Wow. So this came before Rousseau's recording. I've always wanted to see Un Sospiro recorded like this. The only reason I didn't see it before I saw Rousseau's was because your channel is so underrated 😭 Edit: It would've been nice to see this the day it was posted because it was the week before school started so I would've had this to calm me down. On the other hand, I was enjoying a sunset on a Hawaiian vacation when I saw Rousseau's and I requested this piece so many times to him, so I was pumped when I saw his. But what I'm saying is your channel deserves as much attention as Rousseau's
Thank you! Rousseau sure has earned his massive following though! I don't think I'd ever be able to put out videos as fast as he does, with such consistency.
fantastic performance friend!i heard this song recently for the first time and thought i HAD to learn it, it's so beautiful, i would like to as you, how long did it take you to learn? i don't have sheets, do you recommend me doing perhaps learning the song 20 seconds at a time, and how long did it take you to learn? i'm a very slow learner, when i learn both hands together, it takes me a while for my brain to get left hand and right hand working together.
Are you human or piano cyborb? Oo Can you select all images with a street sign as a test? That was impessive. You very tallented if get to this level in 3 years...
I don't really have anything to add that hasn't been said a thousand times before. But the most important tips I've found have been... Never have a "zero day". Always practice a little each day, even if it's a few minutes. Always stop playing if you feel yourself losing concentration (that's when you'll stop learning as effectively). Just take a break and continue 10 minutes later. And of course, don't play stuff that's above your level (I did this way too much). It's tempting, and you might even get it to sound good, but it could ruin your technique. You can correct bad techniques of course, but it's a lot of extra work.
That's true... I'm taking lessons since 4 years and my current main focuses are: Finishing Hanon: "The virtuoso pianist" (Yeah that DAMN book everyone hates... O_O "only" the last chapter and all the scales, arpeggios etc. are left -_- ... x_x (R.I.P 2018)), Learning chord trills and tremolos and playing Alkan's Saltarelle (The only problem here is the fingering for the chromatic scales, the rest is intermediately difficult for me, as I have large hands (I can play octaves with 1-3 fingering, which is good for the section (I think it was around page 8), where you have to play 2 16th-grace notes before an f# octave on the left hand... which I always play with 5-4 (grace notes) and 3-1 (octave) fingering) What do you think of my learning progress? I'm always open to opinions and would really like to know yours :D
Hey dud I wonder what is the logic the choice of coler like with the dark bule, light blue, green and the yellow. And also to leave a comment with out pointing out that suler cool performance would be an absolute sin!!! So yeah that was absolutely magical my friend. And also I've been trying in my free time to transcribe piano pieces and I was wondering how the writting properly works when writing a transcruption of a performance into a score. Well I believe I'll get a look to the score you linked into the description to try to figure it out. :) I just love the piece you played there mate! :D
Hi, thanks for the compliments! There's actually only meant to be two colors; blue and green, like most Synthesia videos. But I've added a cinematic effect on it which I think makes it look nicer, but it also shifts the colors in a weird way. The dark blue color and dark green colors get even darker, while the light blue and light green colors turn lighter. The light green one almost turns yellow. And regarding transcriptions, the scores are written just like normal music scores, you just write everything you're able to hear. The score I linked isn't a transcription, it's just the original sheet that Liszt wrote. It's actually a very complex piece, so if you're not familiar with sheet music I wouldn't start off with that one.
Synthesia Composer nah I'm not planing to to learn this piece in no way it's absolutely beyond my level and 8 know it absolutely. But I've started to transcribe pieces from an other guy. And he shifts hands to play like the "harmonic" of the chord he plays. So the thing I'm trouble with it if I should writr it in the trebel clef of keed it in the lower clef stafs. Of change to the trebel clef in staff that the left hand "always". It's just that proper question I'm troubling to make my mind on how to write it. And also I haven't really learn how to properly play piano by reading the score of the piece. I'm like a ghetto pianist, if I had to put it into words. xD But it's just I don't have much knowledge about how to properly write that passage. So I'm still trying to figure it out how. x)
I would switch clefs to avoid excessive ledger lines. If there are hand crossings then you can just indicate it by writing "L.H." or "R.H" wherever they cross. If you checked out the score to Un Sospiro, Liszt does something very clever. He introduces a third staff temporarily, and uses it only for the melodic line. This is the only piece I've come across that does this, and I'd only use it if there's A LOT of hand crossing (because just putting L.H and R.H everywhere might get tiring to look at).
