Lesson 2: Why I'm better than you at the piano

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  • Опубликовано: 25 фев 2023
  • instagram - / seankimmmm
    tiktok - www.tiktok.com/@seankimmmmm
    I have another vlog coming soon. !!CONCERT PREPARATION VLOG!! So make sure you stay tuned for that!
    Sorry I haven't been uploading for a while. I just needed some time to prepare for a performance that's coming up.
    In our second lesson, we explore a set of techniques that will most definitely help you become a better pianist. The technique I teach today, have been explored and perfected through my personal experiences of learning the piano for 17+ years. It is a bit unfortunate that none of the teachers I had before entering university had specifically taught me the importance of maintaining the 'natural hand position'. I just wanted to share the things that I had to figure out on my own for anyone that is out there struggling like how I used to.
    Sincerely,
    Sean Kim
    Motif Music

Комментарии • 259

  • @robbes7rh
    @robbes7rh Год назад +172

    Relaxed hand position. Playing with your arms, shoulders, and wrist. SLOW practice. Think about one note at a time. If one were to follow these priniciples and practices you laid out in just under 11 minutes, they would have a proper foundation to play anything they truly WANT to play.

    • @sacrilegiousboi978
      @sacrilegiousboi978 Год назад +5

      Yep, I started when I was 5 and I’ve had 4 teachers and all of them emphasised slow practice but only the fourth (who was a former concert pianist) ever emphasised relaxed natural hand position, using gravity and natural weight from the arms and bigger muscles rather than pressing from the wrists and fingers so my technique was garbage until I was about 18 and couldn’t really play anything decently above the level of the middle movement from Beethoven’s Pathetique sonata and Mozart Turkish March. Now i am playing Chopin and Liszt etudes a few years later. My fourth teacher as well as PIANOLAB (who also teaches and emphasises this sort of natural relaxed technique) and closely observing concert pianists on RUclips has transformed my playing. This guy is bang on the money.

    • @robbes7rh
      @robbes7rh Год назад

      @@sacrilegiousboi978 - what a great success story! There is a rich treasure trove of knowledge on RUclips videos. Things I might never have known about or explored arrive on my home page. I’m not usually enterprising enough to go to the library, but I will click a video that looks interesting.

    • @julianmunoz6034
      @julianmunoz6034 Год назад

      Maybe not 1 note at a time for sight reading

    • @LisztenToMe
      @LisztenToMe 6 месяцев назад

      Thinking about one note at a time is a lot less efficient and practical than grouping. This is coming from someone actively learning piano.

  • @Youmadbro5204
    @Youmadbro5204 Год назад +24

    I JUST started playing piano 3 days ago(21 year old) and your videos are like the only ones that actually make perfect sense to me. Can't wait to tryout your advice tomorrow. Thanks bro🙏🏿🙌🏿

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +6

      I’m excited for you 👏

    • @peterstadler6217
      @peterstadler6217 Год назад +3

      It takes real courage to drop the weight of your whole arm and hand into the respective key. But it's worth learning and practicing! With this technique you can skip years of relatively fruitless practice. By the way, this is also the basis of the Russian piano school. Some of the greatest pianists have come out of it.

    • @slicklicks4468
      @slicklicks4468 Год назад

      @@peterstadler6217 very true

  • @PianoWithGuido
    @PianoWithGuido Год назад +11

    As a piano teacher the "telling them to slow down" is spot on. I feel like sometimes I am getting paid to just repeat and repeat "slow down!" I blame the anxiety and speed in today's society standards, where everything has to be immediate or it is discarded. Playing the piano should feel easy and effortless, as the excellent Kenny Werner advised in his book "Effortless Mastery".

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      ahaha. Let me change your mind a little bit. Younger students (15 below) are always very excited to perform music, as they should. Every kid is typically very curious and excited about everything. To them, practicing slowly seems like it kills the creativity and the art of music. So basically, it kills the fun for them. While I am yet to find an effective method of getting younger students to practice slower, I don't really think that our society is the MAIN reason for their impatience.

  • @lolsup9817
    @lolsup9817 Год назад +4

    I knew a lot of this stuff already from my research but I think this is all really great advice and stuff that like you said: will dramatically change how good you become. Awesome vid!

  • @soyeux27
    @soyeux27 Год назад +1

    INCREDIBLE tips. Thanks for your great pedagogy and super good energy in this video !

