Amy, Your you tube channel is brilliant. I'm 73 and have been playing by "ear" since I was 4. I played two-handed chop stix for any relative or visitor who came to the house.My father also played by ear and from the age of 6 to about 12, he taught me to play Moonlight Sonata. I was always fascinated by chords and chord progressions and would figure out how to play just about anything I heard on the radio. I could never explain to anyone how I learned to play and remember so many songs without having any sheet music. My best explanation was...... once I had the chords, all the notes of the music were inside those chords......it just made sense to me, but I could not explain how I did it. It took me 30 years to understand what you have put together in your videos. You are a brilliant pianist and teacher. Thank you for sharing your talent with anyone lucky enough to find your videos. Larry
Wonder lessons! I’ve play rock and blues guitar for 45 years, only 2 years on piano. Piano theory has actually made my guitar playing better, makes you think from a different perspective. Again, wonder web lessons, thank you !
Aimee, every time I watch one of your videos, I grab my guitar, play a few of your chord progressions and I hear music. I have played up to 4 hours a sitting. A musical oddesy that has improved my ear greatly. Thank you so much!❤
Yes, I am a string player but find this channel so valuable.
4 роки тому+4
Thank you Aimee, the concept of stop reading to set free our imagination and creation, from our own mind an soul is really an advanced state of teaching.
Thank you so VERY much. My story is probably a common one.....I took piano lessons between the ages of 10 and 14 or 15 and became quite good but I was unable to read music as the teacher wanted so I 'faked' it by asking her to play it multiple times until I had it memorized. I was good at memorizing even complicated compositions and always did well at recitals pleasing my mother no end. I gave piano up at the age of about 17 and never tried again until I was in my 60's when I tried very hard to re-learn sight reading....but once again I was unable to make the mental leap from notation to hands and could only play 'by ear'...picking out tunes and embellishing them as much as I could. I stumbled across your channel while deliberately looking for a method that I could assimilate and improve without the DREARY sight-reading I had been taught was necessary. Your method is INCREDIBLE and now, at the age of nearly 74, I find myself LEARNING to play by letting my instincts control to a small degree and with your gently guidance I find huge improvement in my playing. Thank you so much.....music, which I always loved and strived to play is FINALLY showing a glimmer of hope and it is all because of your methods.... Thanks from Canada North where I'll continue to follow your channel and your instruction....Thank you SO MUCH!
Thank you: so there is hope for me. I had only lessons half a year. And the piano teacher said I'd better stop. My memorising went so fast I would never learn to read. Me too....a humble follower of Aimee now to get some improvement of me playing... Great channel! Thanks Aimee!
I've never played piano. But these concepts are very easily translated to my instrument (banjo). Your comment about learning by ear rather than from the page couldn't be more important. It's taken me years to figure that out and the possibilities are finally, finally opening up as a result. Thanks Aimee!
I so wish I could go back in time to my teenage years and learn this. Once again, I am almost embarrassed by the fact that I'm an advanced classical pianist but never learned this skill. You are just brilliant.
You probably dont give a damn but does anybody know a trick to get back into an instagram account? I was stupid lost the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
I just love hearing the beautiful sounds and patterns you put together. It is really an amazing kind of freedom that allows you to give your audience something extra special. Thanks Aimee
You're speaking my language. This kind of teaching is what is helping me REALLY learn to play the piano. How to learn to hear things, and find them on the piano, or any instrument. That's what you're teaching. Thank you so much Aimee!
for my own reference, feel free to ignore: practise solo or ac(comp)any, voice lead (inversions), alt 8th + bass, alberti bass, left 1 5 10 5 9 5 8 5, change the patterns up through sections, arpeggio patterns, add2, accented 8th root bass, songs in many keys(!), arpeggios across two hands (16th notes!).
You're lovely Aimee. Your voice is so musical not only when you sing (superbly) but also when you speak. Good tone, good rhythm, not intrusive, never boring, a real pleasure to listen to, and ideal for learning from. You are very talented as a musician and as a teacher as well. Brava!
