@@eliasgonzalez5357 True, especially if the piece has accidentals. I don't know why they're called accidental notes if they're composed on purpose, but I love how a lot of people perk up at them 😂
I was at a studio recording a few demos with my band. I play the trumpet. I cracked on a high note and asked to redo it. Both sound engineers could not hear where the crack was. Neither could the rest of my band. It ended up on the final version and I can still hear it everytime I play the demo. No one else I've played it for can hear it
Imperfections are what makes music special. In a world of midi nowadays, imperfections are hard to replicate naturally and are often what producers are looking for.
One night of missed practice, only the musician notices. Two nights of missed practise, the band notices. Three nights of missed practise everyone notices.
@@piano_in_the_wild This video assured me to play the entire La Campanella in front of my music room one day lol. I am learning that song, and I can play 2 minutes into the piece.
@@usx06240 I would, but I haven't the faintest idea where I can find him talk about this. Is there a video in particular? I'm guessing tonebase but I really have no idea.
I feel like people notice mistakes more so when your live covering a popular song everyone knows. I normally don't play popular songs but I do play very diatonic music and I also feel that if I mess up, people can still hear it. I just tell them I had a little jazz slip lol
@@PeaceNinja007 Yea that’s true, it also depends on what mistake you are making. If you are playing another note in the same key it does not sound off :p
My h.s. choir director used to say, "Never underestimate the ignorance of your audience." It's a truth that has served me well. One of the hardest things I ever learned was how to accept a compliment when I knew I had made mistakes. Just smile and say thank you, sans explanation or self-deprecation. Don't reprimand people's compliments. It's as if you're telling them they are too stupid to know the difference between a good performance and a bad one. And while that may be true, it's incredibly rude to point it out!! 💯
That's what my sax teacher taught me at the end of my senior recital when she complimented me and I mentioned my failures instead of taking the complement. She said "shut up and say thank you!" 😂... That stuck with me.
Really? I’m a pianist and a friend of mine is a drummer. There have been multiple times I heard him play and he said he messed up a bunch but I didn’t notice any of it.
@@tomtativewhen you learned a piece you will immediately know if you hit a wrong note even without hearing anything, because your hands, exes and brain all know what you were supposed to play
For my senior sax recital in college, there was a high note followed by a tricky run back down. I kinda got it, but I noticed my own failures and I know my sax teacher heard me play it better before. When she came and congratulated me at the end, I said "yeah but I missed the tricky part!"... She looked at me and said "shut up and take the compliment! Nobody else noticed! Just say thank you and move on"... That stuck with me for life. We can be so critical of ourselves that we forget how much joy we can bring to others with our music.
lol I had a whole comment thread debating someone justifying contemporary music as .... music, and this was one of my arguments. The audience doesn't even know what they're listening to. You can make a "mistake" and no one will ever notice, it's lazy, requires no effort, and honestly ugly lol
Rubinstein once said, "If I miss one day (of practice), I notice it; if I miss two days, the critics notice it; if I miss three days, the *audience* notice it!" The moral: practice, practice, practice! 🧐😬🎶🎹
When I was in music school, we always had a small concert where you would perform if you accomplished something such as good placement on competition. I won the first place recently, so I had to perform. In middle of playing the piece, my brain and hands just stopped, like fully stopped. I just looked at the crowd and my teacher in the back, there were a few giggles in that dead silence, and then I remembered the notes and continued playing. I'm pretty sure they noticed da mistake.
Can definitely relate. First time I performed a Chopin Etude, I was totally unprepared because even though I knew all the notes I didn’t understand the technique and did not play it expressively. In the performance I arguably played more wrong notes than right notes. I felt awful afterwards. And the audience thought I sounded fantastic.
One time in an audition i froze for a small moment. I left the stage almost crying, but a couple of days later my mom genuinely asked if it was a mistake or part of the music 'cause she didn't remembered that part from when she heard me studying
Dude, this actually happened to me I was supposed to be playing E chord and I ended up hitting the third instead of the route, and it sounded terrible and so I had to keep playing till like resolve it. It was so bad.
A piece if advise I give to musicians, and probably the most important (that took me a long time to really learn) is than no one hears your mistakes more than you do. Unless the mistake is egregious, chances are most people won’t even notice
So true - my piano teacher had to teach me how to ignore mistakes and just keep playing, as when you’re the one playing it’s really hard to not just stop from how bad it sounds. But this is a terrible thing to do in piano exams, because the examiner will probably mark you down for having paused and then started again
I played alto sax in the school band for 8 years (stage orchestra, not marching band). Every year at work when the Christmas music starts playing, there's a version of Canon in the song rotation where one of the violins plays a flat note, and none of my coworkers has any idea what I'm talking about. They apparently can't hear it, but it's so blatantly obvious to me.
