest parts more than on the easiest.

    From the very first time, try to recall or play by ear a part after you played it, part by part.

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