How to memorize a piece of music for piano? - Greg Niemczuk Tutorial - Process of memorization.
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
- #pianotutorial #memory #piano
#pianotutorial #nocturne #legato
You have asked me to record a video about memorization and how I approach a new piece, so I decided to share with you my thoughts about what is my strategy of memorizing. I chose a completely unknown piece for me - Sibelius Piano Sonata. You can find a score on the internet and try to memorize it together with me. I hope you will find it useful.
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Greg. You are a true gem to the piano lovers!!! You are that kind of guy where I feel, he WANTS to help people desperately. There are not so many teachers or pianists in general out there where I feel the same level of helping hands. Truely amazing!!! 😊
Thank you! Wow, yes....you read me totally. I sincerely hope that what works for me can help many people who share the same passion with me which is love towards music.
Greg is a wonderful, passionate teacher!
what a gifted teacher
"Forgetting is the part of memorization" .... Thank you, Greg!
Yes!!!! Realized this itself changed my life!
These is the last step from unconsciously unskilled to unconsciously skilled.
I love this video, it is amazing that you let us into your "actual" practice session. Most piano teachers would NEVER allow this they want to you believe that they have some talent that you do not. So thank you, thank you, thank you. I will re-listen to this video many times.
Thank you!!! Yes, maybe there are a few geniuses but I'm not one of them
This video really is helping me not with the piano but with my 10 button single row diatonic melodeon accordion for Cajun French folk music for which there is no sheet music.
How wonderful!
It was very engaging practice in real time! It would be much easier if you have listened the piece before I assume . It was an eye opening showing. Thanks.
Thank you for showing your process instead of talking about it. It was great to see!! 🎉
Thanks for watching. I'm happy it was interesting for you!
It is fascinating and VERY helpful seeing you doing what I struggle with all the time! Thanks a lot!
My pleasure. Thank you!
I think this the best piece of advice I got along my adventure with the piano. Thank you so much!!!!!!!
So happy to hear that!
Thank you for this insightful video. I have played piano for years, but struggle to play something from memory when asked to do so. I look forward to relearning / memorizing piano pieces with your technique. You are extremely talented - thank you for sharing.
I really hope it will open a new chapter in your life!
Excellent. I hate memorising but I used to be able to by just playing the pieces a lot. I will try this sensible method
I highly recommend it!
Btw. I also don't like memorizing. It physically hurts!
Hello Greg, thank you so much for showing the memorization mechanism inside out! It is the first time someone shows it to me and I feel I can learn to play without score someday!
I believe you can!!!
It was so interesting for me - I've always thought that you should know the piece quite well before you try to memorize it - this video opened my eyes - Thank you! :)
Thanks very much for this valuable lesson.
Thanks a lot for your lesson. It´s very important for self-taught amateur piano players like me. Wish you all the best.
Excellent example of persistence paying off!! Well done!! Jan
Thank you Jan!
Hi Greg, another highly instructive and motivational video, thank you. I recognise practicing pssages with your eyes closed, to let the neurologic connections do their thing, rather than constantly using your eyes only, which, as my teacher says, are too slow.
Very good point!
This is so helpful, I hope I can start memorising the piece finally by heart and not my muscle. ❤
I highly recommend!
How fascinating and inspiring
This video is treasure 🤩🤩 I couldn‘t wait the whole week until I came back from vacation s I could play along the video. Thank you Greg
Good technique for memorizing by playing each hand separately. I also close my eyes or look away from the keyboard when practicing and memorize the feel of the keyboard.
Thanks!
Thanks so much for this lessons Greg. This is so helpful for us, fellow pianists, musicians or just music lovers, and I admire your iniciative so much. Greetings from Latin America!
Thank you so much for sharing your experience....I found your vidéo when i was desperate about my practise....i wanted to learn in two weeks four pieces, and I found myself very slow....hahaha ! With your advices, I'm now more confortable with my memory, one week has passed, three days of practise without piano, et voilà !!! ...the phrase you said " even the error is part of the learning process" was an enormeous help..... thank you again !!!
I'm so happy it is helpful for you!!!!!
Bien le bonjour à mes ami(e)s polonais(e)s !
Djiendobré, Cher professeur Niemczuk,
Witam !
