What do you think of Dave's exercises? You can download the music here: pianote.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/blog/2020/Two-Hand%20Rhythms/Two-Hand-Rhythms.pdf And here's the timecode for each one: - Exercise 1 - 2:20 - Exercise 2 - 6:30 - Exercise 3 - 7:54 - Exercise 4 - 9:29
Excellent rhythm exercises! My near-term goal is to nail these 4 exercises until I can do them fast without really thinking about it. I'm starting out really slowly to internalize them, like he said; then building up tempo, just like you've advised before to do with scales. I really hope you have Dave back for more! Fantastic lesson. Awesome teacher.
Dave: "You can play a little softer." Lisa: "Can you Dave?" Brilliant stuff - informative AND hilarious. No disrespect to Dave, what drummers can do in terms of limb independence is absolute witchcraft.
I had to turn the volume up at first as he spoke quite softly. The first time he played the piano my ears started to bleed! But great video and good tips... thanks!
Me : ( reading ur comment ) While reading ur comment I heard “ you can play a little softer “ Then “ Can you Dave “. I read ur comment at the perfect time 😎
I play guitar, drums and bass. Now I’m learning piano. I have noticed a few advantages from playing other instruments that apply to the piano. Drums: Rhythm, timing and hand independence. Bass: Left hand bass runs and slash chords. Guitar: Broken chords and/or arpeggio style playing. However, I wish I had learned piano first. Music Theory is much easier to understand on a piano because everything is laid out right in front of you. 🎹
I too am a drummer (for 30+ years), and recently started learning piano. Knowing how to read and play rhythm has really helped my learning. It’s exciting to see a familiar drummer “pounding” the keys and providing some excellent tips! I enjoy playing chord progressions with my left hand on the keyboard while keeping a beat on the drums with my remaining limbs.
I've got an experiment that you might find interesting that can aid with both hand and foot independence. Perfect for drummers too. I discovered this myself sometime ago and it kinda works. Just hear me out. Start by taking a walk, it doesn't have to be outdoors, just pace from room to room. While walking, tap out a rhythm with your hands. This could be clapping your hands together or tapping your thighs. Now vary the rhythm. Notice that you were able to vary the rhythm completely independently from your walking pace, right? When you walk it's natural, you've developed muscle memory and you don't even have to think about it. Now sit on a chair and tap your feet on the floor, right, left, right, left, and so on... Now clap or tap a rhythm once again with your hands and try varying the rhythm. I can almost guarantee that you totally messed up the rhythm with your feet. Am I right? Now here's where a little psychology come in... Do the same again with your feet but this time just visualise yourself taking a leisurely walk. Once again tap out a rhythm with your hands but keep visualising a leisurely walk along a canal or some other place. Now vary the rhythm of your hands while maintaining your leisurely walk... Chances are it worked and you can now maintain a steady beat with your feet while varying the rhythm with your hands. It works for me. Please try it and let me know if it works for you too. I've tried this with my right and left hand too. I experiment while performing natural actions like stirring coffee. I will stir a coffee with my left hand then introduce some tapping rhythm on the countertop with my right, and vica versa. It seems to work... ... until I sit in front of a keyboard 🤣
SS - Very interesting! Agree, parts of our brain are on autopilot and others are lost following GPS. Can't wait to try this exercise. Thanx for the suggestion!
This is a really valuable lesson for ALL piano players, and in particular we newbies. Rhythm is such an important part of making music but many of us skip over it in our rush to play the right notes. It's so important in keeping time and tempo. A wonderful video with great value to us newbies. Thanks for posting. Cheers!
Woah! Hold your horses Dave! I love it. It's way over my ability right now but I love it. I often find myself tapping my knees or a tabletop to music and find hand independence quite easy but as soon as I sit in front of a keyboard my brain shuts down. I'm concentrating too much on forming the chords correctly for my hands to work independently. Single fingers I can do though so I guess that's a start. Thanks for this great collab Lisa and Dave 😀
This was wonderful! And speaking as a former tap dance student back in the day I was thrilled to realize that counting music was exactly the same rhythm process. Talk about WOW! I immediately understood what I was accomplishing. Oh and, more drummer lessons on the piano please!! Love the gems of wisdom. Thanks!
