4 Easy Piano Tricks To Sound Like A Pro

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  • Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
  • In this video, David Bennett will teach you 4 awesome tricks that will make your piano playing stand out!
    You’ll be surprised at how easy it can be to improvise with the Pentatonic Scale. He will also show you how the Pedal Note can bring a cool rhythmic vibe and different arrangement to your piano playing (and the Inverted Pedal Note as well), and last but not least, you will learn what Grace Notes are, and how to use them to make your piano playing more stylish!
    ⚡️Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    0:15 Trick 1 (Pentatonic Scale)
    1:30 Trick 2 (Pedal Note)
    3:18 Trick 3 (Inverted Pedal Note)
    3:45 Practice Tool
    4:37 Trick 4 (Grace Notes)
    6:15 Application of Grace Notes on the Melody
    7:30 Closing Thoughts
    ⚡️Try our "Practice Feature" in a 7 days free trial with Pianote. You will have the chance to modify sheet music, change tempos, keys, loop parts, and play along using a virtual piano. Discover more at www.pianote.com/trial/
    ⚡️Check out our FREE piano courses
    Getting Started (your first lessons): www.pianote.com/getting-started
    Chord Hacks (chording): www.pianote.com/chord-hacks
    Sight-Reading Made Simple: www.pianote.com/sight-reading...
    ⚡️Follow us on social media:
    ► Instagram / pianoteofficial
    ► Facebook / pianoteofficial
    ► Tiktok / pianoteofficial
    ⚡️Follow David's socials here:
    ► UA-cam / @davidbennettpiano
    ► Spotify open.spotify.com/artist/0wKKJ...
    #musictheory #musiceducation #piano #pianist #pianoplayer

КОМЕНТАРІ • 91

  • @keithaitken4007
    @keithaitken4007 6 місяців тому +52

    If David Bennet was a regular Pianonote teacher I might consider joining

    • @bonniethomas5620
      @bonniethomas5620 6 місяців тому +2

      They have a lot of good coaches. Try a year.

    • @juhakivekas2175
      @juhakivekas2175 6 місяців тому +5

      David is the best teacher I have ever experienced, and Im 61!
      Ive had school teachers, university professors in natural sciences, professional trade teachers.
      Somehow he expresses himself very clearly, understandably and relaxed in a way that draws your attention.
      I think even the best education does not make you a good teacher if you dont have the right charisma, if you can not pull the students with you. And David can, plus he has obviously a good education behind him.

    • @stoneriverbandcornwall
      @stoneriverbandcornwall 6 місяців тому +1

      Also Kevin Castro is ace. I have invested in lifetime membership

  • @kenbagwell8551
    @kenbagwell8551 6 місяців тому +13

    I can't believe I didn't know the five black keys make up a pentatonic scale!
    Thank you David, thank you Pianonote!

  • @HUMZMIC1
    @HUMZMIC1 6 місяців тому +1

    My favorite was the pentonic scale. That sounded good!!!

  • @derclops
    @derclops 6 місяців тому +6

    Thank you David, really enjoyed these tips! Kudos from Austria!

  • @sonic2000gr
    @sonic2000gr 6 місяців тому +8

    Pedal tones is definitely a new trick for me. Thank you so much!

  • @Josh25094
    @Josh25094 6 місяців тому +5

    Thanks Pianote for teaching me new tricks 🎉🎉

  • @valwolve
    @valwolve 3 місяці тому +1

    I learned a lot from this

  • @theghostofsw6276
    @theghostofsw6276 6 місяців тому +2

    Gold right here for a beginner!

  • @midinotes
    @midinotes 6 місяців тому +6

    I've always loved that country grace-note effect in chords, but I've never managed to nail it. Would love a lesson or some tips on how to create those lilted grace chords you often hear in country blues or jazzy pop music. Great video as always David and so professional, love the studio!

  • @arthouston7361
    @arthouston7361 6 місяців тому +1

    Well done, David.

  • @anabelsuerodegonzalez3061
    @anabelsuerodegonzalez3061 6 місяців тому +8

    Thanks a lot for these 4 wonderful tricks, indeed useful! I will definitely apply them in my playing👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @RodrigoRaez
    @RodrigoRaez 6 місяців тому +3

    What a great lesson. Thank you very much!

  • @markshveima
    @markshveima 6 місяців тому +3

    Inverted pedal tones is a new one for me. I tend to always think pedal tone instead. But the inverted PT is a whole other emotional color. Love it. Thank You!