I don't really do those kind of videos, but there are some nice ones on RUclips already. Maybe this one might help? ruclips.net/video/SeJ6T_8iQ0Y/видео.html
It's definitely the hardest part of the song to get those arpeggios right. Slow and steady practice is the only helpful tip I can really give. I use 1-2-(45) fingering on most of the chords (45 being the double note), and sometimes 1-3-(45). Just remember that for most people it takes years of regular piano playing to build up the dexterity needed to perfect a piece like this. A beginner will simply never master this song without years of experience.
I play anything from 30 minutes to two hours per day. And I've heard those pieces, they're great. My favorite of Liszt's Réminiscences would have to be Réminiscences de Norma. If I was a better pianist I would definitely learn it, especially seeing how there isn't a single good Synthesia video for it.
No, three and a half years overall. I learned this piece two years ago and it took a couple of months to learn... I wasn't quite ready for it back then!
Yep, I record the MIDI while filming myself. Add them together in Adobe Premiere. Then I add a cinematic effect to the synthesia colors, and a black background in the Synthesia video creator to make the notes stand out more. My DAW is Studio One 3, and the piano sounds are directly from my piano. It's a Kawai ES8 and has very customizable sounds.
Reading Steiner What a coincidence! If you want high quality sounds I really recommend recording midis from the kawai. The amount of customizable details they've put in it is crazy...
Synthesia Composer yea but i need to figure out how to exatcly record it as sound file on my pc without the extra step of putting an usb stick into my kawai xd well currently i only have a midi cable which is connected to my pc but i guess i will need an usb cable for that not sure tho :D gonna figure it out somehow
Haha, thanks! This piece is flashy, but for a Liszt etude it's still quite easy... If you want to play Liszt, his third Consolation is a good place to start. Intermediate difficulty, and very beautiful!
I have a camera attached above my piano, and my piano is connected to my computer through MIDI cables. So while I'm recording my hands, everything I play is being turned into a MIDI file. I create a Synthesia video of the MIDI file, and from there it's just a matter of combining it with the video of my hands.
It's actually just my phone, sort of resting on two wall hooks above the piano. It would be better to use a camera though, one with a different kind of lens. Notice how the lowest (and highest) notes don't quite align to my hands? A camera with the right lens would fix that.
Synthesia Composer oh hey!!! I thought you stopped this channnel!! Yes they are definitely my favorite parts but currently I’m learning this piece so I made those time stamps. If you are free as heck, can you check my video titled “un sospiro 5.24??” You are great teacher for me! Thanks for the great video!
@@Haji84 Awesome! This is the first time I'm seeing the direct results of someone watching my videos! You've already got the hand crossing down quite well, which will definitely help in later parts of this piece. Try to add a little more rubato as well. If there's one thing I regret with my own performance, it's the lack of rubato in some parts...
Synthesia Composer thanks for the advice! I’m so much noob for piano that I didn’t know what rubato is until very now lol But I definitely will focus on it! Thank you so much for watching my video😍
Special thanks to Marioverehrer for sharing my performance! ruclips.net/video/-mf3yU8V56s/видео.html
great piece, The next one of mine uploaded to Marioverhrer's channel this week is (FNAF 1) for piano, Just a sneak peak.
PianXtreme Cool! Looking forward to it, though I'm not familiar with the music from FNAF.
177 subs?
It's 178 now
FNAF is up on his channel!
Was 1:50-2:10 played without pedal?
1:50-2:05
It’s astonoshing how Liszt came up with such beauty. This creativity is beyond me.