  • @jeffh5388
    @jeffh5388 10 месяцев назад +2

    Outstanding. Very solid and detailed information. Thank you.

  • @heavylightpiano
    @heavylightpiano Год назад +1

    Love the honest tips! keep the videos coming. i need all the motivation and tips i can get while learning piano :D

  • @NAETEMUSIC
    @NAETEMUSIC Год назад +4

    I am here for this unencumbered confidence and energy. Keep it up king.

  • @nathanbarajas9174
    @nathanbarajas9174 Год назад +11

    I didn't realize how tense my fingers were till I started watching this video. Now I got to learn the Chopin method.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +6

      YES! THANK YOU. This is precisely the reason why I made this video. I didn't know this either until I was like 17 years old. So I'm so glad that I could be of help.

    • @S1st3
      @S1st3 Год назад

      What pieces did you play when you were 15? Would be really interesting

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      @@S1st3 I remember that my biggest pieces from when I was 15 were: Brahms sonata no. 3 and Chopin etude no. 25 no. 12

  • @MyPianoWay
    @MyPianoWay Год назад +1

    Great advice. You definitively deserve a broader audience!
    I want to support you so I subscribed! :)

  • @mmilrl5768
    @mmilrl5768 Год назад +10

    As a self taught, making sure I’m actually effectively using what you are discussing, is kinda hard for me to gauge. However, it is videos like these that have helped me develop my technique thus far. So thank you for sharing your piano expiration and wisdom!

    • @victoza9232
      @victoza9232 Год назад

      MMilr L "Self-taught" is a misnomer, as no one is really self-taught. "Self-directed" is a more accurate term. If you've read books or watched videos to learn how to play, those people
      who wrote the books and made the videos are your teachers.

    • @mmilrl5768
      @mmilrl5768 Год назад +1

      @@victoza9232 I agree, but it’s easier to say self-taught because everyone just understands it as you did.

  • @edwinbastiaens6788
    @edwinbastiaens6788 Год назад

    Great lesson. Thank you!

  • @chuleekornchotsuwan1194
    @chuleekornchotsuwan1194 6 месяцев назад

    I just played piano in my 40s. I agree >>> we have to practice. ^_^ I enjoyed watching your RUclips.

  • @Lucacarrara3173
    @Lucacarrara3173 Год назад

    Sean Kim, thank you very much for this video. I was never taught to use gravity. I can play a Chopin scherzo but never had the passages at concert standard tempo. I just had a practice session and I can feel how the legato comes easy and I get the sound I want with little regulations from the bicep and forearm, but avoiding pushing forward as I did before and remembering to go down to the key using natural gravity, thanks again I'll follow you right now.

  • @Cextra_the_artist
    @Cextra_the_artist Год назад +1

    I knew all those hours in rise of kingdoms would pay off!!

  • @memoky486
    @memoky486 Год назад +2

    great video man keep it up

  • @sethparker7236
    @sethparker7236 Год назад +1

    I like the bluntness of the title. The video got a little off topic from the title, but it’s nice to just see the honesty of “here’s why I’m better than you- I do things that you don’t. If you want to play like me, do some of these things.”
    I feel like that attitude is rare in the piano community because it’s not “proper” or “nice”, but not all piano students respond well to the same instruction. Personally, I find more direct, blunt, honest advice more helpful and challenging to me than just kind encouragement from a piano teacher who never pushes me to progress.
    Keep up the good work with the good videos, I have no doubt your channel will grow significantly. You got a subscribe from me.

  • @olirpinho
    @olirpinho Год назад +1

    thank you very much for this content, pretty useful

  • @user-nv2wt4hi8t
    @user-nv2wt4hi8t Год назад +8

    Honestly lad, respect the confidence in your abilities. Also, yeah, as someone who's been studying music for longer than a decade, from my pre-teen years to mid-way through my 20's, with something so often open to different interpretations and explanations, having a stream of different reasonings by a variety of teachers can be a fucking nightmare. Also, as a former guitarist turned pianist looking to get back to his teacher, this video is so relevant to me it's scary. I'd looked into Taubman, rotation, circling, releasing the hand, bouncing the wrist etc. and was still struggling with tension, particularly when circling and rotating. I realised I wasn't keeping the natural hand position. I was allowing the knuckles to decompress rather than keep that natural arch, where they're slightly raised. And pulling the muscles and tendons because of it. Subbed instantly. Your humour is on point and I would love to see as many insights as possible.
    Also the algorithm clearly stalks me as I've been saturating my RUclips time with the Chopin Institute.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      thank you for your support. I really appreciate it.