  • @user-dq2qe6md9x
    @user-dq2qe6md9x 4 місяці тому

    David Bennett is phenomenal. This session was extremely interesting! I loved the Pentatonic Scale and the Pedal Tone parts the most. Thanks.

  • @ligz2786
    @ligz2786 6 місяців тому +1

    I am not your natural born piano player and just a couple of years into piano playing. I never took lessons before just watch some interesting piano playing youtube instructional videos. I just started watching your youtube room and find it quite well from beginner to advance levels that makes it easier to understand. Keep up the good work! I plan to keep watching and learning from your youtube room.

  • @user-ge2jz8xq6t
    @user-ge2jz8xq6t 6 місяців тому +1

    Thanks so much nice teaching

  • @joby1konobi
    @joby1konobi 6 місяців тому +2

    Thankyou, great lesson. Well taught.

  • @larrygraham3377
    @larrygraham3377 6 місяців тому +1

    Great video. THANKS A LOT !!!
    NOW I HAVE A FEW TRICKS UP MY SLEEVES !!! 😎😎😎

  • @RanLevi
    @RanLevi 6 місяців тому +1

    Amazing tips! Thanks, David.

  • @liyakatbawade3546
    @liyakatbawade3546 6 місяців тому +1

    Excellent demonstration 👏👏👏

  • @soupandcandy3588
    @soupandcandy3588 4 місяці тому

    I love the pentatonic scale!

  • @user-ir7lk4um5x
    @user-ir7lk4um5x 6 місяців тому +1

    👍Thanks for another free content!

  • @seanlewis5804
    @seanlewis5804 3 місяці тому

    All I can say after watching this video is …. wow. I’m a very naïve beginner of just a few weeks, but I’m an older adult. I learned so much in this eight minute video. Likely going to be a subscriber very soon. Thank you so much!

  • @eugeneniangti8198
    @eugeneniangti8198 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for the tutorial. Grace note is best for me.

  • @nickwebb9290
    @nickwebb9290 3 місяці тому

    Excellent tutorial, many thanks 🙏

  • @SharathG809
    @SharathG809 6 місяців тому +2

    Hey , I'm from India I wanted to learn paino. The videos helping me lot!

  • @Luka_WiFi
    @Luka_WiFi 6 місяців тому +1

    David Bennet, a legend! ⭐ ოქრო კაცი!

  • @nicoludovico
    @nicoludovico 6 місяців тому

    I am happy to hear your teaching is very clear and very good ,want to see more,
    cheers
    Nico

  • @shynebox
    @shynebox 6 місяців тому +1

    Yeah, pedal tones is a neat trick, ta!

  • @Thang8MuaThu
    @Thang8MuaThu Місяць тому

    Great 🎉😊

  • @gustough
    @gustough 6 місяців тому

    Nice! Tricks I will embrace and include into my practicing.

  • @valwolve
    @valwolve 3 місяці тому

    Amazing!!!! Wow

  • @aligator9552
    @aligator9552 4 місяці тому

    When David Bennett was the modulating the C pedal tone I swear I wanted to hear the harmonica kicking from a long way home by Supertramp

  • @BlixtenMarlowes
    @BlixtenMarlowes 6 місяців тому

    So simple, yet so efficient! 😃

  • @nellysagundo6634
    @nellysagundo6634 6 місяців тому

    Great tricks, Davin! Thank you.

  • @stevekdaniel
    @stevekdaniel 3 місяці тому

    Great video

  • @saffmohamed7416
    @saffmohamed7416 5 місяців тому

    Awesome and inspiring suggestions, thanks for the share!

  • @janetteestacy145
    @janetteestacy145 6 місяців тому

    A great lesson, thank you 👍

  • @msgingerjourney
    @msgingerjourney 6 місяців тому

    Nice explanations. Thank you!

  • @alrush1234
    @alrush1234 5 місяців тому

    Great, loved it.

  • @davidbalan6571
    @davidbalan6571 6 місяців тому +1

    " The Scientists " by Coldplay, Lean on Me , by bill Withers . As it was " by Harry Styles , Blinding Lights , by the weekend .

  • @jacoposcalzi1929
    @jacoposcalzi1929 5 місяців тому

    Very good David

  • @shentonpeters1191
    @shentonpeters1191 6 місяців тому

    Thank You..impressive

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 5 місяців тому

    Merci.

  • @tommytam100
    @tommytam100 6 місяців тому +1

    They are quite basic but impactful

  • @jazzgal5631
    @jazzgal5631 6 місяців тому +1

    Nice!

  • @SaveManWoman
    @SaveManWoman 4 місяці тому

    Grace notes are great. The Hindustani Music has big emphasis on grace notes(gamaks).