You described my learning experience perfectly. I learned by the traditional method; primarily reading sheet music, with very little theory. I could not understand chord charts; and I quickly became bored with playing. Now, thirty years later, I am learning music theory; and I am having a blast with it. I have a long ways to go still, but I think I am going to learn great things from this channel. Thanks Aimee! Edit: Oops, I left this comment on the wrong video...... silly me!
For me, this is your greatest ever video. A masterclass in twenty minutes. I've learned so much; so applicable, so helpful. Sometimes words are not enough but thank you from the bottom of my heart.
The luckiest thing happened to me is to find your videos. You have helped me understand a lot of things that I did not understand even after years self-learning guitar and piano. Thank you very much!
Why do I suspect it's counter-productive for publishers and recording artist to object to pieces of their music being used in lessons like this? She's helping to keep this song alive. That's good for the artist. If someone knows why this strict approach is being used, please explain. Oh, & by the way, great lesson. She's a fine teacher.
Steve DeLaunay they dont like other people making money from the song that they wrote. She said they demonetize the videos not that theyre not allowed to use them, they just cant use them to make money off of them. There might be some that dont let anyone use their songs but mostly its that they dont want people making money off songs that they dont own.
You make an excellent point about pop songs exposure in music lessons which have the side effect of still promoting the song for the original artist. So true, but most of the time recording companies "cannot see the forest from the trees" in regard to that.
Fuck the song owners (not the artists). Singing, learning songs, teaching songs is our thousands year old culture that is as old as language itself - older than any material invention. We are binding down our culture in a very unnatural shape when we limit ourselves this way. (The way it was clearly in the way of teaching music and musicality in this video really got to me.) Also, this video was fantastic. :)
So GREAT how you address musicality 'by ear' and from the heart, referencing just enough theory to describe what is happening - this is the original liberating function of theory, rather than the seemingly inhibiting, confusing sets of rules or paint-by-number formulas that young aspirants are confronted and turned off by. This is so accessible and meaningful at all levels from beginners to advanced. Also not piano-centric, equally applies to the guitar. The whistlers freaked me out (in a good way), the Rick Beato snippet illustrated your point perfectly... Love how you love and support each other. People like you & Rick make me glad to be alive, sure many feel the same way.... Thank you ever so much, Amy!
I like your suggestion to use the second degree in arpeggios. The second degree (as the ninth) actually shows up well before the seventh in the overtone series, making it a more comfortable partner to the triad than we tend to think.
Madame Nolte, this tutorial was greater than the greatest !!! Sun is shining above your shoulders... Those (sweet) songs are all I (or we from 80s-90s) want to play and the chord variations are so useful..."I do it for you" & "Every breath you take" are so memorial.
This is very good. I play guitar and understand music theory so I can play the piano from an intellectual point of view. I can find the chords on the piano and only want to play an accompaniment but could never make them sound nice just thumping the chord 4 times per bar. This gives me some useful pointers
You explain inversions so well, if you play a C chord, but have a G as the bottom note followed by a C above, and an E above it's still a C Chord. It's about efficiency when changing between chords, in other words, changing between chords with the least amount of movement. I only learnt this recently. I was talking to a studio musician, who has worked with the likes of Keith Emmerson, Rick Wakeman, and Elton John. He told me that EJ, as good as he is, only really has a few tricks to his repertoire, and one of them is a masterful understanding of inversions. I could tell you this studio musician's name, he does appear online, but I can't really. Anyway love this channel, so glad that I stumbled across it.
Sixteenth notes beautiful; more 16th ! Passionate about composing naturally. Humming that is what I do. Yes many people have forgotten that they have the capacity to compose with their ears and by humming.
Excellent video. You are are a true talent. Thank you for sharing your skills. I am trying to learn piano without the aid of a private teacher and it is sometimes difficult to even know what to practice or how to practice. I know some theory(not much) , a few chords, and a couple of scales. Your video gives me direction. Thank you so much.
OK, Just finished my 1st listening to thiso vide & got the message. Use my ears, apply these ideas and then start making up my own patterns. Thanks for your inspiring mentorship, Aimee!
