Beginner

How to Practice Gymnopédie No. 1 on Piano

Erik Satie

KeyD major
Tempo66 BPM
DifficultyBeginner
Time to learn2-3 weeks

About this piece

Satie's dreamy, proto-ambient masterpiece is built on gently rocking chords and a floating melody. Its simplicity is its genius — every note matters, and the performer must resist the urge to add anything.

Practice tips

  1. The left hand alternates between a bass note on beat 1 and a soft chord on beats 2-3 — the bass note should be slightly louder to ground the waltz feel.
  2. The right-hand melody uses wide intervals (often 6ths and 7ths) — practice connecting these leaps smoothly with finger legato and gentle pedal changes.
  3. Hold back on rubato — Satie marked this 'Lent et douloureux' (slow and sorrowful), meaning a steady, unhurried pulse, not a freely floating tempo.

Common mistake

Adding too much rubato or dramatic phrasing — Satie's music should sound detached and contemplative, almost like it's playing itself.

How long to learn

Beginner 2-3 weeks
Intermediate 3-5 days

Frequently asked questions

How hard is Gymnopédie No. 1 to play on piano?

Gymnopédie No. 1 is rated Beginner. Satie's dreamy, proto-ambient masterpiece is built on gently rocking chords and a floating melody.

How long does it take to learn Gymnopédie No. 1?

For a beginner, expect 2-3 weeks. An intermediate player can learn it in 3-5 days.

What key is Gymnopédie No. 1 in?

Gymnopédie No. 1 is in D major, typically performed at around 66 BPM.

What's the most common mistake when learning Gymnopédie No. 1?

Adding too much rubato or dramatic phrasing — Satie's music should sound detached and contemplative, almost like it's playing itself.

Ready to practice Gymnopédie No. 1?

Upload your sheet music and start learning — at your tempo, hands separately, looping the hard parts.

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