'Djenkouié' ! Merci pour ce tutoriel sur comment mémoriser un morceau de musique. La chose pour moi la plus importante, c'est la lecture à vue (j'avais un professeur extraordinaire pour cela à l'IJD). On l'oublie bien souvent, mais c'est LE cours fondamental à maîtriser avant tout autre. Il faut savoir déchiffrer à deux mains, même si c'est très difficile à faire. Une fois, que la lecture à vue est assimilée aux deux mains s'entame alors en effet ce travail détaillé d'apprentissage par coeur que vous proposez. Bravo à vous !
Personnellement, pour pratiquer mon apprentissage des notes, bien que je ne suis pas un exemple à suivre, et souvent je manque de temps, je fais ce même travail d'apprentissage directement avec mes deux mains, en me concentrant sur l'une, puis une fois que j'ai obtenu ce que je veux à l'une, je passe alors à l'autre. Je ne joue jamais mains séparées et c'est un tort. Cela me prend beaucoup plus de temps, mais développe d'autres réflexes essentiels. Il faut durant des heures et des heures de répétitions et de pratiques, travailler sa mémoire. Ce qui nécessite d'avoir un piano. Comme pour la composition.
Apprendre par coeur les deux mains séparément, comme vous le proposez, permet de gagner beaucoup plus de temps, surtout pour les débutants, mais cela reste valable aussi pour les pros. Car il faut bannir la fausse note par tous les moyens ! Et je m'en excuse bien souvent. Encore une fois, bravo pour votre enthousiasme, et vive la Pologne, un pays que j'adore, et que j'ai visité en 1995. Selon un voyage historique, que je n'oublierai jamais :) Dziękuję ! Et Bien à vous (...) Titi
p.s.: la vidéo est un tout petit peu longue, mais je la recommande très volontiers. Merci...
Thank you for these words!!! Merci!
Thanks for this lesson on a very necessary skill. I have been teaching this same system (with minor variations) for decades now. Like you, I had to figure it out on my own! And I must also thank you for introducing me to the Sibelius sonata.😀
Thank you for showing us your honest process. Nothing can replace the hard work. You really are fabulous 🙂⭐❤🙏🏼
Professor, thanks a lot. You have shown how you analyze a piece of music in order to memorise it.
Your musical brain works fast, enabling you to mentally work with big chunks of music. One thing I think is going on, but you are not explicit about is that you are also building up an understanding of what the composer is trying to express, so the whole has some musical shape and emotional flow.
Thanks! I very much appreciate your instruction and demonstration.
Thank you so much!
Merci!
Merci!
Panie Grzegorzu, dziękuję za ten film! Brakowało mi takich praktycznych porad! Wiele z tych rzeczy o których Pan mówi stosuję, ale jest kilka takich, które zainspirowały mnie do tego, aby zrobić na sobie eksperyment i zobaczyć czy i u mnie sprawdzą się 😊 Za jakiś czas pozwolę sobie napisać. Myślę, że ciekawie byłoby również pokazać zapamiętywanie utworów, które ciężko grać osobno (partie obu rąk przechodzą i łączą się ze sobą). Z serca dziękuję, że dzieli się Pan tak cennym doświadczeniem, do tego jeszcze za darmo…Czuję olbrzymią wdzięczność! ❤️❤️
Cieszę się!!! Wierzę, że to pomoże!
Yes, following...Nice going! Thank you!
A piano professor..that's great too! Your lectures are very good👍🏻
Excellent tutorial and I admire your courage for taking on a two-voice right hand like that. I need to watch it several times however....!
This is so enlightening to see your process on memorizing! Thank you for sharing your methods. A few things I took away from this was, learn hands separately from beginning to end, taking note of chords and intervals, playing with musicality with each phrase, looking away from the music and testing your memory and taking breaks. There was much more, but those are things that stood out to me. It's one thing to make a video just describing what you do, but this is so much more motivating to take us along for the ride as you work through learning the music. Thank you, thank you, thank you! 👍👍👍👍🎹🎹🎹🎹
Wow, thank you!!! I'm really happy that it works for you and I can't wait to hear how will it change your memorizing process!!!!
Fine... very interesting... I try to memorize your name!😎
Lol
I stumbled on your lesson on You Tube - and I am very grateful I did. Thank you so much. I'll follow if you have more advice. Always learning. All the best. David
So happy you're here!
Greg, I really wish you were here in the US, Houston. I would have taken piano lessons from you once a week.
I'm teaching on Skype. I have a few students from the US and it actually works much better than expected! If you want we can try
Drop me an email at gnpiano@aol.com
Greg, being nervous has haunted me my whole life! You inspire me! Playing each hand separately of a piece while preparing to perform! Thank you!!!