What a wonderful little video. Thank you. In the past, I'd thought about how drumming is so pointedly rhythm-centric but didn't have any idea on how to take advantage of it. Also for me I consider the drums to be one of the three primary instruments I should know (do I?...nope). You two have shown how. Thank you again.
This little exercise is taking me places. Just have to remember the vi-IV-I-V progression, then work out the right hand chords from the scale of the key that I want to learn, then go to it, sort of transposing on the fly. It teaches me right hand chords and quite a bit of keyboard real estate in the bass region.
This is very helpful. When I first started trying to learn how to play piano a little over a year ago, and noticed I was having trouble with rhythm, I looked everywhere for a video that featured a drummer teaching rhythm on the piano. 💪🏽💪🏽
Try Left Left Right... left left right... left right for an octave. As a drummer, I love this one in piano 😊 We practice these paradiddles visa Versa as you can interchange the hands too, just switch the rights to lefts and lefts to rights. It would probably sound good 💚
5:01 It’s cool how you can see the different musician in the way the play they rhythm together. He uses his whole arm (drummer) and she uses her wrist (pianist).
This was amazing you guys!! 😲 I totally understand rhythm as I first learned music through percussion and I’ve always felt more like a drummer in my head. This tutorial really helped me transport my little music know-how as a drummer straight into my piano practice and awareness. Thank you! 😩 Love you much!
*_Cross-over of the century!!_* Drumeo & Pianote finally collide to become one mighty *Drumnote-Pianeo* !! Love you guys! Do more stuff with folks from Drumeo please every now and then - super fun material indeed. After all, you're situated in the same building, single wall away from one another :D
Great lesson thanks to the neighbour of Pianote, Drumeo. I am a drummer too. I am also folowing piano lessons at Pianote. Many greetings from the Netherlands.
So after watching this I had to go run some errands for my wife and what Dave was saying is really true. I had the radio on listening to the intro riff from Bad Company playing Bad Company and you can hear the alternate hands playing. Pretty cool stuff.
Great and insightful lesson. I am a music producer that picked up the piano about 2 years ago. I wanted to incorporate more complex rhythms like my heroes. Alicia Keys and Stevie Wonder. So I would practice and tap out various hip hop, funk, and soul rhythm beats. Then try to incorporate them on the piano, with all the other techniques and theories I had learned. It was a challenge but once I got it down, my playing was much more rich and dynamic. This lesson reminded me of my starting block training for building my rhythmic skills on the piano. Great piano like a drummer intro for all your followers.
I think this is a very valuable lesson for getting rhythm into your playing. Start tapping then just switch to chords, I think that's brilliant in its simplicity! Thank you so much for this and all your other great lessons too.
This was great to watch. I took drum lessons as a kid but my dad wouldn't allow a drum set because it would be too loud(back in mid - late 90's) and we didn't have the room really either. I'm trying to stay consistent in learning piano so its nice to see the two come together.
As Always this was a great lesson. I have been playing for 2 years. And at about the end of year one, I did a 4 month deep dive into playing the piano like a drummer. Where I would incorporate bouncing left-hand rhythms using the 5th and the octave. I studied Alicia Keys, Stevie Wonder. Elton John. Ray Charles. Except for Stevie Wonder, they all play simple chords. But the make them complex with rhythm. I wanted to play like them, and so mastering piano rhythm was a must.
I'd love to see something like this from a guitarist. I play guitar but now that I'm home 24/7 I've dusted off the keyboard, but I totally think like a guitarist.
I don't think it's that strange that a drummer would give a piano lesson, especially regarding rhythm. Both the drums and piano are percussion instruments. The difference is the drums are a rhythmic percussion instrument while the piano is a melodic percussion instrument.
I played drums for a long time and one year ago i started with piano, is true that hand coordination could bbe easier but when you translate it to the fingers is when things get tougher
Yes. Arpeggios and bouncing on the 5th's to create additional movement and fllls. Kinda like sounds you would get from the high hat. To add them in piano and keep constant (drummer like timing) is the real challenge. All the best on your piano journey.