Thank you, Amy - another great video. I think these conversational lessons work really well - they are interesting and inviting and explain lots of concepts and styles without a lot of scary jargon, yet also contain so much information in them that they bear watching several times.
Sister Aimee, your voice is so soothing that I drift off into la..la..la..land, where rivers sing and trees offer their sparkling fruit... Ok. Need to focus now.
A LOT to digest in this video. At 8:05 to 8:35 you make that stretch from C to the high E and high D look simple. At 8:30 to 8:35 I see you're even holding down the low C and G while hitting those high notes. Easier with the right hand than the left, so very impressive. Thanks for the great video, Aimee!!
Thank you for sharing, you have such a pleasant and clear teaching style. We now find ourselves in a situation that would be perfect to write many songs. Would really like to learn more about songwriting process for us who are new at this. Would love to learn more about chord progression, improvisation techniques, song structure etc.
I love your channel Amy, I only play strings but I am grateful for your expertise and your willingness to share in my musical journey..... thanks again!!!!
Very Nice Madame! You're awesome! I've learned a new technic in improving my accompaniment method... Thanks a lot for this and hoping for more valuable teaching method from you.. God Bless!
Thanks a lot Aimee, Iam very glad that you have done this invaluable lesson, you have a wonderful way of explaining, fantastic. Keep on with something like this. Thanks a lot.
I do a lot of music, all original instrumentals and mainly the keys are used with synth sounds and there's very little actual "playing" where it's chords and melody or lead played by me at the same time and I have wanted lately to start to expand and in this video you've got me with plenty to start on, so my thanks! Peace.
Excellent Lesson, what a huge amount of information in one video, you are such an Amazing teacher Aimee! I was out of town when I first watched this video and it was the one time since I have been taking skype lessons from you that I did not take my keyboard, and I must say I learned my lesson never to leave home without my keyboard, I was so inspired by this video to move onto the next level of my piano playing and I could not practice, due to being out of town however I did somewhat practice in my head. When I got home, first thing I did was bring up this very informational video of yours. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO!!! You are the BEST!!!!
Hello from France! Thank you for this vidéo that brings me a lot of ideas for arpeggios. After a few minutes trying to play some like you do and show us slowly in the video (great teaching!), i now feel much better and i can count beats more easily. so, MERCI and BRAVO.
Aimee, the actual parts of reading and writing music are not very many. 7 and the like. So what you are doing is simplifying how the 7 refers to all songs on the piano in this case. Once the pattern of 7 for example is recognized as not very many then reading and writing music will be easier to understand. I have always found it easier to remember the chord progressions and lyrics of a song when I am being physical with them by playing drums or an instrument along with the song. Being physical helps memory and somehow simplifies understanding and creativity. You are fun to learn with as well as be creative with as you teach. So thanks. And I just think you're great. Shalome.
One concept that may be difficult to embrace is that some of us were trained: chords on the left, melody on the right. And spent years in that framework. I agree that exploiting chords with the right hand is a world changer. But some of us are deeply ingrained in the limited paradigm. I'd love to break free.
I have only been playing for a year, and I hope one day that I will be good enough to take an actual lesson from you. But until that day I want to thank you for the common sense inspiration that you give to me and many like me. (by the way, my piano teacher is very impressed with you)
So funny! I'm mainly a guitarist/bassist and watch Rick B.'s channel all the time, so when you played that clip of him, I kept thinking there was some kind of glitch! Love this vid -- so much great info! Just sub'ed -- can't wait to watch more :)
Very good video. I've played many years and also professionally but learned some new chord/rhythmic patterns I never tried before. Kudos to you Aimee!! Thanks!
Thankyou from the very bottom of my heart Aimee. I’m so excited I can’t wait to learn all these patterns improvising is so difficult for me so I’m very grateful You have no idea. Yay have a great day Jaynee 😍🎶💕🎹👍✌️
Amy, Your you tube channel is brilliant. I'm 73 and have been playing by "ear" since I was 4.