  • @wesleybrown3489
    @wesleybrown3489 6 місяців тому

    This was very helpful gave me some ideas. I may piano player as well and a songwriter. This has really helped me. I got some more ideas for my songwriting. Thank you so much. From this video on what I can do.

  • @captainalpaka1551
    @captainalpaka1551 3 місяці тому

    A good example of a pedal Tone is the Indiana Jones theme. It's also in C Major.

  • @luzbendijo7383
    @luzbendijo7383 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing your video Sir.. informative. I love it.. im new follower

  • @asyrafnukman1991
    @asyrafnukman1991 6 місяців тому

    Terima kasih video

  • @garzoroberto7623
    @garzoroberto7623 5 місяців тому

    Hi David, excellent 🎹🎶lesson - I’m subscribed to your YT 🎹 channel. May I ask please which Nord Piano Library model “piano” you are playing in this video? Cheers, Garzo

  • @ssesangaelizabeth6406
    @ssesangaelizabeth6406 6 місяців тому

    Learned something

  • @willieervinjr2764
    @willieervinjr2764 6 місяців тому +1

    Trick 4

  • @scarletdvore1459
    @scarletdvore1459 6 місяців тому

    Nice…

  • @guppy-fy1zv
    @guppy-fy1zv 6 місяців тому +1

    👍

  • @Ilmatar101
    @Ilmatar101 6 місяців тому +3

    I feel that the black keys only trick is a bit too basic and restrictive, more of an exercise for absolute beginners, because it's definitely motivating. But pedal notes have definitely slipped into my improvisation already. They bring a sense of anticipation that I quite like, until you 'leap' from the pedal. It's easy enough to bring grace notes into the melody or right hand, but I kind of struggle choosing what note I 'grace up' or 'grace down' in the bass - tonic, third, fifth?

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella 6 місяців тому +1

      See if you can find the isolated bass line for the iconic Yes song "Roundabout", in which Chris Squires plays (or praps more accurately, ghosts) grace notes to several notes in succession during the pattern which runs under each verse.
      In each case the grace note was simply a repetition of the note he was moving from, which in some contexts works very well. It's technically quite hard for a keyboard player if the tempo is fast, but there is almost always a crafty fingering which can render it possible if you care to put in the time for experimentation.
      If you can't find the isolated bass track, or even if you can, it's well worth listening to Rick Beato dissect this phenomenal tour de force of rock music on his "what makes this song great" series. I recall him briefly discussing the bass line, which he isolated.
      A keyboard bass line with fantastically funky grace notes is Herbie Hancock's left hand, in any performance of Chameleon. Many of the grace notes are either an octave, or a seventh, above the note being graced.

    • @Ilmatar101
      @Ilmatar101 6 місяців тому

      @@Gottenhimfella Thanks for your answer! I looked that bass line up (while Beato kind of "strikes the wrong chord" for me). It is undoubtedly a stroke of genious, but it still remains a single bass line - and doesn't answer the question that I tried to raise (in a language that's not my mother tongue). My question concerned harmonic context, which we don't have in the bass line. For example, David plays a grace note for the third of chord at the five minute mark of the video, and he plays it 'top-down'. Could he do the same thing in the same situation for the fifth or the root note?

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella 6 місяців тому +1

      @@Ilmatar101 I took it from your first post, when you said " I kind of struggle choosing what note I 'grace up' or 'grace down' in the *bass* " that you were asking about bass lines, which are usually one note at a time (monophonic) lines. It seems I read too much into that word.
      Grace notes are (I guess) a "stylistic flourish", and it's perhaps dangerous to try to find rules to guide matters of taste. I would personally recommend that instead of looking for guidance based on rules, you study the playing of people whose artistic output excites or satisfies you.
      For me, I tend to lump together grace notes, chord voicings and non-simultaneous chord playing (such as flam), because anyone who is a genius at one of these things generally has their own signature in the other two areas, which to me are all related. So as a keyboard player I listen carefully to players like Larry Knechtel (Bridge over Troubled Water), Rick Wakeman (Morning has Broken), and Paul Griffin (American Pie).
      These three were all brilliant session musicians, and they effectively arranged, as well as coming up with inspired piano parts for, the songs mentioned. They were all heavily influenced by the Gospel piano styles of their day, from where grace notes and flam had originally come into jazz and rock music. (Wakeman of course played keyboards for "Yes" at the time when they came up with "Roundabout")
      Billy Powell (Sweet Home Alabama), Nicky Hopkins (Sympathy for the Devil). and Leon Russell (The Letter, with Joe Cocker) and perhaps most of all, Bruce Hornsby (The Way it Is) are others with a rare talent, in my view, for grace notes.
      Of course these decorations go a lot further back, Bach was reputedly a master (although many such flourishes in Baroque times were not notated), as were Romantic composer/players like Chopin and Liszt.
      Lastly, I think David's point that singing is the real birthplace of grace notes is one to bear in mind, and great singers continually provide us with a free education as to what works, just as mediocre ones provide plenty of examples of what does not.