    • @user-nv2wt4hi8t
      @user-nv2wt4hi8t Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm Thank you for the content!

    • @eugenelevin9809
      @eugenelevin9809 Год назад

      What did you think of Taubman and Zhdanov?

  • @Ketsen
    @Ketsen Год назад

    I will try it thanks

  • @JBittermusic
    @JBittermusic Год назад +2

    Starting at 36 just out of love ❤thank you

  • @LogicalQ
    @LogicalQ Год назад +2

    As a fellow piano teacher, this ^^
    Everything you said is spot on. (Except the bit about the dotted eight-sixteenth rhythm being useless) :-)

  • @yudipitre5720
    @yudipitre5720 Год назад +1

    First time I see you .subscribed
    Thank you for advice

  • @Classicalmusichubb
    @Classicalmusichubb Год назад +1

    Bro keep making vids your persona is amazing your channel will grow very fast I promise

  • @MoneyAli75
    @MoneyAli75 Год назад +2

    Cmon pastor 🙌

  • @valentinzwerschke
    @valentinzwerschke Год назад

    This title really spoke to me haha very good!

  • @tomaszskuza9425
    @tomaszskuza9425 Год назад +1

    Thank You :)

  • @ml-ei3nz
    @ml-ei3nz Год назад +1

    Yes, yes, yes to everything you say here. A jewel of a Video, rare on RUclips nowadays.

  • @susannekalejaiye4351
    @susannekalejaiye4351 Год назад

    Thank you! I'm learning harp and some much of what you said about practice transfers to harp. Really appreciate your sharing.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      That’s actually so cool. I did suspect that it would apply to most instruments that require finger dexterity. But its awesome to hear some good feedback from a harpist!

  • @madster01
    @madster01 Год назад +2

    So you’re the Asian guy everyone in the world talks about. No matter how hard we try, Asian guy is always better

  • @adamyohan
    @adamyohan Год назад

    Very good video.

  • @nino0057
    @nino0057 Год назад

    I always tell people that if the Piano were to come alive and play something, what it would play would sound like Chopin. No one's captured the heart and soul of the instrument like that man.

  • @josiahskeys
    @josiahskeys Год назад

    It's so true
    There's absolutely no point of gate keeping on the piano. The amount of work it takes to become great is a barriy to entry, it becomes your whole life. No way around it. If you don't dedicate the time, it will never happen !

  • @rubenmarias411
    @rubenmarias411 Год назад +2

    Great Advice!! Do you always practice at the same slow speed? Do you increase the speed at which you practice? For example in the etude that you showed, the practice tempo and target tempo are very different, how do you go from slow practice to the fast tempo that you are targetting? Thanks!

  • @Lukethelegend-eg8nu
    @Lukethelegend-eg8nu Год назад

    Wild title

  • @danieljohnson411
    @danieljohnson411 Год назад +5

    Two dotted rythyms do have a purpose. Helps with feeling those rhythms especially in jazz type music.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Fair point

    • @hpitura
      @hpitura Год назад

      especially the first one, which is very close to swing. haven't seen or be thought the second one though. I mean the rhythm exists for sure, but I have not practiced scales or arpeggios with it.

    • @L3ver
      @L3ver Год назад

      I thought it was about training quicker movements, while still in small chunks that you can take slowly

    • @danieljohnson411
      @danieljohnson411 Год назад

      Jazz can get pretty fast at 200bpm you don't have time to really count it out you have to feel it. Think about improvisations over a jazz scale at that speed. Applied application of the exercise

    • @L3ver
      @L3ver Год назад

      @@danieljohnson411 At faster speeds in jazz you're not really playing the swing rhythm at all, just accenting in a certain way.
      Also this wouldn't be for jazz swing feel in general, because it's more of a triplet-based feel than dotted quaver

  • @TiagoPiano
    @TiagoPiano Год назад

    Hi Sean, when you mentioned staccato starting at key surface, does that apply to trills? I see people doing a sort of trampoline in an out of trills. I keep struggling with trills.

