This Is Why You Have Elbow Tension (And How To Get Rid Of It)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025

Комментарии • 14

  • @anggunnenohai3870
    @anggunnenohai3870 3 года назад +7

    Dear online piano teacher, I could not thank you more for your clear explanation about elbows’ positions. I pray for you and your family! Love from Indonesia! 🌻

    • @DavidMiller-bp7et
      @DavidMiller-bp7et 2 года назад

      I hope you were not adversely affected by the recent earthquake.

    • @anggunnenohai3870
      @anggunnenohai3870 2 года назад +2

      @@DavidMiller-bp7et Thank you David. It's alright in my place, because I don't live in Java island anymore. Thank you for your thoughtful message. I hope you are alright and safe also. Be happy, David!🌻

  • @andream6533
    @andream6533 3 года назад +7

    Your videos are so helpful and eye opening! I don’t remember learning any of this back in high school piano class. Now I am more aware of my form ❤️

  • @aliceloke2679
    @aliceloke2679 3 года назад +3

    Your technical video makes a lot of sense to me in another way. I am an adult learner and I mean real 'adult'. I am now 67 and started to seriously learn to play 2 years ago with a 61 keys casio keyboard (the spring type, if anyone can remember). All the while, I may have had 4 lessons with a teacher. Anyhow, I could never afford lessons. Instead I bought music books, got the discarded piano pieces of beginners, learn about theory and watch videos etc. I got hold of a used (good) piano and progressed. What I would like to point out, is that without all this formal training and technical mechanisms.... I unconsciously shifted my posture to play the notes or tried different fingerings to play and adjust. Do you think this instinctive adaptations are inherent to humans?

  • @lizweekes8076
    @lizweekes8076 4 месяца назад

    Thanks Craig.🎉🎉

  • @DavidMiller-bp7et
    @DavidMiller-bp7et 2 года назад +2

    Big Craig supporter but there are some situations which require more discussion. This is a good basic lesson.

  • @awakeref
    @awakeref 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you SO much!!

  • @winsomewalstead2157
    @winsomewalstead2157 3 года назад +2

    Really like your shirt! So cool!

  • @aarnemark
    @aarnemark Год назад

    Thanks for the video. I think I have been playing with a lot of tension in my non dominant (left) elbow. I feel it in just about all the literature. I think maybe I am tense to compensate for a lack of independence in the hand. Not sure. I am working on a Chopin waltz, a movement from a Bach partita, a Mozart sonata movement.
    I struggle a lot with repeated chords and notes and trills. Hoping I can work through my tension issues more and RELEASE them.

  • @roadguide123
    @roadguide123 3 года назад +3

    No other channel addresses technical issues like yours does....while I appreciate those short videos...I wish you would do more lengthy ones...having said that...I would like to thank you for your work

  • @almendratlilkouatl
    @almendratlilkouatl 2 года назад +4

    I don't get it at all, It seems that all the exercises and etudes that I am practicing need to be played in positions where I sometimes need my arm in the other side of the keyboard, even as I lean I get my angle in the "right" position only about 15% of the time, sometimes I have to extend my arms both sides and I literally can lean to the left and the right at the same time... I hate this video, it only gave me more questions snd anxiety, Idk what am I doing wrong.

    • @DavidMiller-bp7et
      @DavidMiller-bp7et 2 года назад +2

      Good comment. Needs more detailed and qualified discussion.

    • @hurricane4912
      @hurricane4912 Год назад

      I understand what you mean but this video helped me a lot. I was having some elbow tension in Chopin etudes and I fixed it by rotating my wrists along with my elbows. In your case where the hands go in different directions I would try leaning a bit towards the piano so that your hands can reach further. The elbow movements still work as long as your elbow isn’t always outwards and keeps moving loosely and fluidly.