Other arrangements of Possibility
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There’s a pos si bil i ty.
There’s a pos si bil i ty
all that I had
was all I gon’ get,
umm.
(G)There’s a pos si bil i ty.
(G)There’s a pos si bil i ty
By (G)all I gon’ get
is (C)gone with your step.
By (G)All I gon’ get
is gone with your step.
So tell me when you hear my heart stop.
You’re the on ly one who knows.
Tell me when you hear my si lence.
There’s a (Am)pos
si bil i ty
I would n’t (G)know,
umm,
umm.
(G)Know that when you bil i leave.
(G)Know that when you bil i leave.
By (G)blood and by mean,
you (C)walk like a thief.
By (G)blood and by mean,
I fall when you leave.
So tell me when you hear my heart stop.
You’re the on ly one who knows.
Tell me when you hear my si lence.
There’s a (Am)pos
si bil i ty
I would n’t (G)know,
umm,
umm.
So tell me when my sigh is ov er.
You’re the rea son why I’m close.
Tell me when you hear me fall in’.
There’s a (Am)pos
si bil i ty
it would n’t show,
umm,
(G)umm.
By (G)blood and by mean,
I (Em)fall when you leave.
By (G)blood and by mean,
I’ll (Em)fol low your lead,
(G)umm,
(G)umm.
Possibility — Falling Notes Piano Tutorial
68 people have learned this song
Watch "Possibility" by Lykke Li in falling notes style — like Synthesia. Color-coded notes fall onto the keyboard in real time. Practice left hand, right hand, or both. Key of G, 60 BPM.
This arrangement is a great way to develop your sense of expressive, slow playing — which is honestly harder than it sounds.
At 60 BPM with just four chords (G, C, Em, Am), the technical demands are low, but the musical challenge is real: every note has space around it, so uneven timing or clumsy transitions will stand out.
Your left hand holds a pedal bass pattern, meaning you'll often sustain or repeat a single low note while your right hand moves through the melody above it.
Start hands-separate and really lock in that left-hand pulse before combining.
The trickiest moment for most students is the shift between Am and C — keep your fingers close to the keys and move the whole hand shape rather than reaching finger by finger.
Once you're comfortable, add sustain pedal sparingly to enhance the melancholic feel without muddying the sound.
Lift and re-press the pedal cleanly on each chord change.
This is the kind of piece that trains you to play slowly with control and intention, a skill that makes everything else you learn sound more polished.
Try other practice modes:
About “Possibility”
- Can I learn "Possibility" with falling notes like Synthesia?
- Yes — Falling Notes mode shows colored note shapes dropping onto a virtual keyboard, the same visual style as Synthesia or piano-tile games. Each note's column matches the piano key you press. Works for "Possibility" with hands-separate practice in G at 60 BPM.
- What key is "Possibility" by Lykke Li played in?
- Possibility is arranged in the key of G on Super Simple Piano. You can transpose to any other key live in the player.
- What's the tempo (BPM) of "Possibility"?
- The arrangement plays at 60 BPM. Use the speed control (10-200%) to practice slower or play faster.
- Is "Possibility" easy to play on piano?
- Yes — this is one of our beginner-friendly arrangements with simplified chords and color-coded notes.
- Can I download sheet music for "Possibility"?
- Yes — registered users can download PDF sheet music, plus MIDI and MusicXML files for use in other notation software.
- Who composed "Possibility"?
- "Possibility" was originally performed by Lykke Li. The Super Simple Piano arrangement is simplified for beginner-to-intermediate players.
- What chords are used in "Possibility"?
- This arrangement uses 4 chords: Am, C, Em, G. Only a handful of chords — beginner-friendly.
- What other songs by Lykke Li can I play here?
- Try "I Follow Rivers", "I Follow Rivers", "Possibility". All are in our player with color-coded notes; pick the one matching your level.
- Can I practice left and right hand separately for "Possibility"?
- Yes! Our Top Down mode lets you isolate the left hand (bass clef), right hand (treble clef), or play both together. This makes it easy to master "Possibility" one hand at a time before combining them.
- What is falling notes style for "Possibility"?
- Falling notes (also known as Synthesia or piano waterfall) shows color-coded rectangles falling from the top of the screen onto a virtual keyboard. Each note's position matches the piano key you need to press. "Possibility" is in the key of G at 60 BPM.
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