  • @Fanchen
    @Fanchen Год назад +4

    this is great. I'm going to steal some ideas for my own teaching studio lol

    • @boongusliga
      @boongusliga Год назад +1

      Omg fanchen 😳😳

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      No way its you 😂😂 I remember watching your rush e video and thinking “this guy has insane technique”. What an honour 🙏

    • @SixWatt
      @SixWatt Год назад +1

      No way I found you 💀

  • @spencer_campbell_
    @spencer_campbell_ Год назад +4

    Practice practice practice!

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +3

      yessir. practice like your life depends on it. cos it will for me.. 🥲

  • @rik-keymusic160
    @rik-keymusic160 Год назад

    Great no nonsens video!

  • @BLS5281997
    @BLS5281997 Год назад

    Wow this is super useful. What a great video! Super clear instructions. +1 subscribe

  • @thepianoplayer416
    @thepianoplayer416 9 месяцев назад

    Practice is 1 thing. I've seen some people who don't like music from the beginning. Their parents got them enrolled in a music program or with a private teacher. After a year or 2 they quit. Learning pieces at home is 1 thing. Many people practice pieces for a week and only play in front of a teacher. They need to be playing in front of relatives, friends & other people. Otherwise learning music turn into exercises and people don't enjoy the experience.

  • @wenkaisim4634
    @wenkaisim4634 Год назад +5

    im pre much a pro pianist after this tutorial!

  • @kjt1148
    @kjt1148 Год назад

    Should my arm/shoulder be sore if ii am playing it right? Like as if it’s more of a shoulder and ii am controlling my shoulder to hit the notes of the keys?

  • @pianoprogress4792
    @pianoprogress4792 Год назад +5

    Thanks for the tips! I've been working on keeping my hands relaxed as much as possible and I notice it actually helps with speed (which almost seems counterintuitive to me). One thing that I notice now that I'm getting a little bit further in my piano studies is that my hands are much more tense when I'm playing chords vs individual notes (Especially anything that is an octave or higher). Is there anything you recommend to help with keeping my hands/body more relaxed when playing chords?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      yes definitely! that happens from the inevitable stretching of your hand to be able to reach the chord. I would suggest to hold the chord down (make sure all of the notes are fully played), and while you're holding the keys, you practice relaxing. Do this with every chord. SLOWLY. Relax ur wrists, elbows and shoulders. I hope this helps.

    • @pianoprogress4792
      @pianoprogress4792 Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm Thanks!

  • @istyleonpiano
    @istyleonpiano Год назад

    Great video! Even after playing for like 20 years and having taking lessons, I have a hard time following the slow advice which ends up biting me in the ass later. Too tempting to just produce nice sounding music right away. 😆

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      All of us struggle with that ahaha 😂 unfortunately there’s no such thing as short cuts in classical music

  • @_otroll5393
    @_otroll5393 Год назад +3

    I'm studying Chopin 10/4. It's stupidly annoying. Especially the left hand runs I've spent countless hours on to make even and audible, trying to bring out the articulated tonality within the piece. This video opened up a new dimension for me. Thanks Sean!

    • @Annihilator_5024
      @Annihilator_5024 Год назад

      you might not be ready for it yet, which is totally okay

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +2

      Chopin 10 no. 4 is Chopin's take of Cznery's finger excercises! He purposely wrote it like that so that you can develop good left-hand fingers! So keep practicing 😂

    • @_otroll5393
      @_otroll5393 Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm Ofc man every day! Thanks for putting out good content :)

  • @snbh2440
    @snbh2440 Год назад

    I agree, except for the rythms, they help a lot to increase the tempo

  • @DesireMia
    @DesireMia Год назад +1

    thanks 👍🏽🤝🏽

  • @PianoTechSupport
    @PianoTechSupport Год назад +3

    Teach me senpai 🙏😎

  • @shihweiwong
    @shihweiwong Год назад

    Thank you very much, Sean. Very interesting. Do you also practice Op 10 no 1 in soft light staccato as well?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      No unfortunately not. But now that you bring it up, I think I'll need to have a go at it!

  • @theodorekorbos2804
    @theodorekorbos2804 Год назад

    Mr Sean Kim do you love playing ? As long as you love it play from your ❤ and just play .