I played two-handed chop stix for any relative or visitor who came to the house.My father also played by ear and from the age of 6 to about 12, he taught me to play Moonlight Sonata. I was always fascinated by chords and chord progressions and would figure out how to play just about anything I heard on the radio. I could never explain to anyone how I learned to play and remember so many songs without having any sheet music. My best explanation was...... once I had the chords, all the notes of the music were inside those chords......it just made sense to me, but I could not explain how I did it. It took me 30 years to understand what you have put together in your videos. You are a brilliant pianist and teacher.
Thank you for sharing your talent with anyone lucky enough to find your videos.
Larry
Wonder lessons! I’ve play rock and blues guitar for 45 years, only 2 years on piano. Piano theory has actually made my guitar playing better, makes you think from a different perspective. Again, wonder web lessons, thank you !
You have a great ability to not only play music but also teach others in a clear and concise manner. Wonderful work!
Aimee, every time I watch one of your videos, I grab my guitar, play a few of your chord progressions and I hear music. I have played up to 4 hours a sitting. A musical oddesy that has improved my ear greatly. Thank you so much!❤
probably the most useful music lesson ever recorded
Yes, I am a string player but find this channel so valuable.
Thank you Aimee, the concept of stop reading to set free our imagination and creation, from our own mind an soul is really an advanced state of teaching.
Thank you so VERY much. My story is probably a common one.....I took piano lessons between the ages of 10 and 14 or 15 and became quite good but I was unable to read music as the teacher wanted so I 'faked' it by asking her to play it multiple times until I had it memorized. I was good at memorizing even complicated compositions and always did well at recitals pleasing my mother no end.
I gave piano up at the age of about 17 and never tried again until I was in my 60's when I tried very hard to re-learn sight reading....but once again I was unable to make the mental leap from notation to hands and could only play 'by ear'...picking out tunes and embellishing them as much as I could.
I stumbled across your channel while deliberately looking for a method that I could assimilate and improve without the DREARY sight-reading I had been taught was necessary.
Your method is INCREDIBLE and now, at the age of nearly 74, I find myself LEARNING to play by letting my instincts control to a small degree and with your gently guidance I find huge improvement in my playing.
Thank you so much.....music, which I always loved and strived to play is FINALLY showing a glimmer of hope and it is all because of your methods....
Thanks from Canada North where I'll continue to follow your channel and your instruction....Thank you SO MUCH!
Thank you: so there is hope for me. I had only lessons half a year. And the piano teacher said I'd better stop. My memorising went so fast I would never learn to read. Me too....a humble follower of Aimee now to get some improvement of me playing... Great channel! Thanks Aimee!
Wayne geordiesdad a
I've never played piano. But these concepts are very easily translated to my instrument (banjo). Your comment about learning by ear rather than from the page couldn't be more important. It's taken me years to figure that out and the possibilities are finally, finally opening up as a result. Thanks Aimee!
I so wish I could go back in time to my teenage years and learn this. Once again, I am almost embarrassed by the fact that I'm an advanced classical pianist but never learned this skill. You are just brilliant.
You probably dont give a damn but does anybody know a trick to get back into an instagram account?
I was stupid lost the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
@Rodney Julian Instablaster ;)
At 15:00 you moved to G Major and your speaking voice modulated to that key. Gorgeous!
Such simple concepts, but explained so well. Thank you!
I just love hearing the beautiful sounds and patterns you put together. It is really an amazing kind of freedom that allows you to give your audience something extra special. Thanks Aimee
You're speaking my language. This kind of teaching is what is helping me REALLY learn to play the piano. How to learn to hear things, and find them on the piano, or any instrument. That's what you're teaching. Thank you so much Aimee!
for my own reference, feel free to ignore:
practise
solo or ac(comp)any, voice lead (inversions), alt 8th + bass, alberti bass, left 1 5 10 5 9 5 8 5, change the patterns up through sections, arpeggio patterns, add2, accented 8th root bass, songs in many keys(!), arpeggios across two hands (16th notes!).