You're welcome! Thank you for your words!
Dear Greg, I had problems ordering this sonata in F. Major Opus 12 on internet. But I ordered it here at the Library, in Dole. They have received it. I will go on Tuesday to get the partition. I am happy to try to learn it. Thank you for your wonderful teaching. Have a lovely week-end.
What an amazing professor. I am jealous of your students
Thank you!
We can always try online, it actually works very well.
Wow, this is super helpful!
Thank you again for sharing your ideas and advice, I have been working with your methods for a few days now and it makes a big difference.
Take care! 😊
Thank you so much!
I play the violin, but got a lot out of your video - thank you for sharing 😊
Dziękuję bardzo za ten film!
Another amazing video! Thanks for that! The way I memorize is similar to that, but I've come to develop it in an irregular way. Hear about it from a great Pianist as you are, and knowing it's a great way to apply it systematically, helps me a lot, besides being greatly pleasant! Congratulations for the courage to record it in real time! 😃👏
Thank you so much!
Thank you. Memorizing are hard for me. This was really helpful.
Fascinating! Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom!
I Hope it will be useful!
I am actually working with it right now, in this very moment and it opens up new pathways in my brain!
I am a harpist, so everything you teach can be applied 1:1.
One more piece of feedback:
it’s amazing how learning the hands separately structures the process and makes learning more efficient.
It uses far less brain power and is less exhausting.
What a pleasant surprise.
Thank you again! 🥰
@@nadiabirkenstock_harpsong YES!!! I'm using it all the time and this way I learned 1000% more repertoire that I would learn while working the other way....
Panie Grzegorzu, jest Pan nie tylko genialnym Pianistą, ale również genialnym Nauczycielem! Bezcenny film! Deklasuje wszystkie tutoriale, które do tej pory widziałem (również te płatne). Baaardzo Panu dziękuję! 🙏👏👏👏
Ojej....nie wiem co powiedzieć na tak wspaniały komplement.... Ja dzielę się tym, co sam wymyśliłem i wypracowałem. Dziękuję!
THANK YOU
Great instructional video. Thank you Greg. This method requires a deep knowledge of music theory, chords, and chord progression. To all my friends on this channel, an investment in a good comprehensive book on music theory will help us all in analyzing pieces and following Greg’s method. Also, breaking up each piece into phrases and learning it phrase by phrase, each hand alone, will lead to successes in learning. My teacher used to tell me that she had to transpose some pieces that she played into different keys, when she was a student at the conservatory. Transposing a piece forces the performer to learn the chords and their progression. Thanks again Greg. I always enjoy your videos.
Wonderful comment. Thank you so much!
Thank you, Greg! It's so interesting, look, how practice another pianists. You have a really good idea to learn one hand and not two hand together. I always learn two hands together, but it's too much time.
Thanks for watching! My life has changed since I started doing that. So I highly recommend it!
I am very grateful especially for this subject of this video. You are the only one person in my life who explained how to do it, thus my teachers - I had several ones, they did not even teach me musical theory and never gave me any advice how to play by heart, it is very sad because I could be much further ....So big thank you!
I feel so happy that I could give you this important guidance. I feel exactly the same like you in that matter..... That's the reason why I made this video!
for me I'm able to sight read with both hands and depending on the score I will sight read at least one page, slower at first and then the next day I sight read the same page and it will be faster until eventually the tempo is correct to the score. Interesting different methods to use, like yours is good for stage performance while mine is good for self entertainment at home
I totally agree with you! Your way of learning is perfect when you just want to play from the score and play for yourself without any stress of a public performance on concerts.
Maestro I just found your website and I am thrilled.
Welcome!!!!
Thank you for the demonstration. Seeing you struggling through the piece one phrase at a time is motivating. I've heard these recommendations from my teacher but it's hard to switch habits and apply new approaches. Now I will have a visual memory of how it's done and it would be easier to actually do it.
This reminds me of how I learnt pieces as a child, before I was "taught" (compelled) to learn them by repeated playing from the score, instead. This sonata looks actually so easy that it might respond to being read through several times in detail, away from the piano, before working with the hands! And it is easier to understand both hands together than separately, for instance in the passage at the bottom of the first page, where the harmony makes more sense with the left hand included from the start. (I haven't tried to play a note of it yet, so this may not be right, but what I hear in my head works like that). On the other hand, I will try to apply your method to more difficult pieces where I can't play either hand in my head, let alone both (say Chopin Op10 No4).