  • @peterbrenton410
    @peterbrenton410 Год назад

    Dotted rhythm practice can help with position change problems

  • @winterheat
    @winterheat Год назад

    yup, follow the leadership, be proactive, be an entrepreneur, monetize music, and sure you will be fine

    • @winterheat
      @winterheat Год назад

      this comment is meant to be sarcastic

    • @masonng534
      @masonng534 Год назад

      @@winterheat Then what's your point?

  • @BunPiano
    @BunPiano Год назад

    if i relax my fingers and arm while holding a note the weight of the other fingers press the other notes

  • @justanothernguyen2334
    @justanothernguyen2334 Год назад

    As a self-taught guitarist i can tell you that "proper techniques" can be achieved by, yeah, just practicing long enough... I doubt most of the "shredders" got more out of someone watching over their practice sessions, than woodshedding for years with patterns all over the fretboard, working all the fingerings imaginable to man. Legato/staccato playing is the result of imitating the sound you like by transcribing.

  • @Missaigon
    @Missaigon Год назад

    Hi, what technique can you recommend for both reading the bass and melody(i meant reading the music sheets)? Appreciate it

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Ofc start off with reading separate hands. But in terms if fluency, I really can’t tell you much except practice until you get there. (Which means practice a lot) ahaha

  • @avyeris
    @avyeris Год назад

    Hey bro, great vid. I d like you to be more thorough about staccato technique, that shit makes my wrists hurt a little (while legato doesn’t anymore)

  • @teodorhristov8435
    @teodorhristov8435 Год назад +1

    Bro should’ve hidden his eyes for the thumbnail, it gave it all away

  • @tobiasvanavelon9684
    @tobiasvanavelon9684 Год назад +2

    This was an almost random seeming suggestion to me - I usually watch Chess and just plain music theory content, or acoustic guitar stuff.
    This is really great advice for any musician, though, and you paced your video really well. I bet this helps a lot of people. Doing my +1 to get this circulating to more aspiring musicians.
    PRACTICE SLOW. This is true of other instruments and vocals as well, folks!

    • @marcorulesearth
      @marcorulesearth Год назад +2

      Yoo i watch chess too! I recommend watching Daniel Naroditsky he has very useful advice and profound opening theory tips

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Thank you sir! My main repertoire is the caro kann

    • @marcorulesearth
      @marcorulesearth Год назад +1

      Oh interesting, i use Sicilian defense. Hopefully we match up one day and fight til Death!

  • @ranradd
    @ranradd Год назад

    Just bought a piano, haven't played since I was a kid (decades ago) so this was very timely and great information. Hope I can do it correctly.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Thats good to hear you’re giving it another go. Good luck!

  • @okcgaming6543
    @okcgaming6543 Год назад

    So where do i begin? For now I’ve just been learning to read sheet music and then practicing my favorite songs by sight reading. I don’t have much time to practice, when i go back to uni i only play an hour a week. What is the most important thing to practice so that I say a year or so, i’ll be 10x better? Should i just look up legato and staccato and do those?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      People think music is linear and it has one right path/ one right answer to everything. I can't answer this question because you have to be good at everything 😭. if you just practice songs, technicality will come and bite you someday. if you just practice romantic music, Bach will be come and haunt you in your dreams. My point is that your practice should consist of a balance of all these things. This is why there are no such things as shortcuts in classical music.
      If you want the best results, practice the fundamentals: scales, etudes, Mozart sonatas, Bach inventions etc. And play them super slowly. It'll feel like you're getting nowhere but later on, your progression will become exponential because you'll have a solid foundation.

  • @serwoolsley
    @serwoolsley Год назад

    mmm i don't think much of up and down with my wrists to play a note unless i need additional force to put into it, i think much of shifting the weight of the arm from a finger to another

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      actually thats accurate. The way I explained it in the video is catered down for the 7, 8 year olds I teach on a weekly basis. It's not easy trying to explain this to a general audience.

