Play Any Rhythm Pattern Easy Using Attack Points
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- Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
- Today's lesson is on how you can master your rhythms using the attack point strategy. By planning out when to move on to the next note, you can make your rhythmic playing on piano much more precise. Getting rhythms just right is very important if you want to learn how to play piano well.
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Thanks for the great explanation! This is where struggle sometimes when notes are mixed.
Your Attack Point Strategy has helped me a lot. Trying to figure out just when to hit a key and how the rest works has been a big part of the puzzle that I have not been able to piece together until now. I took your course a few years back but other things happened and have not been able to get back with it yet. But thanks again.
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Metronome is your best friend when practicing what Tim teaches here. Thanks for the great lesson.
Oh my gosh, I think I’m getting it a little.
I listened to Tim( about 50 times) for past couple of days.
I stopped the video at 2:41 and used each finger to practice this measure. I see some fingers are weaker/slower than others and if I don’t fully concentrate I lose it. So I start again. I’ll keep this up and use it while practicing my songs.
And, then I’ll use the other rhythms TIm teaches - wish me luck!
Thank you Tim…….. thanks for your help!💐
Kathi 🙋♀️
Hi Tim, I am currently learning to read music & this has really helped me to understand rhythm and counting the beats. Thank you 😊
I've practiced and found your attack method for getting the note spot on time is brilliant Tim. I feel and hear I'm hitting the off beat 8th notes and the four sixteenth groups exactly against the metronome up to about 110 mm. It's given me great certainty in playing evenly. I have not seen other websites discuss this topic so thoroughly. Many thanks.
I,Dipak from India saying it is very much helpfull,I am thankful to you,
This is a very timely and helpful lesson. I feel I've made a 2% improvement in my sightreading, but it's helped by piano playing at least 20% better. I'm no master, but it made other things easier. But rhythm was a weak point, so on to the next goal. Merci beaucoup.
Thanks for counting out the e+a . It really helps. I’m 75 and just starting to learn piano.
By the way, excellent instructional videos on counting that I wished I had been taught as a young musician. I find your videos to be helpful as an adult musician who has struggled with counting for years. I think it's been mostly laziness on my part but I am trying to correct my mindset to be more accurate and strict by actually counting and less guessing!
Thank you Tim for the very helpful lesson on the attack strategy m
Hi Tim. I have been watching your videos on how to master rhythm for quite sometime now and I must admit that I have gained a lot. I am just learning how to read music and play piano by myself. I really appreciate what I have learnt today about counting 16th notes because this is one area that has been a bit challenging for me. I look forward to learning more and more from you. Thanks.
Excellent rhythm music theory refresher
You are an excellent teacher! Thank you for bringing so much understanding to the mystery.
Very helpful. Well explained. Thank you!
I can’t thank you enough for explaining this. I will soon get in person lessons but for now I’m trying to use an app and your channel to help me with the basics! Thank youuuuuuuu!
Excellent really appreciate these lessons
Clear as crystal! Very helpful. 6 weeks into piano learning. Top!!!
I find that the attack approach strategy is very helpful when learning how to correctly count out the beats in each measure or bar.
Thank you so much for this video. I've seen a few videos on rhythms, but my brain just wasnt ready for it. zi got it now! 😊 And as usual, well done video. Thanks
So glad I found your lessons on counting!!🤗🎵🎶
Glad you found them too!
Good job! Thank you.
Thank you Tim. You made me clear on ties.
you are the best teacher
I think that you may have the best lessons when it comes to rhythms, how to really understand them on sheet music and apply them to the instrument. I took an online course taught by a college music professor and he did not explain these things nearly as well, which is why I went looking for other sources.
All of a sudden you have made this very clear in my mind. I have always had trouble counting the beats.
very helpful thanks
Fantastic, you are truly great teacher.
Very very useful thank you so much!!!
Great tips about the counting and attack points. This will help me a lot as a beginner keyboard (piano) player.
that's very useful for me .thank you!
Thank you, It's very useful to me
I have just found your series on counting and I find it superb. The final attack point example was particularly relevant to me as in Blues the 1/8th note is frequently a short quick slide over. But in How Long Blues the first note in the first bar is a 1/8th F chord in first inversion that ties to the first chord in the second bar that is a half note. the 1e+a method is particularly relevant here. Thank you
ive been taking lessons only just practicing my 2nd lessons learning the chords but this is helped me understand how to count cords i havent gotten into 16th notes yet but itll help me count later when i get that far in my lessons but ive been taking notes n writing all this stuff down in a note book to look off later
Very good - leads to 'swing'. I play sax, but counting is my Achilles heel, so your lessons are very helpful. Thanks.
Thanks, learned something new again.
You are genius while teaching
Very easy manner
God blesses you
Continue teaching
Thanks
thank you sir... definitely subscribed!
This is really helpful to me
I find it very helpful to glance at the first two notes and last two notes of the bar. If it ends on a quarter note it's played on the 4. A ending eighth note is played on 4 +. If the bar ends with a quarter and a eighth then they're played on the 3+ and 4+. It's easy to count backwards two notes.
Understanding the beginning and ending rhythm of a bar makes the middle much easier to sight read.
Sixteenths work the same. Glance at the first and last notes of the bar. Then fill in the middle.
0:56 "that's like the worst question mark I've ever seen" LOL..!! Loved your self-effacing joke..!!
Great lesson, I am looking for a fully comprehensive sheet music exercise for chords and chord inversions, so I can practice visual to mechanical learning..to be able to quickly recognize and play stacked chords..Anything like that available for download?
i love it
What blew my mind about beaming notes is that notes are not beamed across the 2nd and 3rd beats… rather they are tied. Makes reading so much easier.
Genius
Tim, Thank you so much. Great tutorial.
I'd probably only put the syllables that are optional in terms of being spoken in parentheses and not include the main beat numbers that should always necessarily be spoken.
at the 11:55 mark, with the grouping of the notes you circled, would i play just one note or all 3 since they all equal one beat?
Thank you for replaying.
Never knew about the beam=1 either
I didnt know I'll be learning a math here
3:55 look at his desktop
I am 73 years old would like to learn piano but I can see how tough it is .I try to understand the lesson but mt brains not coping with me