You're lovely Aimee. Your voice is so musical not only when you sing (superbly) but also when you speak. Good tone, good rhythm, not intrusive, never boring, a real pleasure to listen to, and ideal for learning from. You are very talented as a musician and as a teacher as well. Brava!
Aimee Nolte truly is music to a songwriter's/lyricist's/storyteller's ears! ♡
Thanks Aimee, You sound music ,with out much ado.....
Practical applications from a lifetime in music. Communicated and demonstrated by a maestro. Shared with us here. For free. Unbelievable.
You described my learning experience perfectly. I learned by the traditional method; primarily reading sheet music, with very little theory. I could not understand chord charts; and I quickly became bored with playing. Now, thirty years later, I am learning music theory; and I am having a blast with it. I have a long ways to go still, but I think I am going to learn great things from this channel. Thanks Aimee!
Edit: Oops, I left this comment on the wrong video...... silly me!
Love you! Thanks for all the great tips!
For me, this is your greatest ever video. A masterclass in twenty minutes. I've learned so much; so applicable, so helpful. Sometimes words are not enough but thank you from the bottom of my heart.
This teaching is pure love. Praise God
I don’t play piano but I learn so much from watching you for my guitar. Thank you
Dear Aimee, you just made me realize how fragile and imperfect we, humans, are. Yet so infinitely beautiful... Thank you so much for all your work.
The luckiest thing happened to me is to find your videos. You have helped me understand a lot of things that I did not understand even after years self-learning guitar and piano. Thank you very much!
Why do I suspect it's counter-productive for publishers and recording artist to object to pieces of their music being used in lessons like this? She's helping to keep this song alive. That's good for the artist. If someone knows why this strict approach is being used, please explain. Oh, & by the way, great lesson. She's a fine teacher.
Steve DeLaunay they dont like other people making money from the song that they wrote. She said they demonetize the videos not that theyre not allowed to use them, they just cant use them to make money off of them. There might be some that dont let anyone use their songs but mostly its that they dont want people making money off songs that they dont own.
You make an excellent point about pop songs exposure in music lessons which have the side effect of still promoting the song for the original artist. So true, but most of the time recording companies "cannot see the forest from the trees" in regard to that.
Fuck the song owners (not the artists). Singing, learning songs, teaching songs is our thousands year old culture that is as old as language itself - older than any material invention. We are binding down our culture in a very unnatural shape when we limit ourselves this way. (The way it was clearly in the way of teaching music and musicality in this video really got to me.) Also, this video was fantastic. :)
@@Andresv586 Yeah, the money's still being made, but it goes to them.
Thank you, it's like giving someone the gift of sight
Thanks Aimee. This is exactly what I’ve been needing lately. Plus I love the subtle product placement and special guest appearance by Rick Beato!
You are the best teacher anyone could dream of! (And on the piano there are so many teachers destroying the lust of playing.)
So refreshing to hear your enthusiasm for teaching Aimee. Keep these wonderful lessons coming!
So GREAT how you address musicality 'by ear' and from the heart, referencing just enough theory to describe what is happening - this is the original liberating function of theory, rather than the seemingly inhibiting, confusing sets of rules or paint-by-number formulas that young aspirants are confronted and turned off by. This is so accessible and meaningful at all levels from beginners to advanced. Also not piano-centric, equally applies to the guitar. The whistlers freaked me out (in a good way), the Rick Beato snippet illustrated your point perfectly... Love how you love and support each other. People like you & Rick make me glad to be alive, sure many feel the same way.... Thank you ever so much, Amy!
@6:20 Singing along (even if poorly) can be very helpful for a beginner to get both hands working together. I don't know why, but it just helps!
The best teacher ever on the Tube 😭🙌😍Thank you so much.
Finally! I’ve been trying to find a video on this foreeeeever
Thank you Aimee ! you are an amazing teacher
I like your suggestion to use the second degree in arpeggios. The second degree (as the ninth) actually shows up well before the seventh in the overtone series, making it a more comfortable partner to the triad than we tend to think.