  • @yevgenykoramblyum9204
    @yevgenykoramblyum9204 Год назад

    Good pointers! I would have shared your video with my son (especially the part about practice) but can't due to the languarge.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      I’m sorry to hear that. I find that teaching something to someone else is one of the most effective ways to make that idea your own though. Maybe you could have a go at teaching the points I made to your son yourself? 😊

  • @komoru
    @komoru Год назад +2

    Subscribed! You mean to tell me you didn't just wake up one day and get good at piano? I thought it was a "gift" 😅 The "gift" is being able to have the internal motivation to succeed at the instrument as well as having both the desire and time to practice the right things, consistently, for years and being able to give yourself permission to suck for a while until you get good. Joe Rogan said this in one of his podcasts when asked how he got good at comedy: give yourself the permission to suck for a while! Digital pianos and headphones are great for this reason. Your neighbors and roomates probably don't want to hear you messing up "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands" because you eventually want to learn to play Chopin or become the next Elton John.

  • @mr.baothepekingese658
    @mr.baothepekingese658 Год назад

    Practice dotted rhythm is very useful in achieving even running notes! I am surprised why you say it's useless.

    • @Lucacarrara3173
      @Lucacarrara3173 Год назад

      Maybe he mentions the specific dotted rhythm just by 2 notes. Doing groups of 4 or 6 and stopping at different notes is a different thing in my opinion and that is useful

  • @ibish9513
    @ibish9513 Год назад +1

    🙏

  • @todorstojanov3100
    @todorstojanov3100 Год назад +1

    Do you also practice trills, tremolos etc. this way? See, I find it very difficult to rely mainly on weight if that weight needs to be rapidly alternated between two fingers. Three is fine, but two just confuses me and I always end up playing trills mainly with finger strength

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Yes. I didn't get to quite cover this in this video. But trills, staccatos and scales (played fast) are played with the finger strength mainly because there isn't enough time for you to put your full weight into each note. I didn't really want to talk about this in the video as I will confuse most people. But that's kind of the next step of all of this.
      However, this doesn't discredit the value of using your weight to play. You need utilise your hand weight THEN use finger strength.

  • @Desterian
    @Desterian Год назад

    I disagree on the dotted rhythms though. I find them very useful for smoothing out uneven playing.

  • @Ronin42069
    @Ronin42069 Год назад

    Thanks for the lesson

  • @jannis11
    @jannis11 Год назад

    nice

  • @chyaiido
    @chyaiido Год назад

    wheres lesson 3

  • @debloatgod1848
    @debloatgod1848 Год назад +1

    what about the ending of op 2 no 1 by beethoven it is marked ff and the notes are staccato, how would you play those staying on keys and using fingers and lfiting up very fast?

    • @bryanryan4504
      @bryanryan4504 Год назад +1

      You have to involve your core and back and shoulders in many instances of playing dynamical piano. Lot of players don't learn the tool of fast twitch with their core.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      This is a good question. You need to involve all your weight while simultaneously having strong finger tips. Russian pianists are the master of this.

  • @craiver00
    @craiver00 Год назад

    During slow practice should you apply dynamics right away? Cause some teacher said you have to.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Yep. Your teacher is 100% correct. I didn’t have time to explain it in the video, but slow practice should include every nuances such as rhythm, dynamics, articulation etc. The notes itself are only small one aspect of the whole painting.

  • @treeisyum5491
    @treeisyum5491 Год назад +2

    The "don't play with your fingers" kinda confused me. My teacher kept telling me to play with my back and not my fingers and I was like what the heck am I supposed to do.
    This helps a bit lol

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      I've been told this before as well. What they mean is: use your arm weight to play, but your fingers must be strong enough to support the entire weight of you arm. ps. if you keep your back loose and round, you will find that your 3,4,5 fingers gain more dexterity instantly.

  • @RolandHuettmann
    @RolandHuettmann Год назад

    What do you think about the Taubman method? To me, it seems to support your ideas about practicing,.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      tbh, I think the Taubman is the exact same approach just phrase differently 😂 Although everyone's hand is different and you can't make generalised assumptions in music, it seems like we have figured out the most optimal way of playing the piano.

  • @starsailor9252
    @starsailor9252 Год назад

    how do I know if I'm using the weight of my palm correctly to strike the keys?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      For example, if you’re playing a chord: try to relax while you’re still holding the notes down. If you feel your shoulders, elbows and wrists going down, that means you weren’t fully relaxed when you first played the note.

