nice one bro back in those days this us to be the daily piano routine not this internet age where u can just learn one lick and trick and fill u have arrived
How does playing Hanon exercises do good for a jazz pianist? Perhaps you get so bored playing Hanon that once your fingers can fly free of Hanon's restraints, whatever you play afterwards sounds like improv.
It helps to visualize and get a feel physically for different keys so you can execute melodic ideas in any key! It’s easier to use relative pitch if you know the shapes of keys fluently… plus you can try these exercises on jazz scales like melodic minor or Dorian!
As a classical pianist I have to say that Hanon etudes are completely useless. You should forget him and practice Brahms, Czerny, Dohnanyi, Chopin, Liszt etudes depending of your level. Forget Hanon.
nice one bro
back in those days this us to be the daily piano routine not this internet age where u can just learn one lick and trick and fill u have arrived
@@oronsayepaul6709 indeed.
This is how I regained use of my middle and index fingers after injury when I was 14 years old and became able to play left handed chords.
@@timstrel1 amazing!
I absolutely love this! Hanon is a part of my piano technical foundation! Thank you for sharing!
@@latonyawrenn1435 my pleasure! Thank you for watching!
I practiced this a while back in all keys. I need to get back to it.
@@MrHilight2012 it’s great practice!
Thanks for this I think I need to start practicing more seriously again
@@khalilboutira1177 amazing to hear! Good luck!
I’ma try this😅
@@stevekdaniel let me know how it goes!
Is the fingering in all the keys the same as in C? No crossovers. Thumb always on the low note? That's what I think I'm seeing.
@@chrisnadovich6859 that’s correct!
Let's slow down from Db onwards! 😂😂
@@magicmummy84 😂😂😂
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
🙏🏾🙏🏾👌🏾👌🏾
How does playing Hanon exercises do good for a jazz pianist? Perhaps you get so bored playing Hanon that once your fingers can fly free of Hanon's restraints, whatever you play afterwards sounds like improv.
@@williammcghee863 It’s good for finger dexterity and independence. Not necessarily related to improvising, but always good to have good technique.
It helps to visualize and get a feel physically for different keys so you can execute melodic ideas in any key! It’s easier to use relative pitch if you know the shapes of keys fluently… plus you can try these exercises on jazz scales like melodic minor or Dorian!
Jazz pianist here. Agree.
Didnt know its practices in all keys. Thought hannon exercises are in C😂
@@tateknows3379 they are all in C but it’s good practice to try them in all keys :)
As a classical pianist I have to say that Hanon etudes are completely useless.
You should forget him and practice Brahms, Czerny, Dohnanyi, Chopin, Liszt etudes depending of your level. Forget Hanon.