That's what I was thinking. Drummers might get slamming chords in a pretty rhythm down easily. But their real issue would be controlling rhythm in their fingers.
I'm teaching myself piano, very slowly and I'm really struggling with finding the beat and keeping the rhythm. My 13 year old son is a brilliant drummer and guitarist and he has been really helping me, because rhythms and beats come very naturally to him. This piano lesson from a drummer makes perfect sense.
1 and 2 are what the kick drum plays, I’m starting to play synths and using what I’ve learned hear on those, though most are monophonic. I’ve played other instruments before snd taking a break from them and filling the role of a secondary synth player at church. I recently played easter snd used lessons 1 and 2 on this video for one of my bass synths and midi linked those with my pads and EPs it was awesome!
Good Lesson! FYI Lisa and Dave, I have been playing, performing and Teaching Drums full time for many years. I decided a few years ago that I wanted to play some Piano. Guess what my first Piano Sing was??? Linus and Lucy ?( Charlie Brown) you know the only real challenge to this song is the Syncopated Rhythm. No problem for myself due to years of Drumming😅 Thank you for your instructional videos. Always enjoy and you have helped me to further my Piano Skills as a Drummer
I love his control of force on the keys - when I do that, it sounds like the piano is screaming. Fantastic lesson - only wish the demo was longer than 4 measures. It was like learning the tango! Gave me a whole new perspective of approaching my practice. Dave is a fantastic teacher. Lisa, you've taught me SO much. Can't thank you enough! XO
I saw that this lesson came up on my feed and I looked at it AGAiN. One of THE most valuable piano lessons ever. And it's so cool that Lisa is there to provide commentary that makes this so hilarious, entertaining but also educational. You should have this on your Pianote Hall Of Fame Lessons.
Four years of traditional piano lessons as an adult. Then nothing. Now, forty years later, thanks to your Chord Hacks and this video, I'm feeling an excitement that I never felt about my lessons. I think I may be having too much fun with these free video to see the need for your piano foundations. What a quandary!
A good idea : drummer at the piano! And what about the opposite : a pianist on drums; but not on real drum set, but the digital one inside the electronic keyboard , which also includes the possibility of split and metronome? For example, a pianist plays with both hands on the keys of bass drum and snare drum with a metronome on and changing the balance between the hands; and at the same time he uses pianistic playing movements.
Very interesting approach. I play piano since young and I'm learning drums with my son . We are teaching each other ,very similar way you guys are doing. Totally understand. I follow your chanel :) love it . Thanks for your time. Really great 😊👍
i am in the same situation as he is. A lifetime drummer finally learning piano, and the rhythm just comes SO EASY for me. Piano is a percussive instrument, so it is no surprise that drummers are a natural fit. Thanks for the post.
And likewise as a piano player, playing the drums for the first time came easy to me when I took music theory in high school. Everyone was struggling with the rhythms and were swinging the sticks all over the place while I was keeping a steady beat. My friend asked, "how do you do that??". And I said, "I don't know, Dave. I just can", in a soft delicate voice.
What do you think of Dave's exercises? You can download the music here:
pianote.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/blog/2020/Two-Hand%20Rhythms/Two-Hand-Rhythms.pdf
And here's the timecode for each one:
- Exercise 1 - 2:20
- Exercise 2 - 6:30
- Exercise 3 - 7:54
- Exercise 4 - 9:29
great topic....awesome presentation, interesting point of view...
Honestly, this was by far one of the best exercises. Bring this guy on more... Helped me a lot as a beginner.
Awesome! We'll have him back for sure!!
Excellent rhythm exercises! My near-term goal is to nail these 4 exercises until I can do them fast without really thinking about it. I'm starting out really slowly to internalize them, like he said; then building up tempo, just like you've advised before to do with scales. I really hope you have Dave back for more! Fantastic lesson. Awesome teacher.
Now we have chord progression and rhythm, is it possible to do anything "rhythm progression"?
Dave: "You can play a little softer."
Lisa: "Can you Dave?"
Brilliant stuff - informative AND hilarious. No disrespect to Dave, what drummers can do in terms of limb independence is absolute witchcraft.