Yes, I strongly recommend it. Usually I'm memorizing hands separately even easier pieces, as this gives me much more self confidence
like sharing
こんにちは。日本で、いまはひとりでピアノの練習をしています。昔から音が聞こえ、そのモデルに沿って勉強をしていました。
今動画を見ると、ルービンシュタインや、こないだの発見ではリヒテルのバッハやベートーヴェンピアノソナタなどがモデルにあったようで、ほかにも、ショパンのバラードやポロネーズやワルツなどあらゆる曲でモデルが弾く音が聞かれ、ときに、ナレーションが入り、ショパンが弾いた曲の原曲だとか、これをショパンの書きたかったようにひかせてあげるから弾いて世に出して、とかいわれ、自分は大した地位でもないので、いちど彼の母国のかたにお聞きしてもらいたいなと思っていました。せめてこんなエピソードだけでも。まだ、いろいろと練習中なので、あとあまりにモデルが激しくなるので、自分の弾きたいようにひきたいと言ったらそうしてもらえていま、楽譜をきちんと暗記して引くプロセスにちょうどいるところです。ありがとうございます。古川絵梨 Ellie Furukawa wrote today 27/7/2023
Using your approach, i was able to learn chopin nouvelle etude no 2 very fast. I would love to watch your analysis on this kinda "underrated" chopin etude.
This video really help me to learn how to memorize a piece with confidence. So far I memorize by hands memory but always forgot when I play in front of others. I will try to follow your guideline and will practice. Thank you!
So glad to find this tutorial. I am a self-taught piano player. No problem with reading sheet music. But enormous problem in memorizing. In fact, I don't think I can memorize any piece in its entirety. Thanks for the advice. I will try to follow to see whether it works for me. You are amazing.
Hey Greg, many thanks for this really important video. I'am a piano teacher in Switzerland, learnd memorizing years before as optimal methode for me but forget, to teach momorizng my stundents. So I will do it in the future. Cheers Martin
Hello Martin! I just saw your comment. Let me know if it was helpful!
I will play a concert in Tonhalle in Zurich this year! Check my website www.niemczuk.com for more details (it's not there yet but it should be announced soon)! Hope to meet you!
@@gregniemczuk Hey Greg, I will follow your tour and I try to come to Zurich and maybe we can meet us. Thx for your reply. See you 😄
@@martinsenn3607 it will be on September the 17th!
To memorize a piece of music is like solving a rubics cube! Thank you for this video. It helped me a lot! 🎹
Exactly!
Dear Greg, As a closet composer pianist masterclasses like the one you just gave are of the greatest value to me. It really is allot of work to accurately memorize pieces! I am not ashamed to say this is the part I have the least patience for. What has helped me personally is practice relative solfeggio since it really helps us understand the context of the music. God bless !
Yes. Also for me it's not pleasent. I prefer the work that comes after memorizing process
Hi Greg, it's kind of stunning to me how you first memorize and then practise....do you keep the score in front of you while practising? I find that even after a few months of practise with score, I find I have been practising a wrong note here and there. Or is it just me not paying full attention right at the beginning? 😄
@@masadiceronio4577 hi, I try not to have the score in front of me because than me memory doesn't work they way I want. I prefer to practice difficult parts without the score, small parts, of course sometimes you must double check if all the notes are correct!
@@gregniemczuk thank you. Makes sense
Thank you for sharing 👍🎹
Thank you so much Greg, I just discovered all your videos and they are so excellent , especially on Chopin, to let us go deeper into the pieces . Please keep making these videos . Greetings from the UK!
Thank you so much dear Kathryn!
Memory playing is a very important aspect. If we mémorise is we REALLY KNOW IT! In my opinion, after teaching for some 55 years, is that the music becomes a barrier or a fence or obstacle between the music and the player. Trying to perform WITH music in front of you is HORRIBLE. It never comes out well.
All my exams were played from memory, thanks to my teacher who insisted this. Her teacher was a pupil of Liszt! Say no more!
She was so right in making us all do exams from memory and to do all performance from memory. She had many great students.
As well as doing when Greg is saying here, I read and study the score AWAY from the piano and commit the notes to my memory by “playing “ the music in my head with eyes closed. This works wonders! What do you think about this Greg? Also after memorising the hands separate, what’s the best way to add the both hands to the memorisation?
I am always awestruck by blind pianists. And there are so many who are so excellent. How on earth do they do it! They don't even have a score.
