I'm finding this extremely helpful, although I am struggling to keep up to the beat in the second verse. I keep going back to try to see what you are doing with your left hand... but anyway... loving this and I cant believe how I am improving... I practice every day... (no wonder my neighbors are not speaking to me)
Hi angela. Thx for the message! One helpful thing to try for transitioning from static chords to getting more “movement” is just staying on one chord and counting the constant beat (1,2,3,4) of the song slowly and letting your fingers individually go up and down as if you were tapping the rhythm out on a table top (always having 1 finger come down on each of the 4 constant beat rhythms) but instead of banging out the rhythm on a table you are having your fingers come down on one of the piano keys that are notes of the chord. It doesn’t matter which finger. Think about bringing some musicality and rhythm into your hands. Based on the rhythm that your brain already knows from hearing and knowing the song. I don’t know if that makes sense or is helpful at all. Thanks again for the message.
@@stevesongs1 thanks so much, can't wait to wake up in the mornings to practice🤣will try and I will eventually get there, I'm sure. Rome was not built in a day... any other videos apart from Hey Jude and Let it be?
I'm finding this extremely helpful, although I am struggling to keep up to the beat in the second verse. I keep going back to try to see what you are doing with your left hand... but anyway... loving this and I cant believe how I am improving... I practice every day... (no wonder my neighbors are not speaking to me)
These videos have really helped me thank you !... the fact that you are making classic pop songs so easy to play.
Thanks for the message! Glad the videos were helpful.
Thanks, you put a lot of work into this, very useful to me.
Thanks for the comment Kevin. So glad to hear that it was helpful!
Excellent Job , step by step . Love how you built it up . Thank you nice and clear teaching .
Thx for the message Susan!
Brilliant Steve thanks
Thanks you make it easy to learn
Thnk you steve! Nice tutoring
Thanks for the comment Sonia!
This was awesome! I loved it! Do you have a printable version of your music?
Thank you! Yes - in the description of the basic version.
Very cool !
Thanks!
The last part is impossible for me to keep up to. Everything else is awesome. I try this every single day. Is there a video on beats perhaps
Hi angela. Thx for the message! One helpful thing to try for transitioning from static chords to getting more “movement” is just staying on one chord and counting the constant beat (1,2,3,4) of the song slowly and letting your fingers individually go up and down as if you were tapping the rhythm out on a table top (always having 1 finger come down on each of the 4 constant beat rhythms) but instead of banging out the rhythm on a table you are having your fingers come down on one of the piano keys that are notes of the chord. It doesn’t matter which finger. Think about bringing some musicality and rhythm into your hands. Based on the rhythm that your brain already knows from hearing and knowing the song. I don’t know if that makes sense or is helpful at all. Thanks again for the message.
@@stevesongs1 thanks so much, can't wait to wake up in the mornings to practice🤣will try and I will eventually get there, I'm sure. Rome was not built in a day... any other videos apart from Hey Jude and Let it be?
Wrong key. And if this is intermediate, then consider me Frederic Chopin.