I had to turn the volume up at first as he spoke quite softly. The first time he played the piano my ears started to bleed! But great video and good tips... thanks!
Lool u ever heard the expression dont let your right hand know what your left hand is doing ...its that basically lool
Excellent
Kurt Retort LOL 😂 😂 😂 so true
Me : ( reading ur comment ) While reading ur comment I heard “ you can play a little softer “ Then “ Can you Dave “. I read ur comment at the perfect time 😎
I love this lesson. It would be great if you and Drumeo Dave could do a sequel on "finger independence".
do more sessions like this to get other musicians perspectives
Finger independence made easy
Absolutely the best piano channel ever, you can learn so much, you WANT to learn it and it's so easy and so helpful at the same time. I love you guys.
I play guitar, drums and bass. Now I’m learning piano. I have noticed a few advantages from playing other instruments that apply to the piano. Drums: Rhythm, timing and hand independence. Bass: Left hand bass runs and slash chords. Guitar: Broken chords and/or arpeggio style playing. However, I wish I had learned piano first. Music Theory is much easier to understand on a piano because everything is laid out right in front of you. 🎹
That’s the same exact case for me... I wish I didn’t stop my classical piano lessons back when I was a kid
I only play guitar and im interested to learn play piano, having a musical background sure helps
True about music theory and the piano.
Brilliant perspective
That's an "ear-opening" lesson,. Thank you, guys!
Wow. Can you have Dave come back for another rhythm lesson sometime in the future please?
Absolutely!
@@PianoteOfficial can you get nate savage to learn piano as a guitar player perspective?
I too am a drummer (for 30+ years), and recently started learning piano. Knowing how to read and play rhythm has really helped my learning. It’s exciting to see a familiar drummer “pounding” the keys and providing some excellent tips! I enjoy playing chord progressions with my left hand on the keyboard while keeping a beat on the drums with my remaining limbs.
I've got an experiment that you might find interesting that can aid with both hand and foot independence. Perfect for drummers too.
I discovered this myself sometime ago and it kinda works. Just hear me out.
Start by taking a walk, it doesn't have to be outdoors, just pace from room to room.
While walking, tap out a rhythm with your hands. This could be clapping your hands together or tapping your thighs. Now vary the rhythm.
Notice that you were able to vary the rhythm completely independently from your walking pace, right?
When you walk it's natural, you've developed muscle memory and you don't even have to think about it.
Now sit on a chair and tap your feet on the floor, right, left, right, left, and so on...
Now clap or tap a rhythm once again with your hands and try varying the rhythm.
I can almost guarantee that you totally messed up the rhythm with your feet. Am I right?
Now here's where a little psychology come in...
Do the same again with your feet but this time just visualise yourself taking a leisurely walk. Once again tap out a rhythm with your hands but keep visualising a leisurely walk along a canal or some other place. Now vary the rhythm of your hands while maintaining your leisurely walk...
Chances are it worked and you can now maintain a steady beat with your feet while varying the rhythm with your hands. It works for me. Please try it and let me know if it works for you too.
I've tried this with my right and left hand too. I experiment while performing natural actions like stirring coffee. I will stir a coffee with my left hand then introduce some tapping rhythm on the countertop with my right, and vica versa. It seems to work...
... until I sit in front of a keyboard 🤣
SS - Very interesting! Agree, parts of our brain are on autopilot and others are lost following GPS. Can't wait to try this exercise. Thanx for the suggestion!
This is EXACTLY what I have been looking for!!! Dave, Lisa, thank you so much! These videos are so helpful!
This is a really valuable lesson for ALL piano players, and in particular we newbies. Rhythm is such an important part of making music but many of us skip over it in our rush to play the right notes. It's so important in keeping time and tempo. A wonderful video with great value to us newbies. Thanks for posting. Cheers!
Woah! Hold your horses Dave!
I love it. It's way over my ability right now but I love it.
