This is so good, need to put it into practice, the hard part! The details and demonstrations are amazing. Interesting to realize I am one of the students who continuously repeat something with little awareness and wonder why improvement is elusive. Early years of piano instruction focused solely on notation, and it’s a gargantuan process to shift gears. Videos with this much detail are rare and priceless!
This is a gem, thank you for this great tutorial! It finally dawns on me what exactly happenned in my mind whilst playing for others. Would also love to hear if there are strategies to reduce nervousness during performance🙏
The human body has several types of proprioceptors, which are sensory receptors that help us sense the position and movement of our body parts. Here are the main types: Muscle Spindles: These are located within the belly of muscles and detect changes in muscle length and the rate of change1. Golgi Tendon Organs: Found in tendons, these receptors sense changes in muscle tension2. Ruffini Endings: Located in the skin and joints, they detect sustained pressure and joint position1. Pacinian Corpuscles: These are found in the skin and joints and are sensitive to vibration and pressure1. These proprioceptors work together to provide the brain with information about body position and movement, helping us maintain balance and coordination.
Thank you very much for this, it’s fascinating how this all fits together. Do you think slowing the tempo down to the extent that you can move the hand into position in a relaxed movement well before the beat on which the notes should be played, then playing on the beat at this slowed down tempo so that it is easily played with no mistakes encapsulates some of these techniques?. I think your idea of hearing and singing the notes before hand is something that will be very useful going forward.Thanks.
But all those receptors are delivering Signals to the brain only If there is tension or movement in the muscular apparatus... These Signals are necessary for the registration of the position of the Body and all the limbs. Isn't this just everything about introception, borken down to the level of proven physiological principles?
I'm not completely sure what your question is? As I think I said in the video, there is a relationship with proprioception which I'll need to go into in a different video. But it is possible to have proprioception without interoception- I'm arguing here for the importance of interoception which uses different parts of the brain (insular cortex) than proprioception. It's also probably worth pointing out that much of the current academic literature still admits a lack of fine understanding around many of the mechanisms of interoception and proprioception.
@@HeartofthePiano It was not a question but a kind of adddition, proprioception needs tension or movement in the tissues where the proprioceptors are located. if there is "relaxation", which is often misunderstood as "no tension at all", these receptors give no signals to the brain, so we cant feel our body or where the limbs are. dont misunderstand me i' m totallay d' accor with nearly all your statements so far i watched your tutorial which i detected recently 😃
@@jcs4994 Ah, yes in part two which I've edited but not uploaded yet, I talk about the importance of 'pandiculation' in the hands & fingers which is very much directly related to what you're saying 😎
I am also a beginner but I looked for this type of video because I realize I am missing alot of instruction in learning. There is more to piano than reading notes, playing notes incorporating all of the dynamics. Conclusion: for me it is: let it go. He speaks of it in last 10minutes or so. Try it, in privacy and in your own way. Let him help you. 🩷🩷🩷🎶🩷🩷🩷
I really like the way you teach and the way you think. I've been watching your videos for a few days.
This is so good, need to put it into practice, the hard part! The details and demonstrations are amazing. Interesting to realize I am one of the students who continuously repeat something with little awareness and wonder why improvement is elusive. Early years of piano instruction focused solely on notation, and it’s a gargantuan process to shift gears. Videos with this much detail are rare and priceless!
This is a gem, thank you for this great tutorial!
It finally dawns on me what exactly happenned in my mind whilst playing for others.
Would also love to hear if there are strategies to reduce nervousness during performance🙏
The human body has several types of proprioceptors, which are sensory receptors that help us sense the position and movement of our body parts. Here are the main types:
Muscle Spindles: These are located within the belly of muscles and detect changes in muscle length and the rate of change1.
Golgi Tendon Organs: Found in tendons, these receptors sense changes in muscle tension2.
Ruffini Endings: Located in the skin and joints, they detect sustained pressure and joint position1.
Pacinian Corpuscles: These are found in the skin and joints and are sensitive to vibration and pressure1.
These proprioceptors work together to provide the brain with information about body position and movement, helping us maintain balance and coordination.
❤😮🎉 that was a great tutorial 👌... thank you
@@RoxiTube1 glad you liked it- I was worried I went on a wild diversion from focusing on jumps! 😂
Thank you very much for this, it’s fascinating how this all fits together. Do you think slowing the tempo down to the extent that you can move the hand into position in a relaxed movement well before the beat on which the notes should be played, then playing on the beat at this slowed down tempo so that it is easily played with no mistakes encapsulates some of these techniques?. I think your idea of hearing and singing the notes before hand is something that will be very useful going forward.Thanks.
This is definitely something I'm going to talk about in part 2, and spoiler alert- sometimes yes sometimes no 😂
But all those receptors are delivering Signals to the brain only If there is tension or movement in the muscular apparatus... These Signals are necessary for the registration of the position of the Body and all the limbs. Isn't this just everything about introception, borken down to the level of proven physiological principles?
I'm not completely sure what your question is? As I think I said in the video, there is a relationship with proprioception which I'll need to go into in a different video. But it is possible to have proprioception without interoception- I'm arguing here for the importance of interoception which uses different parts of the brain (insular cortex) than proprioception. It's also probably worth pointing out that much of the current academic literature still admits a lack of fine understanding around many of the mechanisms of interoception and proprioception.
@@HeartofthePiano It was not a question but a kind of adddition, proprioception needs tension or movement in the tissues where the proprioceptors are located. if there is "relaxation", which is often misunderstood as "no tension at all", these receptors give no signals to the brain, so we cant feel our body or where the limbs are. dont misunderstand me i' m totallay d' accor with nearly all your statements so far i watched your tutorial which i detected recently 😃
@@jcs4994 Ah, yes in part two which I've edited but not uploaded yet, I talk about the importance of 'pandiculation' in the hands & fingers which is very much directly related to what you're saying 😎
Not related to any beginner. Will do nothing for me.
I am also a beginner but I looked for this type of video because I realize I am missing alot of instruction in learning. There is more to piano than reading notes, playing notes incorporating all of the dynamics.
Conclusion: for me it is: let it go.
He speaks of it in last 10minutes or so. Try it, in privacy and in your own way. Let him help you. 🩷🩷🩷🎶🩷🩷🩷