Wow! All in one… so easy to understand! I wonder why some teachers make all of these concepts seem so complex. A masterful lesson. For piano lessons without headaches…Mr Huw Rees. Thank you.
I'm starting piano today, and besides some very basic stuff in school I've never played before, this was super helpful but also made me realise the key signature completely changes how notes are read on my music. I see now why knowing your scales is super important (one of the reasons at least).
Simple complete tutorial of scales, fingerings using Circle of fifths in one video . Perfect ! Thank you so much very appreciated. Please discard my comment a year ago. NBG
your classes are really fantastic dear Sir.. expecting more and more from you.. I am an Indian Carnatic Musician.. Thank You... Now Learning Western Piano Music form you...
Hey please can u make a video in between this video and the previous video.... I m facing problems to bridge the gap. I can play all which u showed in the previous video(i got to know everything from you only,earlier i knew nothing) Even in this video i can say that u r explaining well...but my brain lost the momentum.
Like your tutorial very much but I wish you had count your fingering as you go on ´verbally,´ it would help so much and gain progress faster. I lost a lot of time just to figured it out , stopped G left hand. NBG
The circle of fifths shows us how many sharps and flats are there in the key which we want to play. It also shows relations between all the keys. So we can visualize what will sound good together, like keys which are close to each other in the circle will sound good together but not if they are further apart.
It's really complicated. I don't want to sound bratty but my dad teaches violin and he said because if it's was F and not F# then it would be a diminished 5 not a perfect fifth and you have to have a perfect fifth to reach the requirements of the circle of fifths. Yeah I don't even get what I just said so don't even worry about it.
A flat note is just one semi-tone lower than the natural note and a sharp note is one semi-tone higher than its natural note. So Gb is just one semi-tone lower than G. And G# is one semi-tone higher than G. If you look at your piano it makes much more sense. Hope that helps
If you mean the way the a G# sounds compared to an Ab then there is *no difference. *(But if you call a G# an Ab on music sheets, you will probably loose music friends because of this. You can easily tell which to call as it will denote the note with a # or b after the note.)
Wow! All in one… so easy to understand! I wonder why some teachers make all of these concepts seem so complex. A masterful lesson. For piano lessons without headaches…Mr Huw Rees. Thank you.
Such a brilliant brilliant video. I learned more here then any other video I have watched.
I'm starting piano today, and besides some very basic stuff in school I've never played before, this was super helpful but also made me realise the key signature completely changes how notes are read on my music. I see now why knowing your scales is super important (one of the reasons at least).
Simple complete tutorial of scales, fingerings using Circle of fifths in one video .
Perfect ! Thank you so much very appreciated. Please discard my comment
a year ago. NBG
your classes are really fantastic dear Sir.. expecting more and more from you.. I am an Indian Carnatic Musician.. Thank You... Now Learning Western Piano Music form you...
Thank you so much for your classes. Its been very helpful in my learning.
Love it, now waiting for the one on the minor scales.
brilliant video i leran well very clear lesson thank you dear
You are most awesome music teacher in whole UTube
Thank you so much for all the videos.. Its great for piano beginner like me.. :)
Thank you so much for your videos sir 😊🙏🙏
You teach very good...thank you!
Nice explanation 👍
Excellent tutorial !
this is hard mahn
Thank you sir..
God bless you more. 😊😊😊
Hey please can u make a video in between this video and the previous video....
I m facing problems to bridge the gap. I can play all which u showed in the previous video(i got to know everything from you only,earlier i knew nothing)
Even in this video i can say that u r explaining well...but my brain lost the momentum.
Exactly he's like missing an intro to this lesson I'm completely lost
THaTs racist
Thanks I learned key signatures
Thx mah booooi
Pls upload the covers of your recent tutorials.
04:45 "G major happens to be the next most complex scale". Did you mean "the simplest"?
Thank you!
Like your tutorial very much but I wish you had count your fingering as you
go on ´verbally,´ it would help so much and gain progress faster.
I lost a lot of time just to figured it out , stopped G left hand. NBG
What is the circle of fifths do??? I'm kinda lost. Might have to rewatch it again until I get it.
The circle of fifths shows us how many sharps and flats are there in the key which we want to play. It also shows relations between all the keys. So we can visualize what will sound good together, like keys which are close to each other in the circle will sound good together but not if they are further apart.
12:01 can someone pls explain why he moved to F# and not F
It's really complicated. I don't want to sound bratty but my dad teaches violin and he said because if it's was F and not F# then it would be a diminished 5 not a perfect fifth and you have to have a perfect fifth to reach the requirements of the circle of fifths. Yeah I don't even get what I just said so don't even worry about it.
It goes with the order of adding more sharps to the scale.
I'm a beginner, I don't understand the purpose of chords and scales and do I have to memorise and practice them ?
Yes
@@adamziadn thank you
what's the difference between a flat and sharp note? I am confused :|
A flat note is just one semi-tone lower than the natural note and a sharp note is one semi-tone higher than its natural note. So Gb is just one semi-tone lower than G. And G# is one semi-tone higher than G. If you look at your piano it makes much more sense. Hope that helps
If you mean the way the a G# sounds compared to an Ab then there is *no difference.
*(But if you call a G# an Ab on music sheets, you will probably loose music friends because of this. You can easily tell which to call as it will denote the note with a # or b after the note.)
Simply.
A sharp note has higher frequency
A Flat note has less frequency
Than C D E F G A B
How to know the bass notes of every chord
-beginner
Complicated makes me forget
you lost me at F#
2l
😕
Thanks. Could do without the earsplitting sibilance though. Yikes/Ouch