Wow! The way your hands glide across those keys has me baffled. That was fantastic!
Awesome quality for such a small channel. You deserve way more subs!
Just found this channel, why does it only have 27 subscribers when it's amazing? I'm gonna make that 28 subscribers
Now we are at 29 ^-^
Now we are 358
With me it's 364
But looks like this guys stopped posting😶😶😶☹️
That's so unfortunate 😣😕
omg you're my new inspiration (kisses from Brazil)
Wow. So this came before Rousseau's recording. I've always wanted to see Un Sospiro recorded like this. The only reason I didn't see it before I saw Rousseau's was because your channel is so underrated 😭
Edit: It would've been nice to see this the day it was posted because it was the week before school started so I would've had this to calm me down. On the other hand, I was enjoying a sunset on a Hawaiian vacation when I saw Rousseau's and I requested this piece so many times to him, so I was pumped when I saw his. But what I'm saying is your channel deserves as much attention as Rousseau's
Thank you! Rousseau sure has earned his massive following though! I don't think I'd ever be able to put out videos as fast as he does, with such consistency.
Synthesia Composer it’s multiple people :/
La mejor versión de Un Suspiró que he encontrado sin duda
*cough cough*
Rousseau
*cough cough*
Please more videos as this channel is the BEST hands down ! More Chopin, Liszt, Beethoven and Brahms !
Absolutely gorgeous. Thanks you for this.
You’re so talented at piano!!
Aw man, so good ans beautiful
Beatiful piece and so is your performance. :)
WoW great job dude i wish i had discovered your channel before
You've just earned your 56th sub.
1:54 the beatdrop of the century
It was insane ! GGs !
0:12
Man!
Amazingggggg!!
fantastic performance friend!i heard this song recently for the first time and thought i HAD to learn it, it's so beautiful,
i would like to as you, how long did it take you to learn? i don't have sheets, do you recommend me doing perhaps learning the song 20 seconds at a time, and how long did it take you to learn?
i'm a very slow learner, when i learn both hands together, it takes me a while for my brain to get left hand and right hand working together.
Are you human or piano cyborb? Oo
Can you select all images with a street sign as a test?
That was impessive. You very tallented if get to this level in 3 years...
BadArt42 Haha, thank you! But I'm only human. Anyone should be able to reach my level in three years if they practice effectively and a lot.
Any tips or advices?
I don't really have anything to add that hasn't been said a thousand times before. But the most important tips I've found have been... Never have a "zero day". Always practice a little each day, even if it's a few minutes.
Always stop playing if you feel yourself losing concentration (that's when you'll stop learning as effectively). Just take a break and continue 10 minutes later.
And of course, don't play stuff that's above your level (I did this way too much). It's tempting, and you might even get it to sound good, but it could ruin your technique. You can correct bad techniques of course, but it's a lot of extra work.
That's true... I'm taking lessons since 4 years and my current main focuses are: Finishing Hanon: "The virtuoso pianist" (Yeah that DAMN book everyone hates... O_O "only" the last chapter and all the scales, arpeggios etc. are left -_- ... x_x (R.I.P 2018)),
Learning chord trills and tremolos and playing Alkan's Saltarelle (The only problem here is the fingering for the chromatic scales, the rest is intermediately difficult for me, as I have large hands
(I can play octaves with 1-3 fingering, which is good for the section (I think it was around page 8), where you have to play 2 16th-grace notes before an f# octave on the left hand... which I always play with
5-4 (grace notes) and 3-1 (octave) fingering)
What do you think of my learning progress? I'm always open to opinions and would really like to know yours :D
@@PannenbergMusic hello can you tell me some pieces that you can play cause I need to share some things cz sharing will help us to improve :)
Hey dud I wonder what is the logic the choice of coler like with the dark bule, light blue, green and the yellow.
And also to leave a comment with out pointing out that suler cool performance would be an absolute sin!!! So yeah that was absolutely magical my friend.