I often find myself tapping my knees or a tabletop to music and find hand independence quite easy but as soon as I sit in front of a keyboard my brain shuts down. I'm concentrating too much on forming the chords correctly for my hands to work independently. Single fingers I can do though so I guess that's a start. Thanks for this great collab Lisa and Dave 😀
Lisa thanks for bringing Dave in to teach rhythm. That was brilliant! Thank you so much!!!
This was wonderful! And speaking as a former tap dance student back in the day I was thrilled to realize that counting music was exactly the same rhythm process. Talk about WOW! I immediately understood what I was accomplishing. Oh and, more drummer lessons on the piano please!! Love the gems of wisdom. Thanks!
Excellent video. thanks for this!
I’m a drummer and yes piano come a bit easier and this channel helps me a lot
What a wonderful little video. Thank you. In the past, I'd thought about how drumming is so pointedly rhythm-centric but didn't have any idea on how to take advantage of it. Also for me I consider the drums to be one of the three primary instruments I should know (do I?...nope). You two have shown how. Thank you again.
This little exercise is taking me places. Just have to remember the vi-IV-I-V progression, then work out the right hand chords from the scale of the key that I want to learn, then go to it, sort of transposing on the fly. It teaches me right hand chords and quite a bit of keyboard real estate in the bass region.
Very useful lesson. Thanks a lot to both of you.
This dude blew my mind. So simple but so effective
Cool... always working on my rhythm... this might help.
This is very helpful. When I first started trying to learn how to play piano a little over a year ago, and noticed I was having trouble with rhythm, I looked everywhere for a video that featured a drummer teaching rhythm on the piano.
💪🏽💪🏽
i'm glad I played guitar and a little bit of percussion for 10 years before I started piano, it definitely helps with hand independence and rhythm.
This is a great lesson to help me with beats and rhythm. Thanks so much for posting.
Again! Your creativity make me smile at every single video. Another original approach.
This is a repeat video, it is a great exercise, I would welcome more patterns from Dave.
Try Left Left Right... left left right... left right for an octave. As a drummer, I love this one in piano 😊 We practice these paradiddles visa Versa as you can interchange the hands too, just switch the rights to lefts and lefts to rights. It would probably sound good 💚
That's amazing I'm going to practice this every day. I struggled with timing since started playing. Although I am quite good at classical music.
Oh, I love this! He seems like a such a cool guy :) And he explained everything perfectly
Dave is an awesome guy and an amazing teacher!
Much needed, thanks. More, please.
Thank you so much great enthusiasm. Keepsafe.fromthe UK stroke survivor
5:01 It’s cool how you can see the different musician in the way the play they rhythm together. He uses his whole arm (drummer) and she uses her wrist (pianist).
I love this lesson. I have always wanted to play the drums and I'm drawn to playing my keyboard in a rhythmic way. 💜
That was fantastic. Great to have the perspective from a drummer 😃
This was amazing you guys!! 😲 I totally understand rhythm as I first learned music through percussion and I’ve always felt more like a drummer in my head. This tutorial really helped me transport my little music know-how as a drummer straight into my piano practice and awareness. Thank you! 😩 Love you much!
Oh my gosh! Very nice exercise, specially to me who's weak with rhythm 🙃
*_Cross-over of the century!!_* Drumeo & Pianote finally collide to become one mighty *Drumnote-Pianeo* !!
Love you guys! Do more stuff with folks from Drumeo please every now and then - super fun material indeed. After all, you're situated in the same building, single wall away from one another :D
Power-packed lesson! Dave broke it down wonderfully. Thank you! I hope Lisa and crew are all safe and healthy.
Thanks Mark!
@@MrDaveAtkinson Poking at drums really helped my left/right coordination. See my channel for 2 piano songs I wrote. Cheers, Dave!
Great lesson thanks to the neighbour of Pianote, Drumeo. I am a drummer too. I am also folowing piano lessons at Pianote.
Many greetings from the Netherlands.
So after watching this I had to go run some errands for my wife and what Dave was saying is really true. I had the radio on listening to the intro riff from Bad Company playing Bad Company and you can hear the alternate hands playing. Pretty cool stuff.
Great lessons...