That is so real 😂😭 I’ve had a concert last year in which I did so much mistakes and my mother would replay and replay the recording, loving what I had played and each time, I would literally roll on the ground in pain
once i recorded myself playing and while i was playing i was so convinced i fcked up the whole thing but when i rewatched the recording it was completely fine 😭😭
Played this song for a recital last week, and it indeed sounded that way to me! Mozart always kicks my butt, but making mistakes in front of your own students is good for both you and your students lol.
It's so true, and as we know that the audience doesn't hear it, we act as if nothing had happened! Since I've been doing concerts I've gotten used to it, however now I notice that: When I pull my mouth, I play in tune. When I play out of tune I smile. So when I play out of tune people think I'm playing in tune but when I play in tune they think I'm playing out of tune 😭😭😭
Once i was playing for a group of people at my chord and one of the arpeggios accidentally did a sharp and it still sounded good, it was a game song and no one noticed lol
Painfully accurate. Hate when I play bad and mention I’m working on it still and they just say it sounds great. I’m like I need actual critiques to get better dang it! 😂
Subscribe if you heard a mistake
Yes, actually im begginer of famous song in piano
i heard a different mistake
I heard it because all my videos has turkish march💀💀💀 (the mistake is its not supposed to be legato)
Yea,definitely! I’m an beginner at rush e!
I'm a pianist, (amongst other things). Technically, I cheated. 😂
If you're a musician in the audience, you also hear what the pianist hears 😅
When its major, yes, but if its minor and you dont know the piece, its not likely you Will notice
@@eliasgonzalez5357 True, especially if the piece has accidentals. I don't know why they're called accidental notes if they're composed on purpose, but I love how a lot of people perk up at them 😂
No you usually dont
As a pianist myself I can confirm this is true
I was 1 thousandth like (i have the power on this comment)
Its just a jazz rendition guys nothing to worry about
Underrated
average jazz player
(Im a jazz bassist)
I was thinking about that too 🤣
@@atlandfrisk _bruh_ hahaha
As a jazz pianist, there are ✨ no accidents✨ 😌
I was at a studio recording a few demos with my band. I play the trumpet. I cracked on a high note and asked to redo it. Both sound engineers could not hear where the crack was. Neither could the rest of my band. It ended up on the final version and I can still hear it everytime I play the demo. No one else I've played it for can hear it
Great story! I think that's the sugar and salt of being a musician!
Imperfections are what makes music special. In a world of midi nowadays, imperfections are hard to replicate naturally and are often what producers are looking for.
One night of missed practice, only the musician notices.
Two nights of missed practise, the band notices.
Three nights of missed practise everyone notices.
@@piano_in_the_wild This video assured me to play the entire La Campanella in front of my music room one day lol. I am learning that song, and I can play 2 minutes into the piece.
@@funnygrandpapuppet3300 wow, that's so cool! Good luck and all the best!!
That weak and disappointing hand gesture as you give up is also quite relatable
YAAA
na i rage bang
@@editorindebt8410 same
sad hand gesture is for public situations, rage bang for practice sessions
I just smash my hands randomly in the piano after i'm done with the song, or my head if i'm in the right mood
This makes me feel better about making mistakes due to performance anxiety.
Watch Seymour Bernstein on this subject.
the audience hears too much pedal
@@usx06240 I would, but I haven't the faintest idea where I can find him talk about this. Is there a video in particular? I'm guessing tonebase but I really have no idea.
Yes this helps, we allways say this to eachother before performing😊
İ littreally will prefor in front of all school tomorrow 😮💨
General audience doesn't notice mistake, they only notice that musician has noticed something and became nervous
Bruhh that me when I play violin
That’s true hahaha
I feel like people notice mistakes more so when your live covering a popular song everyone knows.
I normally don't play popular songs but I do play very diatonic music and I also feel that if I mess up, people can still hear it. I just tell them I had a little jazz slip lol
@@PeaceNinja007 Yea that’s true, it also depends on what mistake you are making. If you are playing another note in the same key it does not sound off :p
@@djulianofficial You’re right. But my goofy azz tends to slip usually one semi tone up which for the most part is not on the same key
My h.s. choir director used to say, "Never underestimate the ignorance of your audience." It's a truth that has served me well. One of the hardest things I ever learned was how to accept a compliment when I knew I had made mistakes. Just smile and say thank you, sans explanation or self-deprecation. Don't reprimand people's compliments. It's as if you're telling them they are too stupid to know the difference between a good performance and a bad one. And while that may be true, it's incredibly rude to point it out!! 💯
That is so true!
what if you discover Hannibal Lecter in the audience
@@Fourmyle44 chances are, you won't - because you made a mistake 😈
That's what my sax teacher taught me at the end of my senior recital when she complimented me and I mentioned my failures instead of taking the complement. She said "shut up and say thank you!" 😂... That stuck with me.