    • @philmckenna5709
      @philmckenna5709 6 місяців тому +1

      @Gottenhimfella
      Excellent post, mate! Food for thought (and experimentation)...

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella 6 місяців тому +1

      @@philmckenna5709 Thanks, mate! Always good to hear when a message has reached a slightly wider audience.
      On rereading what I wrote, I realise I perhaps left out as many iconic early players as I included , but I won't dilute the message further except that I must include two of the first massive influencers in my playing: Billy Preston, who provided so much beneficial inspiration to the Beatles at a time when they were in danger of exhausting their previous influences (Organ on "Let it Be", composed and performed "That's the way God planned it"
      Also Matthew C Fisher (Whiter Shade of Pale)
      It's interesting that Billy, too, was immersed in gospel music for his formative years.
      I don't know about Matthew, but I was able to discover that during his years at Selhurst Grammar school, Mr Spratt gave a course of musical appreciation after the obligatory religious service. Starting with the classics - Bach and Handel, then Mozart and Haydn and so on to Beethoven and the Romantics. When Mr Spratt reached the latter, he made the remark "The rot set in with Beethoven"
      This might provide at least part of the answer to to where Matthew found his inspiration for the organ parts of "Whiter Shade".
      Tying back to the nominal reason for these posts (grace notes): the combination of a particularly haunting drawbar setting on the Hammond (four leftmost fully out, remainder fully in, percussion on the second harmonic), and Matthew's perfectly judged semitone grace note up into the chord which opens the intro, makes it instantly recognisable and intensely evocative even to non-musos, even if playback is halted before the chromatic step down in the bass immediately after beat two of bar one.
      Today's "worship music" seems to me generally rather less inspired and inspiring. I long since ceased to have a dog (or the reverse spelling!) in the fight, as a did as a child in the sixties, but that still does sadden me a little.

  • @user-xo2yo6jl3o
    @user-xo2yo6jl3o 6 місяців тому

    Add David Bennett to your staff and I will sign up again. (belonged a few years ago and drifted away because I found a really good teacher)

  • @proezzy6591
    @proezzy6591 6 місяців тому

    Woow

  • @Messic0
    @Messic0 6 місяців тому +5

    I think it’s cool how Pianote means Big Piano in Spanish

  • @bindumanoj698
    @bindumanoj698 6 місяців тому

    As always

  • @dinhomouramoura7497
    @dinhomouramoura7497 6 місяців тому

    Por favor , ensina a música i started a joke

  • @ipainthouses3084
    @ipainthouses3084 5 місяців тому

    The pedal note , does this only works with C ?

  • @FutureAbe
    @FutureAbe 6 місяців тому

    FREE 7-DAY TRIAL

  • @dave2031
    @dave2031 6 місяців тому

    Can you give me a piano? I highly doubt i can find any of it in my country

  • @vspatmx7458
    @vspatmx7458 6 місяців тому

    David is so damn good
    That another country cudnt replicate his skills and had to import him for his rare skills

  • @user-ce7qb2fd8n
    @user-ce7qb2fd8n 5 місяців тому

    I want to become a farmer but I really want to know piano

    • @Dakodin42
      @Dakodin42 2 місяці тому

      Make sure to do exercises for your hands and wrists.

  • @BamaRags23
    @BamaRags23 6 місяців тому

    Tell Amy I said hi...

  • @Liverpool-axeman
    @Liverpool-axeman 2 місяці тому

    Bless him he kept missing the grace notes and just moved on like it didn’t happen.

  • @joysoul4089
    @joysoul4089 6 місяців тому +2

    No, I understand why some jazz keyboardists don’t read music. They use all those tricks. 🤣

  • @dankers12
    @dankers12 6 місяців тому +1

    These aren't tricks.
    These are illusions.

  • @michaelchester2073
    @michaelchester2073 Місяць тому

    6:23 no you didn't....

  • @argi0774
    @argi0774 6 місяців тому

    Honestly, if I hear that, I am thinking: beginner. But sure as hell not Pro