And also I've been trying in my free time to transcribe piano pieces and I was wondering how the writting properly works when writing a transcruption of a performance into a score. Well I believe I'll get a look to the score you linked into the description to try to figure it out. :)
I just love the piece you played there mate! :D
Hi, thanks for the compliments! There's actually only meant to be two colors; blue and green, like most Synthesia videos. But I've added a cinematic effect on it which I think makes it look nicer, but it also shifts the colors in a weird way. The dark blue color and dark green colors get even darker, while the light blue and light green colors turn lighter. The light green one almost turns yellow.
And regarding transcriptions, the scores are written just like normal music scores, you just write everything you're able to hear. The score I linked isn't a transcription, it's just the original sheet that Liszt wrote. It's actually a very complex piece, so if you're not familiar with sheet music I wouldn't start off with that one.
Synthesia Composer nah I'm not planing to to learn this piece in no way it's absolutely beyond my level and 8 know it absolutely.
But I've started to transcribe pieces from an other guy. And he shifts hands to play like the "harmonic" of the chord he plays. So the thing I'm trouble with it if I should writr it in the trebel clef of keed it in the lower clef stafs. Of change to the trebel clef in staff that the left hand "always".
It's just that proper question I'm troubling to make my mind on how to write it.
And also I haven't really learn how to properly play piano by reading the score of the piece. I'm like a ghetto pianist, if I had to put it into words. xD
But it's just I don't have much knowledge about how to properly write that passage. So I'm still trying to figure it out how. x)
I would switch clefs to avoid excessive ledger lines. If there are hand crossings then you can just indicate it by writing "L.H." or "R.H" wherever they cross. If you checked out the score to Un Sospiro, Liszt does something very clever. He introduces a third staff temporarily, and uses it only for the melodic line. This is the only piece I've come across that does this, and I'd only use it if there's A LOT of hand crossing (because just putting L.H and R.H everywhere might get tiring to look at).
Can you make a video where you teach us this ... I hope I can play it...
I don't really do those kind of videos, but there are some nice ones on RUclips already. Maybe this one might help? ruclips.net/video/SeJ6T_8iQ0Y/видео.html
Where can I download this midi file... 😩
At the moment I don't share my MIDI files, sorry.
@@SynthesiaComposer Can I Get the audio file? (mp3 for example). I Love your performance, that's why I'd like to have the audio.
@@EduardoRamirez-wx6ng You can convert any RUclips video to mp3 if you search for a converter! I don't have access to my files at the moment.
@@SynthesiaComposer when are you going to have access to your files?
Wow!
Hi ! Can you do my Transcendental etude no.1 ? thanks
Franz Liszt Maybe in the future... I don't find it particularly interesting though. And I'm unable to learn your other transcendental etudes.
Ok
I can play the half of 4th one (Mazeppa). I Don't particularly like his transcendental etudes. It's too...'bashed'...or melodramatic... IMHO.
I feel the same way. I prefer his concert etudes and paganini etudes. Mazeppa has some beautiful parts though.
please give me tips for the part at 1:54
It's definitely the hardest part of the song to get those arpeggios right. Slow and steady practice is the only helpful tip I can really give. I use 1-2-(45) fingering on most of the chords (45 being the double note), and sometimes 1-3-(45). Just remember that for most people it takes years of regular piano playing to build up the dexterity needed to perfect a piece like this. A beginner will simply never master this song without years of experience.
Thank you for the advice this tutorial is really helping me out
Congratulations, I’m a very fan of liszt and I can tell you you played really well, next piece:sonata in B minor 😂
alvaro san gil Thank you! His sonata would probably take me like a year to master, otherwise I'd go for it!
Nice to hear, how many hours you play at day? Because if you play this with only 3 years of experience I bet you play 4/5 hours
By the way, check these out: ruclips.net/video/JI6JfJXcUjU/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/KB59i99Wxc4/видео.html
I play anything from 30 minutes to two hours per day. And I've heard those pieces, they're great. My favorite of Liszt's Réminiscences would have to be Réminiscences de Norma. If I was a better pianist I would definitely learn it, especially seeing how there isn't a single good Synthesia video for it.