I appreciate the concepts u talk about in your videos!! ✌
Great and insightful lesson. I am a music producer that picked up the piano about 2 years ago. I wanted to incorporate more complex rhythms like my heroes. Alicia Keys and Stevie Wonder. So I would practice and tap out various hip hop, funk, and soul rhythm beats. Then try to incorporate them on the piano, with all the other techniques and theories I had learned.
It was a challenge but once I got it down, my playing was much more rich and dynamic. This lesson reminded me of my starting block training for building my rhythmic skills on the piano. Great piano like a drummer intro for all your followers.
more please! great lesson.
I'm also a drummer and started learning piano, and even I find it a bit easy. And this exercise is really helpful 👍
Thanks for the inspiring video!
This is great! I would love more videos with drummers teaching rhythm!
Superb. Loved the technique ❤️
I think this is a very valuable lesson for getting rhythm into your playing. Start tapping then just switch to chords, I think that's brilliant in its simplicity! Thank you so much for this and all your other great lessons too.
Really great. Thanks Dave!
Thankyou Lisa and Dave, great lesson and heaps of fun plus very helpful exercises! 😀👍💕
Good lesson with something i have been struggling with-thanks
Wow...... what a wonderful lesson!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you teachers!!!!!!!
Thank you! 😃
Thanks for this valuable lessons.
This was great to watch. I took drum lessons as a kid but my dad wouldn't allow a drum set because it would be too loud(back in mid - late 90's) and we didn't have the room really either. I'm trying to stay consistent in learning piano so its nice to see the two come together.
As Always this was a great lesson. I have been playing for 2 years. And at about the end of year one, I did a 4 month deep dive into playing the piano like a drummer. Where I would incorporate bouncing left-hand rhythms using the 5th and the octave. I studied Alicia Keys, Stevie Wonder. Elton John. Ray Charles. Except for Stevie Wonder, they all play simple chords. But the make them complex with rhythm. I wanted to play like them, and so mastering piano rhythm was a must.
Lisa your face is a picture x.. I love that none of us ever stop learning new skills. Great lesson! 🇬🇧
I've always had this issue with rhythm
. Awesome video!
I'd love to see something like this from a guitarist. I play guitar but now that I'm home 24/7 I've dusted off the keyboard, but I totally think like a guitarist.
We might have just the lesson for you :) - ruclips.net/video/0QcdeMZgAhA/видео.html
Hello Dave, Great!! with Lisa!! Drumeo and Pianote.. great!!
Two of my fave channels in one. Pianists and drummers have so much in common.
This is a favourite lesson of mine. Loved it.
I don't think it's that strange that a drummer would give a piano lesson, especially regarding rhythm. Both the drums and piano are percussion instruments. The difference is the drums are a rhythmic percussion instrument while the piano is a melodic percussion instrument.
Drums - rhythmic percussion
Piano- rhythm+melody+percussion
After wanting for several years to play piano I discovered Denelle piano lesson and it seems to be the top home study course (check it out on google)
@@carlosroman586 is it better than PIANOTE
Thanks for the download Dav and Lisa.
This is ridiculously good!!...Please bring him often:-)
OK wow this was incredible - exactly what I had been looking for as someone struggling with rhythm. this channel keeps serving up GOLD as always
This lesson, piano with drummer is simply amazing.
Great lesson!!! I was a drummer as a teenager. This totally makes sense to me. This is so cool!! Thanks.
I played drums for a long time and one year ago i started with piano, is true that hand coordination could bbe easier but when you translate it to the fingers is when things get tougher
Yes. Arpeggios and bouncing on the 5th's to create additional movement and fllls. Kinda like sounds you would get from the high hat. To add them in piano and keep constant (drummer like timing) is the real challenge. All the best on your piano journey.
That's what I was thinking. Drummers might get slamming chords in a pretty rhythm down easily. But their real issue would be controlling rhythm in their fingers.
As a former drummer who is learning piano, all I can say is... AMEN.
I'm teaching myself piano, very slowly and I'm really struggling with finding the beat and keeping the rhythm. My 13 year old son is a brilliant drummer and guitarist and he has been really helping me, because rhythms and beats come very naturally to him. This piano lesson from a drummer makes perfect sense.