@@Fourmyle44the book!!! 😅 Well... Our brains would suffer...😂
If you fuck up as a drummer, on the other hand, EVERYONE notices 😭
Edit: Thanks for 500 likes! I had a feeling I wasn't alone on this one lol
Even the drum itself dissappointed
drummer here. Can totally relate 😢
Really? I’m a pianist and a friend of mine is a drummer. There have been multiple times I heard him play and he said he messed up a bunch but I didn’t notice any of it.
@@jackc9386 Drummers being extremely self-critical.
@@jackc9386 that's reassuring :) but based on the 110 likes, you might be in the minority on this one 😭
As a pianist, the one single mistaks feels like a electric strike to my ears and brain
So accurate
People with an ear for music are awesome. I wish I could hear that kind of thing
And the hand starts to become desorientated, mistakes will follow ⚡️
@@tomtative Are you sure? It psses me off when I make a mistake lol And then i'm all nervous if I have a crowd looking at me ..
@@tomtativewhen you learned a piece you will immediately know if you hit a wrong note even without hearing anything, because your hands, exes and brain all know what you were supposed to play
POV: a musician in the audience
I feel so comfortable when I don't understand the mistakes, I enjoy my life listening to any music 😂
My mind when it said “Pianist” 💀
what the 🥜
get of that damn site boy
get your mind out of the gutter little bro
What the pean--
@@tragicreeze I’m not even in the gutter and I heard it too! 😆
This goes for every instrument
This is by far the truest thing I've ever seen. And that's saying something.
For my senior sax recital in college, there was a high note followed by a tricky run back down. I kinda got it, but I noticed my own failures and I know my sax teacher heard me play it better before. When she came and congratulated me at the end, I said "yeah but I missed the tricky part!"... She looked at me and said "shut up and take the compliment! Nobody else noticed! Just say thank you and move on"... That stuck with me for life. We can be so critical of ourselves that we forget how much joy we can bring to others with our music.
Kosei when he sees his mum in the audience:
lmao frfr
Real😂
was looking for this
APRIL IS OVER PLS DONT DO THIS TO ME
Lmfao
This is exactly what happens!!! The greatest challenge is playing through mistakes as if nothing has happened. This is what I am training on now.
I love contemporary pieces because the audience can’t tell if the weird note was a mistake or intended 😂
lol I had a whole comment thread debating someone justifying contemporary music as .... music, and this was one of my arguments. The audience doesn't even know what they're listening to. You can make a "mistake" and no one will ever notice, it's lazy, requires no effort, and honestly ugly lol
Remember, there are no mistakes, only happy accidentals
Absolutely, Bob!😀
Life would B pretty ♭ without them, wouldn't it
That’s a # way to look at it my friend.
@@denniskanyanja3728 Well, what can I say? I'm A♮
@@2760adeEverybody needs a friend, even a mistake.😮
I love being able to hear the piano noises (more than just the strings). That’s cool
I'm still looking for the mistake in the audience part😊😅
Honestly I think both of them were great
The best part is watching yourself later and realize you played really well
“She just said pianist”
“She just Said Pianist”
“She just Said Pianist”
(EDIT:DAMN MY PHONE IS BLOWING UP!)
FR
FR
FR
FR
FR
Rubinstein once said, "If I miss one day (of practice), I notice it; if I miss two days, the critics notice it; if I miss three days, the *audience* notice it!"
The moral: practice, practice, practice! 🧐😬🎶🎹
40 HOUR!
When I was in music school, we always had a small concert where you would perform if you accomplished something such as good placement on competition. I won the first place recently, so I had to perform. In middle of playing the piece, my brain and hands just stopped, like fully stopped. I just looked at the crowd and my teacher in the back, there were a few giggles in that dead silence, and then I remembered the notes and continued playing.
I'm pretty sure they noticed da mistake.
100% true. Professional piano player here. Audience never notices. Just keep playing. Don’t talk about with people who compliment you.
Can definitely relate. First time I performed a Chopin Etude, I was totally unprepared because even though I knew all the notes I didn’t understand the technique and did not play it expressively. In the performance I arguably played more wrong notes than right notes. I felt awful afterwards. And the audience thought I sounded fantastic.
The last chord and the key after it is jazzy. I like it
Frrrrr relatable for me
as a musician I can confirm, this is exactly what it feels like to
I konw that feeling i did make a mistake before
OMG it's frisk
YO FRISK UNDERTALE BRO!!1!1!!1🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥📢📢📢📢📢
Help the voice saying pianist
As a pianist and a perfectionist and overthinker i totaly agree w this thats why i get so nervous in my recitals
One time in an audition i froze for a small moment. I left the stage almost crying, but a couple of days later my mom genuinely asked if it was a mistake or part of the music 'cause she didn't remembered that part from when she heard me studying
why is this so relatable
Dude, this actually happened to me I was supposed to be playing E chord and I ended up hitting the third instead of the route, and it sounded terrible and so I had to keep playing till like resolve it. It was so bad.
THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS! I have some kind of performance anxiety and each mistake often feels like end of the world, which is not ;)
I made a piano recital as a final exam in my Piano class during school. I made about a 40% accuracy but everyone thought I played flawlessly.
that pianist is still hearing it way better than i would if i was playing
Soo frickin relatable. Im like that when i make a mistake
I always hear that when practicing, even during recitals sometimes 😭
So relatable bc i'm a pianist
A piece if advise I give to musicians, and probably the most important (that took me a long time to really learn) is than no one hears your mistakes more than you do. Unless the mistake is egregious, chances are most people won’t even notice
my mom is the audience fr
So true, it's sometimes frustrating when you hear a mistake and the one you're showcasing to thinks its perfect
So true - my piano teacher had to teach me how to ignore mistakes and just keep playing, as when you’re the one playing it’s really hard to not just stop from how bad it sounds. But this is a terrible thing to do in piano exams, because the examiner will probably mark you down for having paused and then started again
I played alto sax in the school band for 8 years (stage orchestra, not marching band). Every year at work when the Christmas music starts playing, there's a version of Canon in the song rotation where one of the violins plays a flat note, and none of my coworkers has any idea what I'm talking about. They apparently can't hear it, but it's so blatantly obvious to me.
Literally me🤧
I'm also a pianist and I can relate so much 😂
100% When I make mistakes and listen to the recording of it I realise how hard it actually is to notice it
So True!
As a pianist with perfect pitch, I can more than relate lol
The last note actually sounds good
So true. That's so relatable bc i'm a pianist
So true!
I play 6 instruments, so I hear what the pianist hears as well.
Whoah cool guy alert
Damn save some for the rest of us
Please delete I don’t want my girl to see this
i like the second more, it has more "character" while the first one is more clean and "correct"
As a pianist myself i can agree.
Yep this me! lol
Just a normal arrangement by Hamelin
Beautiful tunes. What a gift
this is so real
🤣 Yes - I know that!
This video makes me have to go pee
It's true man
I hear myself all the time
That is so real 😂😭 I’ve had a concert last year in which I did so much mistakes and my mother would replay and replay the recording, loving what I had played and each time, I would literally roll on the ground in pain
I felt that in my core
There are no mistakes, there is only the attitude with which you play a note.
Brooo the end actually sounded like it was just a jazz rendition 😂
“That was lovely” .. me trying me hardest to take the compliment
Can confirm. That’s exactly what it feels like
as a pianist thats so true😭😭
hi Kassie! I really miss you and watching your videos. I’m so excited for you to come back and I’m sure everyone else will be thrilled
This is so relatable. I’ll add tho-your finger control is top notch. I’m no where near that.
why is this so relatable 😭
So true
When I do it I make so many mistakes and people don’t notice but me just be hearing nothing right
True so relatable 😂😂
What I hear : Pure music 🥰
So relatable!
once i recorded myself playing and while i was playing i was so convinced i fcked up the whole thing but when i rewatched the recording it was completely fine 😭😭
So true and my music teacher alway told me ignore what i am hearing and just continue playing cause the part i messed up will come again💀
literally so real.
Played this song for a recital last week, and it indeed sounded that way to me! Mozart always kicks my butt, but making mistakes in front of your own students is good for both you and your students lol.
i've listened to this so many times, it sounds normal now 😂
It’s actually so true,when I practice piano
It's so true, and as we know that the audience doesn't hear it, we act as if nothing had happened!
Since I've been doing concerts I've gotten used to it, however now I notice that:
When I pull my mouth, I play in tune.
When I play out of tune I smile.
So when I play out of tune people think I'm playing in tune but when I play in tune they think I'm playing out of tune 😭😭😭
lol omg. I know the feeling.
EXACTLYY I was doing an concert at my school and I made many mistakes yet my friends said they heard no mistakes 😂
When it's a competition and everyone there knows when you make a mistake💀💀💀💀 This is relatable af
Once i was playing for a group of people at my chord and one of the arpeggios accidentally did a sharp and it still sounded good, it was a game song and no one noticed lol
Amazing!
Husk shaking... 🥺🥺🥺
I'm fiction-hearted of him so i feel his emotions, and i feel them VERY HARD in this scene 😔😟😥😢
😰😰😰😰
This is SO true
I love your Piano, she is so Gorgeous ❤🩹😭
Painfully accurate. Hate when I play bad and mention I’m working on it still and they just say it sounds great. I’m like I need actual critiques to get better dang it! 😂
I hear every single sound that his nail caused
So good ! Same in other types of arts ! I love it
The F in the end was personal 😂