I play 5 or 6 😂maybe one day I will upload the 12 transcendental etudes
I know this video is 5 years old but if you’re still there, are there any tips to play measure 30 insanely fast?
wow, that takes some skill! For how long have you been playing?
Thanks for watching! About three and a half years.
wtf, really? You have been playing piano for just 3 and a half years? Or was it just for this piece?
No, three and a half years overall. I learned this piece two years ago and it took a couple of months to learn... I wasn't quite ready for it back then!
It still is very very impressive! How much time do you practice a day or used to?
Thanks! I practice anywhere from 30 minutes to 2-3 hours a day.
Uuhhh how do you write this is sheet music ahaha
Which Programm do you use to edit your video? You just record your playing and then the synthesia and then match it over or?
Oh and which Daw and vst do you use?
Yep, I record the MIDI while filming myself. Add them together in Adobe Premiere. Then I add a cinematic effect to the synthesia colors, and a black background in the Synthesia video creator to make the notes stand out more. My DAW is Studio One 3, and the piano sounds are directly from my piano. It's a Kawai ES8 and has very customizable sounds.
Synthesia Composer Thanks for the fast answer. WWAAIT WUT LOL i got an kawai es8b too Loooool
Reading Steiner What a coincidence! If you want high quality sounds I really recommend recording midis from the kawai. The amount of customizable details they've put in it is crazy...
Synthesia Composer yea but i need to figure out how to exatcly record it as sound file on my pc without the extra step of putting an usb stick into my kawai xd well currently i only have a midi cable which is connected to my pc but i guess i will need an usb cable for that not sure tho :D gonna figure it out somehow
nice, how long have you played piano?
So this is how you play a franz liszt
Holy God damn how long have you been playing man?
Thanks! I've been playing for three and a half years.
Three and a half and you're already doing Liszt...I guess I gotta step up my game :p amazing performance man, you just got a new sub ;)
Haha, thanks! This piece is flashy, but for a Liszt etude it's still quite easy... If you want to play Liszt, his third Consolation is a good place to start. Intermediate difficulty, and very beautiful!
Are your fingers ok? You moved them around quite a bit.
MrLandShark 55 Haha, they're fine, don't worry. The Chopin etude I uploaded before this hurts much more because of the stretches.
Sir do you take requests?🤔
Sorry, no. I learn pieces too slowly to do that. Plus I only practice stuff that I really love listening to.
May i ask ho long you’ve been playing?
I'm up to four and a half years now!
how could you record from top? what is your setup?
I have a camera attached above my piano, and my piano is connected to my computer through MIDI cables. So while I'm recording my hands, everything I play is being turned into a MIDI file. I create a Synthesia video of the MIDI file, and from there it's just a matter of combining it with the video of my hands.
wow really creative :) whos holding the camera? a tripod ?
It's actually just my phone, sort of resting on two wall hooks above the piano. It would be better to use a camera though, one with a different kind of lens. Notice how the lowest (and highest) notes don't quite align to my hands? A camera with the right lens would fix that.
1:11
1:13
Are these timestamps your favorite parts of the song?
Synthesia Composer oh hey!!! I thought you stopped this channnel!! Yes they are definitely my favorite parts but currently I’m learning this piece so I made those time stamps.
If you are free as heck, can you check my video titled “un sospiro 5.24??”
You are great teacher for me! Thanks for the great video!
@@Haji84 Awesome! This is the first time I'm seeing the direct results of someone watching my videos! You've already got the hand crossing down quite well, which will definitely help in later parts of this piece. Try to add a little more rubato as well. If there's one thing I regret with my own performance, it's the lack of rubato in some parts...
Synthesia Composer thanks for the advice! I’m so much noob for piano that I didn’t know what rubato is until very now lol
But I definitely will focus on it! Thank you so much for watching my video😍