This page shows “Hạt Mưa Vương Vấn” in our color-coded kid songbook view — every note is colored by pitch (red C, orange D, yellow E, green F, blue G, purple A, pink B) and the lyrics sit directly under each note, so children can sing along while they play. The song is in the key of C at 65 BPM, a medium-difficulty arrangement — try slowing the tempo down using the BPM control.
This arrangement is a lovely way to develop expressive control at a slow tempo — and 65 BPM is deceptively challenging because every uneven note and rushed transition is fully exposed. Your right hand will carry a lyrical melody that relies on smooth legato connections, so focus on keeping your fingers close to the keys and transferring weight smoothly between notes rather than lifting and dropping. The left hand uses fairly straightforward chord patterns in C, but pay close attention to chord changes that fall on off-beats — it's easy to rush those transitions when the melody is sustaining. I'd suggest learning hands separately first, locking in the left-hand rhythm until it feels automatic, then layering the melody on top. Use light sustain pedal to connect phrases, but release cleanly at each chord change to avoid muddiness. This is the piece that will teach you how to make slow playing sound intentional and beautiful rather than hesitant.