How to Play “Assassin’s Creed III” Main Theme — Guitar & Piano (concise guide)
Quick facts
- Composer: Lorne Balfe
- Common published key: D minor
- Typical tempo: quarter = 140 (varies by arrangement)
- Available official/paid sheet music: Musicnotes, SheetMusicPlus, JW Pepper, SheetMusicPlus (search those sites for “Assassin’s Creed III Main Theme” or “Main Title”).
Piano — approach & practice steps
- Learn the main motif (right hand): arpeggiated minor‑mode phrase centered in D minor — practice slowly, hands separate.
- Left hand: steady ostinato/root‑fifth octaves with occasional bass leaps; lock left‑hand rhythm before combining.
- Add dynamics: crescendo into the phrases’ peaks, use sharp accents on phrase entrances.
- Voicing: bring out melody in RH while keeping LH accompaniment subdued.
- Practice plan (10–15 min blocks): hands separate (3), hands together slow (3), tempo increase with metronome (3), musical polish with dynamics (2).
Guitar — approach & practice steps
- Choose arrangement: fingerstyle or chordal tab; lead motif often played on single‑note treble strings or high harmonics.
- Tuning: standard tuning works; some tabs arrange for capo to match piano key.
- Technique: use alternate picking for melody, palm‑mute on accompaniment to mimic orchestral low strings.
- Chords/voicings: Dm, Bb, F, C, Gm (use barre shapes for fullness).
- Practice plan (10–15 min blocks): melody accuracy (4), chord changes & rhythm (4), combine & add dynamics (2).
Simplified beginner tabs/chords (starter)
- Main chord progression (looped idea): Dm — Bb — F — C
- Melody (single‑string, approximate, in D minor):
- e|–10-8-7–8-10–12-10-8–7-|
- (Use as a first-pass; match to official sheet to refine.)
Where to get accurate notation/tabs
- Musicnotes (piano sheet) — purchasable, interactive.
- SheetMusicPlus / JW Pepper — piano and guitar/tab arrangements.
- YouTube tutorials — free play‑throughs and covers (search “Assassin’s Creed III Main Theme piano/guitar”).
Practice tips for a polished performance
- Slow practice at 50–60% tempo, gradually increase.
- Record runs to check balance and timing.
- Focus on phrasing and dynamic contrast to emulate orchestral feel.
- Use a metronome and practice small sections repeatedly.
If you want, I can provide: a short, playable piano excerpt (5–8 bars) or a guitar tab of the main melody — tell me which.
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