Madame Nolte, this tutorial was greater than the greatest !!! Sun is shining above your shoulders... Those (sweet) songs are all I (or we from 80s-90s) want to play and the chord variations are so useful..."I do it for you" & "Every breath you take" are so memorial.
This is very good. I play guitar and understand music theory so I can play the piano from an intellectual point of view. I can find the chords on the piano and only want to play an accompaniment but could never make them sound nice just thumping the chord 4 times per bar. This gives me some useful pointers
Merci for this. A great noodling video, so I'll be coming back to this.
Hello from France. I appreciate this kind of video . I learnt a lot of practical things without pain. Merci and Bravo!
Dominique
You explain inversions so well, if you play a C chord, but have a G as the bottom note followed by a C above, and an E above it's still a C Chord. It's about efficiency when changing between chords, in other words, changing between chords with the least amount of movement. I only learnt this recently. I was talking to a studio musician, who has worked with the likes of Keith Emmerson, Rick Wakeman, and Elton John. He told me that EJ, as good as he is, only really has a few tricks to his repertoire, and one of them is a masterful understanding of inversions. I could tell you this studio musician's name, he does appear online, but I can't really. Anyway love this channel, so glad that I stumbled across it.
This is good, basic info for classical piano students who want to branch into playing pop -- and that's a lot of my students! Thanks.
Wonderful. Please do more of these.
Thank you for your goal to make us use our ears to play music instead of our eyes
Sixteenth notes beautiful; more 16th ! Passionate about composing naturally. Humming that is what I do. Yes many people have forgotten that they have the capacity to compose with their ears and by humming.
Excellent video. You are are a true talent. Thank you for sharing your skills. I am trying to learn piano without the aid of a private teacher and it is sometimes difficult to even know what to practice or how to practice. I know some theory(not much) , a few chords, and a couple of scales. Your video gives me direction. Thank you so much.
OK, Just finished my 1st listening to thiso vide & got the message. Use my ears, apply these ideas and then start making up my own patterns. Thanks for your inspiring mentorship, Aimee!
Thank you, Amy - another great video.
I think these conversational lessons work really well - they are interesting and inviting and explain lots of concepts and styles without a lot of scary jargon, yet also contain so much information in them that they bear watching several times.
Thanks Aimee! Its very difficult to me play by ear. Your tips are helping me so much.....
as a guitarist im a budding piano player /very helpful as always
Very good tutorial girl thanks i am learning
So helpful to see the styles of play that are presented in this video , thanks so much! Aimee.
Loved this one so much! Thank you!
Sister Aimee, your voice is so soothing that I drift off into la..la..la..land, where rivers sing and trees offer their sparkling fruit... Ok. Need to focus now.
A LOT to digest in this video. At 8:05 to 8:35 you make that stretch from C to the high E and high D look simple. At 8:30 to 8:35 I see you're even holding down the low C and G while hitting those high notes. Easier with the right hand than the left, so very impressive.
Thanks for the great video, Aimee!!
This is the series I was yearning for! Thank you Aime
I could listen to Amy talk for hours, would not matter what it was about. She is easy on the ears...and 👀’s!!
Thank you for sharing, you have such a pleasant and clear teaching style. We now find ourselves in a situation that would be perfect to write many songs. Would really like to learn more about songwriting process for us who are new at this. Would love to learn more about chord progression, improvisation techniques, song structure etc.
Fantastic, invaluable lesson for pianists, thanks Aimee, keep up with this type of contents please!
I love your channel Amy, I only play strings but I am grateful for your expertise and your willingness to share in my musical journey..... thanks again!!!!
Fantastic Lesson
Great wishes from Germany
Thank you, Aimee. Great suggestions for breaking up the chords with a variety of hand patterns for us autodidactic newbies.
Wonderful! This is worth one term of music theory lessons. Thank you so much.
Very Nice Madame! You're awesome! I've learned a new technic in improving my accompaniment method... Thanks a lot for this and hoping for more valuable teaching method from you.. God Bless!
