💡💡FREE COURSE PREVIEW: bit.ly/3MMnEyh 🎹 1 Year Piano Success Blueprint: bit.ly/4aDd07h 🌟 Piano Pedaling Course: bit.ly/48S75JF 🗒 Practice Makes Permanent Book: bit.ly/4ciVlTe ✔ Get Weekly Practice Tips To Your Inbox: bit.ly/3Rwk3aN 🎹 REACH YOUR PIANO GOALS: thepianokeys.com 📕Master Piano Chords With My Book: bit.ly/3yRbqRj
I have two metronomes. One a portable battery-powered device. The other is included within the MobileSheets music reader app on my tablet. I use both. Just did SUPER slow metronome practice, at 12.5% performance speed, on a piece in final stages of memorization. It was very insightful, to say the least. Found a couple of places that broke down because only muscle memory had been carrying me. Then played it again, same super slow speed, with eyes closed. This forced me to "see" the notes in my mind rather than rely on muscle memory. Again very helpful. As agonizing as super slow practice with a metronome can be, it really is a valuable exercise that I should do more often. Marina is right: there are no quick and easy shortcuts, people!
I also use MobileSheets and didn't even think to check for a metronome in it! Thanks for the tip! And congrats on actually DOING the challenge! woohoo!!!
Have been playing since I was 7. Poorly taught but I can read music but not timing. Now 64 and passionate about filling the holes. I have been daily practicing for hours daily for the last 5 years. I try to use a metronome, but the pieces I play now, the beat gets lost. I find myself copying youtube videos and playing along side them to keep time. Any advice on how I could change this? Currently playing Enrique Lazaro pieces. Love his arrangements. Thank you so much for your videos!!
Hmm, without hearing you play, I'm not really sure how to guide you. I do have some rhythm tutorials here on UA-cam, as well as several courses that go in-depth on rhythm. You can always book a short zoom lesson with me so I can give you specific direction on how to overcome this hurdle.
Hello Marina! Thanks for another video that is much more useful than I'd imagined from a cursory glance at the title. I actually never thought of the metronome as something to be viewed in various ways. Rather, in my somewhat muddled thought process, I would set the beat to whatever the time signature indicated and just go with it. However, when looking at the metronome markings without starting the metronome, I was often wrong as to how fast or slow a piece was. Just having you explain it in a logical manner really brought clarity to my (supposed) understanding. I still feel a certain amount of pressure when playing with a metronome which means I'm not using it often enough or correctly. Hmm... At an rate, thanks! 😊
Thank you, R! The pressure you feel (which is totally normal) is exactly why you should be practicing with the metronome. If you feel like you can't keep up with it, or you're making a lot of mistakes, either the speed you chose is too fast, or you're still in the preliminary stages of just learning the notes that you're playing, in which case, you should turn off the metronome and practice in small sections just to get familiar with the notes and movements you need to make.
I watched 15 videos about metronome labels for beginners, and they pull like a Mozart music sheet, then blast the keyboard with their insane RH and LH coordination, then talk like how good this is what they are doing, then proceed to play another piece of highly complex music🤦🏼♂️
Yeah but each song is different and unique in itself....fitting a metronome to a song doesn’t work always. Scales yes, songs no you gotta feel it out and listen to it over and over. So tell me how would you use a metronome to any random song? Example Piano Man vs The Entertainer? Especially songs with groove like blues or boogie woogie.
@@ThePianoKeys right now I’m using the metronome to practice slow on La Campanella since it’s challenging and I want to eradicate any mistakes at the beginning. I think I’m using it right but I don’t know. So I believe one has to learn to use the metronome for all the songs. (Scales and arpeggios are easy with metronome.)