Still working on this lesson. Looking forward to more. Rocking motion with octaves I the left hand
Awesome. Thanks guys, so useful!!
1 and 2 are what the kick drum plays, I’m starting to play synths and using what I’ve learned hear on those, though most are monophonic. I’ve played other instruments before snd taking a break from them and filling the role of a secondary synth player at church.
I recently played easter snd used lessons 1 and 2 on this video for one of my bass synths and midi linked those with my pads and EPs it was awesome!
He really drums the piano!
Wow! How good is this now!!
Good Lesson! FYI Lisa and Dave, I have been playing, performing and Teaching Drums full time for many years. I decided a few years ago that I wanted to play some Piano. Guess what my first Piano Sing was??? Linus and Lucy ?( Charlie Brown) you know the only real challenge to this song is the Syncopated Rhythm. No problem for myself due to years of Drumming😅 Thank you for your instructional videos. Always enjoy and you have helped me to further my Piano Skills as a Drummer
I really appreciated as your favorite follower this session!! Keep up to prepare others. Thanks.
Brilliant. Always thought i should take drum lesson when my piano rhythm wasn't performance was not at its best. THANK YOU !
amazing lesson! Pianote is awesome.
Wow! I am seriously impressed. 😮
By far the most important video I've watched. Thanks.
She is just so fun to watch and listen to! I love her videos and watch them all.
Great stuff. Thanks! 👍
I love his control of force on the keys - when I do that, it sounds like the piano is screaming. Fantastic lesson - only wish the demo was longer than 4 measures. It was like learning the tango! Gave me a whole new perspective of approaching my practice. Dave is a fantastic teacher. Lisa, you've taught me SO much. Can't thank you enough! XO
I saw that this lesson came up on my feed and I looked at it AGAiN. One of THE most valuable piano lessons ever. And it's so cool that Lisa is there to provide commentary that makes this so hilarious, entertaining but also educational.
You should have this on your Pianote Hall Of Fame Lessons.
I like the rhythm analysis a lot, more like this please.
Love this guy...
Great lesson. I started out on drums and it has helped me immensely with other instruments.
GREAT, really liked the two finger, and the drumming excercises away from the piano which helped me enormously
Excellent lessons Drumeo and Pianote. I shall practice these rhythms and implement them into my compositions. Thank you very kindly for the tips.
GREAT video, many thanks.
Extremely useful lesson!
Thank you! That is so awesome. The struggle is real though!!! LOL.
I just started learning piano, as a drummer of 18 years so far. This is really neat to see.
Four years of traditional piano lessons as an adult. Then nothing. Now, forty years later, thanks to your Chord Hacks and this video, I'm feeling an excitement that I never felt about my lessons. I think I may be having too much fun with these free video to see the need for your piano foundations. What a quandary!
I don’t play piano but this lesson has given me so many ideas already to take my sax to the next level. Thank you so much. Awesome lesson.
I'm so glad!
Dave: says "rudimental"
Me: drummer alert!!!
A good idea : drummer at the piano! And what about the opposite : a pianist on drums; but not on real drum set, but the digital one inside the electronic keyboard , which also includes the possibility of split and metronome? For example, a pianist plays with both hands on the keys of bass drum and snare drum with a metronome on and changing the balance between the hands; and at the same time he uses pianistic playing movements.
Very interesting approach. I play piano since young and I'm learning drums with my son . We are teaching each other ,very similar way you guys are doing. Totally understand.
I follow your chanel :) love it . Thanks for your time. Really great 😊👍
i am in the same situation as he is. A lifetime drummer finally learning piano, and the rhythm just comes SO EASY for me.
Piano is a percussive instrument, so it is no surprise that drummers are a natural fit. Thanks for the post.
And likewise as a piano player, playing the drums for the first time came easy to me when I took music theory in high school. Everyone was struggling with the rhythms and were swinging the sticks all over the place while I was keeping a steady beat. My friend asked, "how do you do that??". And I said, "I don't know, Dave. I just can", in a soft delicate voice.
LOVE Dave and Lisa! Yay 💜 so happy to have seen this. Love this lesson!!!!!!! - Kristeta
This is so brilliant!!!!