Yes!!! I totally agree! And I'm preparing another video exactly about this practicing and memorizing AWAY from the piano.
@@gregniemczuk I look forward to the video Greg!
Thanks a lot Master Greg Niemczuk for showing me ^°°^ The ®memorizing way ~ ``La voie 🎹🕴️💃🇨🇵 á suivre..`` J'y vais de ce pas pratiquer •√ Consolation N°3 de Liszt ✓°🙏Merci beaucoup 🙏🍂🙏🍃🇱🇦💖
Thank you, this is very helpful.
You've mentioned in the video that you force yourself to forget already memorized parts while in the process of memorizing?
But, you haven't really elaborated that, and I must admit I don't understand at all how can you force yourself to forget something you've memorized?
Could you please explain that just a little bit?
Thanks!
Yes of course. Forcing to forget means that after Memorizing e.g. 8 bars you go on and memorize the next part and than the next, than you make 5 minutes break, and than WITHOUT THE SCORE you're trying to play from the beginning what you've just learned. For me in 99% I forgot a lot of things.... And this is exactly what speeds up the memorization process for me. I recommend it!
@@gregniemczuk Thank you very much! 🙂
Hello Greg, thank you so much for this lesson. I tried yesterday then this morning and it works. This is very amazing. It opens the door to some more mastery. Now, I plan to learn Burgmuller opus 100
Fantastic!!!!! Congratulations!!!!
@@gregniemczuk I have the first two studies by heart 😉 even if it’s a very simple score, to me it’s a huge progress
@@ChrisSquaredTwo bravo!!!
Hi Greg , now I have #3 to #6. The adventure goes on😊
@@ChrisSquaredTwo I'm so proud of you!
Bardzo się cieszę, że zrobił Pan taki wartościowy film, dzięki któremu wielu szczególnie młodych pianistów, będzie wiedziało jak lepiej zapamiętywać utwory, bo nie jest to takie oczywiste jakby się mogło wydawać, sam mam bardzo podobny sposób zapamiętywania, jednak bardzo przyjemnie oglądało mi się ten materiał, pozdrawiam serdecznie :)
PS: Fajnie, że wziął Pan utwór Sibeliusa, uwielbiam tego kompozytora i grałem mnóstwo jego utworów :D
Bardzo dobry sposób zapamiętywania ale też inaczej się gra utwory których melodie dobrze znasz a inaczej te które grasz od zera. Bo w tych pierwszych nawet jak zapomnisz danej sekcji to znasz melodie i wiesz czy grać wyżej czy niżej klawisz i jak naciśniesz ten dobry to się przypomina dalszy ciąg. Dobrze też podczas zapamiętywania wymyślać sobie jakąś historie w wyobraźni wtedy dużo łatwiej wchodzi bo angażujesz palce + słuch i wzrok widząc w głowie dany obraz historii. Mnemotechniki są dobrze znane i ludzie zapamiętują bardzo dużo rzeczy w krótkim czasie tylko trzeba wiedzieć jak :) Ja pamiętam jak się uczyłem do szkoły liczby Pi po przecinku to od 0 do 100 na daną liczbę miałem jakiś przedmiot wymyślony i układałem historyjkę do tego. Finalnie zapamiętałem chyba ok 600 cyfr a to i tak krótko się uczyłem sam byłem w szoku jak to wchodzi. Wiadomo że na początku jest dziwnie i mózg szaleje ale z czasem można się bardzo dużo rzeczy nauczyć na pamięć i to na długo bo przy powtórce robisz to tylko w głowie i można powtórzyć bardzo szybko tak samo jak przypominasz sobie jakąś sytuacje z życia która trwała nie wiem 30minut a ty w sekundę wiesz co i jak było po kolei.
Thank you!
I’ve only learned pieces via muscle memory and by heart. I never was able to read sheet music (since I never tried) but used a program to help me learn pieces quicker than if you were to try and break them down by yourself (as an amateur, it’s a godsend for learning repertoire I adore - that’s out of my reach otherwise.)
could you share with program you use? I'm in a similar situation and I use Synthesia to learn and memorize a piece without knowing sheet music at all, which I find too hard for me.
