🎹 After You've Gone Piano

Turner Layton · Expert · 761 notes· Tempo 120 BPM· 6,000 views· Update 25/12/2025 · Piano
🎭 Emotional Character
Aching with nostalgia, joy and loss in the same breath, moving without effort or hesitation — active and densely woven throughout.
Minor Flowing tempo Moderate dynamics Busy texture Wide-ranging melody
📥 Downloads
👤 Suggested For
🏆 Advanced Students 🎹 Concert Pianists 🖐 Large Hands 🎤 Recital Repertoire
⏰ Estimated Practice Time
23
weeks to performance-ready
Concert-level material. Mastery takes dedicated long-term commitment.
6hper week
150htotal est.
3hard segments
* Estimate assumes ~6h focused practice/week for an average-level student at this difficulty tier.
🎯 Difficulty Assessment
Expert
67 / 100
BeginnerIntermediateAdvancedExpert

Professional - complex layering and high speed required

761
Total Notes
54%
Interleaved
4.5
Avg N/Beat
0
Ornaments
⚠ Challenges
🤝 Some hand coordination ⚡ Some fast sections 📏 Moderate note range ↕️ Large hand jumps 🎵 Multiple voice layers
✅ Accessible
#️⃣ Mostly white keys ⏳ Short & manageable
🎚 Dynamics
f
Mostly f - subtle dynamic shaping
Avg velocity 80/127  ·  Spread 16  ·  Range 80–96
pppmpmfffffff
🎹 Note Range - Piano Keyboard
Upper dot = RH (Right Hand) Lower dot = LH (Left Hand) White dot on black key = sharp/flat note used
📐 Note Range per Hand  ·  Sheet Preview
🤚 Left Hand
LowestG2
HighestC#4
Span18 st (1Oct+TT)
Notes228
Widest leap17 st  C4→G2
🖐 Right Hand
LowestC2
HighestF5
Span41 st (3Oct+P4)
Notes533
Widest leap38 st  D5→C2
🖐 Hand Span & Chord Density
Max chord span: 10 semitones (m7)
0 stOctave2 Oct
Avg chord: 2.1 notes  ·  56 chords
Max chord span: 40 semitones (3Oct+M3)
0 stOctave2 Oct
Avg chord: 3.4 notes  ·  122 chords
⚠️ 59 stretch chords (>octave)
↪️ Scales & Thumb Crossing
No significant scale runs detected — this piece does not heavily rely on thumb-crossing technique.
🔁 Repeating Phrases
43%
Repeated
19 of 44 bars contain repeated phrases — a good portion of the piece recycles earlier material, reducing the unique learning load.
Repeated bar Unique bar
🎯 Suggested Practice Passages ?Each "passage" is 2 consecutive measures (ô nhịp). The algorithm scores every passage by note density and interval leaps, then picks the 3 hardest for focused practice.
The hardest passages in this piece — spend extra time here before running the full piece.
📍 Measures 18–19
Hardest
📍 Measures 38–39
2nd hardest
📍 Measures 42–43
3rd hardest
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How difficult is After You've Gone Piano on piano?
After You've Gone Piano is rated Expert on PianoMetric's piano difficulty scale, with a score of 67/100. It was composed by Turner Layton. Only advanced pianists with strong technique, high note density tolerance, and expressive control should attempt this piece. The piece runs approximately 1m 30s. It contains 761 notes in total.
How long does it take to learn After You've Gone Piano?
Based on PianoMetric's analysis, learning After You've Gone Piano to a performance-ready level takes approximately 23 weeks (~150 total practice hours) for a expert level student. Concert-level material. Mastery takes dedicated long-term commitment.
Where can I download the piano sheet music PDF for After You've Gone Piano?
You can download the piano sheet music PDF for After You've Gone Piano directly on this page. The sheet is 2 pages long. Click the 'PDF Download' button above to get the full score.
Is there a video tutorial for After You've Gone Piano piano?
Yes — a piano video tutorial for After You've Gone Piano is embedded on this page. You can watch it here or follow the 'Play on YouTube' link. The tutorial covers the full arrangement at 120 BPM.
What piano level is required to play After You've Gone Piano?
After You've Gone Piano is suited for Expert level pianists (difficulty score 67/100). This is expert-level repertoire. Strong sight-reading, high note density stamina, and polished expressive technique are essential.
What is the mood or feel of After You've Gone Piano?
Aching with nostalgia, joy and loss in the same breath, moving without effort or hesitation — active and densely woven throughout. It belongs to the Piano genre. The piece is played at 120 BPM.