💡💡FREE COURSE PREVIEW: bit.ly/3MMnEyh
🎹 1 Year Piano Success Blueprint: bit.ly/4aDd07h
🌟 Piano Pedaling Course: bit.ly/48S75JF
🗒 Practice Makes Permanent Book: bit.ly/4ciVlTe
✔ Get Weekly Practice Tips To Your Inbox: bit.ly/3Rwk3aN
🎹 REACH YOUR PIANO GOALS: thepianokeys.com
📕Master Piano Chords With My Book: bit.ly/3yRbqRj
Clear and easy to follow guid on efficient practice with the metronome!🎹✨🎹
Thank you, Diane! Glad you like the video! ❤❤
I have two metronomes. One a portable battery-powered device. The other is included within the MobileSheets music reader app on my tablet. I use both. Just did SUPER slow metronome practice, at 12.5% performance speed, on a piece in final stages of memorization. It was very insightful, to say the least. Found a couple of places that broke down because only muscle memory had been carrying me. Then played it again, same super slow speed, with eyes closed. This forced me to "see" the notes in my mind rather than rely on muscle memory. Again very helpful. As agonizing as super slow practice with a metronome can be, it really is a valuable exercise that I should do more often. Marina is right: there are no quick and easy shortcuts, people!
I also use MobileSheets and didn't even think to check for a metronome in it! Thanks for the tip! And congrats on actually DOING the challenge! woohoo!!!
Lovely Marina ! You are a great teacher and a great math teacher ❤
Thank you! 😃
The best teacher and making music theory easy to understand ! Thank you so much
Wow, thank you!
Ur a good teacher than my teacher l don't understand her in class but for u l understand
Thanks so much, I'm glad you're able to understand me!
This was helpful, thanks.
You're welcome!
Loved all your videos very much and thanks 😊 🙏
So glad!
Have been playing since I was 7. Poorly taught but I can read music but not timing. Now 64 and passionate about filling the holes. I have been daily practicing for hours daily for the last 5 years. I try to use a metronome, but the pieces I play now, the beat gets lost. I find myself copying youtube videos and playing along side them to keep time. Any advice on how I could change this? Currently playing Enrique Lazaro pieces. Love his arrangements. Thank you so much for your videos!!
Hmm, without hearing you play, I'm not really sure how to guide you. I do have some rhythm tutorials here on UA-cam, as well as several courses that go in-depth on rhythm. You can always book a short zoom lesson with me so I can give you specific direction on how to overcome this hurdle.
I love your Channel , and i hope you keep being this fabulous person
Wow, thank you! Your comment put a huge smile on my face!!
Hello Marina! Thanks for another video that is much more useful than I'd imagined from a cursory glance at the title. I actually never thought of the metronome as something to be viewed in various ways. Rather, in my somewhat muddled thought process, I would set the beat to whatever the time signature indicated and just go with it. However, when looking at the metronome markings without starting the metronome, I was often wrong as to how fast or slow a piece was. Just having you explain it in a logical manner really brought clarity to my (supposed) understanding. I still feel a certain amount of pressure when playing with a metronome which means I'm not using it often enough or correctly. Hmm... At an rate, thanks! 😊
Thank you, R! The pressure you feel (which is totally normal) is exactly why you should be practicing with the metronome. If you feel like you can't keep up with it, or you're making a lot of mistakes, either the speed you chose is too fast, or you're still in the preliminary stages of just learning the notes that you're playing, in which case, you should turn off the metronome and practice in small sections just to get familiar with the notes and movements you need to make.
Great video, very helpful thank you 👍
You're welcome!
Beautiful hair style my dear prof 🌹😘🌹😘👍🎹
Thank you! :)
Thanks so much, Dan!
I wish you were my teacher!
That is so sweet, thank you!
❤
what isn't one click supposed to be a quarter note
I answer that question in the video.
Can you come to Australia to tutor me? 🙃
I'm on my way! 🤣🤣
@@ThePianoKeys on that note, I don't even think the borders are open, COVID and all 🤔
I watched 15 videos about metronome labels for beginners, and they pull like a Mozart music sheet, then blast the keyboard with their insane RH and LH coordination, then talk like how good this is what they are doing, then proceed to play another piece of highly complex music🤦🏼♂️
Yeah but each song is different and unique in itself....fitting a metronome to a song doesn’t work always. Scales yes, songs no you gotta feel it out and listen to it over and over. So tell me how would you use a metronome to any random song? Example Piano Man vs The Entertainer? Especially songs with groove like blues or boogie woogie.
You are confusing practice with performance. You can absolutely use the metronome to practice any piece or song, then turn it off and feel the music.
@@ThePianoKeys right now I’m using the metronome to practice slow on La Campanella since it’s challenging and I want to eradicate any mistakes at the beginning. I think I’m using it right but I don’t know. So I believe one has to learn to use the metronome for all the songs. (Scales and arpeggios are easy with metronome.)