I am not a pianist but when I took piano as harmonic instrument I always played everything by memory because it was easier and natural to learn the technique without reading and then it was harder if I wanted to play reading it xd I am realizing that making conections of motivs and such to read "chunks" of information would probably allowed me to read and maintain the level of playing
But well, playing by memory becomes easy when you are learning if you never read the sheet music when you repeat something to make the technique/digitation/etc stick to you
I like so much greg s Chanel bécause,lot of thing ...extra great playing..live and vidéo s personnal,and teaching for piano s player and beyond that ) l am guitarist ..gréât source of inspiring !
Thank you 💓💓💓💓💓
👍👍
Thanks, really interesting... The same process works for an amateur singer. There is melody (or voice score), and behind that is the sound 'scape'. Learning and remembering is very much the same.
Of course, half of what you say or do means nothing to me/us.
This is EXACTLY what I was hoping to learn. Your method is working already! I can't thank you enough.
I'm SUPER HAPPY!!!!
@@gregniemczuk Me too! I'm just an amateur, and until recently I only played chamber music. So, I never needed to memorize anything. But, now I am participating in Tonebase classes and everyone seems to memorize their solo repertoire. So I need to learn how to do this! Your video was exactly what I need to learn. I am starting to learn the Mazurka 59/2, so I'll use your method today. Dziękuję bardzo!
Mind to explain a bit on pedalling? We should be looking forward to.
Ok!
Druga. Bardzo dziekuje! 💐 I serdeczne pozdrowienia.
It works 😊
This approach remembers me the Karl Leimer's one. Good video. Thank you!
Could you please elaborate on what you're doing when you play mentally? I've read this practice advice from many sources before but I always struggle with this step. I can't visualize myself playing every note in detail at the keyboard. At best I can just see a hazy image of a few fingers playing a few notes. I also struggle to hear the piece in my head (my ear training and sight singing abilities are non-existent).
I'll make another video about that
@@gregniemczuk thank you, I'm looking forward to it! I've been watching your videos every evening the past couple of days and I'm learning so much. Your UA-cam channel is an absolute goldmine.
Super 🙏🙏🙏
I am so glad I came across your youtube channel. You are an AMAZING teacher! I watched this entire video and was totally engrossed by what you did in real time. I am sure not many pianists will put themselves through it, so i just wanted you to know I appreciate your doing it. I could feel your intense mental focus especially when you closed your eyes and paused to remember. You are so spontaneous and authentic. What an inspiration you are to me - a hobby pianist who struggles with keeping time and memorising. Thank you so much, Greg for sharing your knowledge with us. I will be watching and liking your previous videos, as I go through them. Much appreciation, Arnold (Australia)
Hi Arnold. Thank you so much! I love teaching!
I'm preparing another video simular to this one called :Mental Practice, in which I will be doing that in real time but away from the piano!
I admire piano amateurs. Keep going and loving the music!
Thank you very much 💗
Thanks
It depends.... My music school required two recitals a semester and a final large recital of memorized music. As a tubist I was very jealous of flute players. They could play all these easy to play classic tunes and forms whereas my literature sounded like a traffic jam. So, I memorized my music visually, in the library. I never played recitals "by ear" though I played professionally for half a century by ear, I memorized recital music.
"How to use punctuation incorrectly." This phrasing, tho' it begins with "how," is not an interrogative. It essentially means' "This is how to do X." Hence, it should end with a period.
Why do so many people unthinkingly put a question mark at the end just because sometimes "how" indicates a question?
Thanks!
Thank you!!!!
I had a real pleasure to see your video:absolutely important for students and teachers!!!
so did I, and absolutely important and joyfull for me as an old churchorganist and pianolover.
what are some exercises for finger independence?
it is the thing i struggle with the most and is my biggest roadblock learning piano
I recommend Hanon. But I will make a special video about finger independence!
Thank you for showing your process. Ron Fernandez
Thank you for the comment dear Ron
Good tutorial, thank you!
At 5:09 CORRECTION: The FIRST action should ALWAYS BE: GO TO YOU TUBE AND LISTEN TO AT LEAST 3 SEASONED PLAYERS. For THAT will allow you to get a full grasp a. WHAT THE PIECE IS ALL ABOUT and b. THE LEVEL OF ESTIMATED DIFFICULTY: "maybe I should wait another 3 or 4 months and do something less difficult in order to gradually slide into this NOW possibly a little too difficult for me."
Yes, good point, thank you.
Thank you for this very instructive video. Do you have some other videos telling what happends when putting the hands together ? This would be so helpful to me...
Oh, I don't. But I will do it!
Thank you so much!
I see, that is very useful. I was always in trouble to practice. I'll try it immediately!
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