One of the best lessons on you tube, let me say it again, You’re AMAZING!!❤️😎
Thanks a lot Aimee, Iam very glad that you have done this invaluable lesson, you have a wonderful way of explaining, fantastic. Keep on with something like this. Thanks a lot.
This gives me some great ideas. Thanks!
I do a lot of music, all original instrumentals and mainly the keys are used with synth sounds and there's very little actual "playing" where it's chords and melody or lead played by me at the same time and I have wanted lately to start to expand and in this video you've got me with plenty to start on, so my thanks!
Peace.
This video helps me a lot to find new possibilities comping songs. Thank you very much!
Nice explanation and voice also very cute....thanks Amy
3:15 yep that's what I do, I use inversions to keep my range small
Nice lesson! You have a beautiful voice!
Excellent Lesson, what a huge amount of information in one video, you are such an Amazing teacher Aimee! I was out of town when I first watched this video and it was the one time since I have been taking skype lessons from you that I did not take my keyboard, and I must say I learned my lesson never to leave home without my keyboard, I was so inspired by this video to move onto the next level of my piano playing and I could not practice, due to being out of town however I did somewhat practice in my head. When I got home, first thing I did was bring up this very informational video of yours. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO!!! You are the BEST!!!!
Absolutely great lesson - brilliant - thanks!
I could listen to you play all day
Hello from France!
Thank you for this vidéo that brings me a lot of ideas for arpeggios. After a few minutes trying to play some like you do and show us slowly in the video (great teaching!), i now feel much better and i can count beats more easily.
so, MERCI and BRAVO.
Thanks for simplifying something I have always wanted to learn.
Exactly what I've needed thank you!
"...from your own heart..." Thanks Aimee
Thanks a lot Aimee great teacher.
After learning a lot of different chord progression building methods, this was exactly what I was looking for next! :D Thanks a lot!!
Aimee, the actual parts of reading and writing music are not very many. 7 and the like. So what you are doing is simplifying how the 7 refers to all songs on the piano in this case. Once the pattern of 7 for example is recognized as not very many then reading and writing music will be easier to understand. I have always found it easier to remember the chord progressions and lyrics of a song when I am being physical with them by playing drums or an instrument along with the song. Being physical helps memory and somehow simplifies understanding and creativity. You are fun to learn with as well as be creative with as you teach. So thanks. And I just think you're great. Shalome.
Great lesson, Aimee.
You are lovely Aimee!!
Superb lesson cheers
Great lesson! Thanks, Aimee.
One concept that may be difficult to embrace is that some of us were trained: chords on the left, melody on the right. And spent years in that framework. I agree that exploiting chords with the right hand is a world changer. But some of us are deeply ingrained in the limited paradigm. I'd love to break free.
VARIETY. What you mention at 9:07 Aimee, it just really sunk in recently how this is what makes one's playing sound a more interesting and "pro".
Thank you Aimee!
I have only been playing for a year, and I hope one day that I will be good enough to take an actual lesson from you. But until that day I want to thank you for the common sense inspiration that you give to me and many like me. (by the way, my piano teacher is very impressed with you)
Delightful Aimee. Thank you.
Great teacher.
Really wonderful lesson, thanks for sharing ! Lee
Time to put down my John Thompson Modern Course and sit with this video for a few hours. Thanks Aimee!!
Ur a beautiful singer too... thank u for that and i Love u dear
thank you Aimee. Timeless lesson
So funny! I'm mainly a guitarist/bassist and watch Rick B.'s channel all the time, so when you played that clip of him, I kept thinking there was some kind of glitch! Love this vid -- so much great info! Just sub'ed -- can't wait to watch more :)
O, wonderful video again. So inspirating, I love you.
Very good video. I've played many years and also professionally but learned some new chord/rhythmic patterns I never tried before. Kudos to you Aimee!! Thanks!
Thankyou from the very bottom of my heart Aimee. I’m so excited I can’t wait to learn all these patterns improvising is so difficult for me so I’m very grateful You have no idea. Yay have a great day Jaynee 😍🎶💕🎹👍✌️
Love it, nice singing too ♥️👏