  • @sacrilegiousboi978
    @sacrilegiousboi978 Год назад +1

    What’s your opinion on practicing on electric pianos like Yamaha clavinovas? Do you think this is detrimental to developing one’s technique?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Good keyboards do their best to mimic the touch of grand pianos. I think very cheap (relative to grand pianos) keyboards are so bad to develop your technique on. Cos there’s virtually zero resistance to the fingers when pressed. But mid to high ranged keyboards are essentially just what you make of it until you reach a certain point.

    • @sacrilegiousboi978
      @sacrilegiousboi978 Год назад +1

      @@seankimmmmmm yeah, my friend at conservatoire often has to practice on his own tiny portable electric keyboard with zero resistance in his dorm because the practice rooms at our conservatoire are often taken (there’s so few that we have to book them more than a week in advance to get a chance and we are limited to 2 hours a day!) many musicians practice in the bathroom/hallway lol… anyways, luckily I have a decent electric with lots of resistance at home (so much so that Scarlatti k141 repeated notes are almost impossible lmao…), when I played on a Steinway D once I was blown away how easy it was because the action was so light in comparison!

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      @@sacrilegiousboi978 wow I can’t believe that there are musicians that practice in bathrooms. That level of dedication is really inspiring. I’ve gotten in trouble so much, so many times for using the Steinways at my uni for my personal practice 😂 I’ll pray for the day that each and one of us has a Steinway D and a stradivarius to practice on 🙏

  • @cratenoob
    @cratenoob Год назад

    how can you play loud choruses with relaxed hand? should i never use finger strength at all or only sometimes?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Same thing! You have to use ur arm and body weight to play but your fingers should be strong enough to support the weight on the keys. That means always having curved fingers without collapsing under the pressure of the arm weight.

    • @cratenoob
      @cratenoob Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm Thank you, my runs feel easier and more fluid

  • @Gooch1911
    @Gooch1911 Год назад

    My $40 used casio salutes you

  • @afara2000
    @afara2000 Год назад

    How long would be a typical practice session? Assuming if you're an intermediate player.

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      These days I try to aim for 4-6 hours a day. Even though I could be more consistent 🫢😆

  • @algorix8420
    @algorix8420 Год назад

    I have done 3 years of piano with a good teacher, but never reached any chopin piano etudes ( i was doing the First trascendental of liszt if i m not mistaken, the raindrop prelude of Chopin and an allemande by Bach)
    What do i Need to do in order to start practicing an etude by myself? Can i do It? It s reasonable to do It? I want to Better my playing, It has stopped becoming Better since i left music school

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Believe it or not, sometimes ambition and ego are the two biggest downfall for an intermediate level musician. Of course you have to be ambitious to improve, but it should be in the right context. I would highly recommend that you start your first Chopin etude with a teacher. I want to be as encouraging as possible but I’ve seen too many people trying to run before they can barely walk. So just be cautious and mindful of this!

    • @algorix8420
      @algorix8420 Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm yeah i was of the same idea, Guess I ll have to find a teacher... Thx for answering

  • @Annihilator_5024
    @Annihilator_5024 Год назад

    10:11 this is interesting. you slowed down on the descent, which means it's possible that you struggle with the descent more than the ascent. it's the opposite for me, my descent is really even and comfortable but my ascent is all messed up

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      It may seem like I slowed down, but I was actually making sure that I had my 5th finger anchored down. Having a strong 5th finger is the key to playing Chopin op. 10 no. 1!

  • @MotifMusicStudios
    @MotifMusicStudios Год назад +1

    So curious to listen in, but kids around here so I will circle back so they don't colour the playground with some f*** bombs! Looks like you've got some great advice to offer.

    • @MotifMusicStudios
      @MotifMusicStudios Год назад

      Aw, love Chopin too!

    • @MotifMusicStudios
      @MotifMusicStudios Год назад

      Edgy, but awesome. Great video.

    • @MotifMusicStudios
      @MotifMusicStudios Год назад

      YES. Love hearing about arm weight here and know lots of aspiring pianists will listen up when they hear it from you!

  • @kentporterfield3968
    @kentporterfield3968 Год назад

    Im 59 years old... I've been learning the keboard for one year. Since time is of the essence are there any short cuts to becoming a very well player.... self-taught by a teacher off RUclips...Mangold

  • @Me-pn7gq
    @Me-pn7gq Год назад

    Though I have been playing piano for the past 7 years im still in grade 3 as i lost a lot of years switching teachers :(
    So I'm between beginner and intermediate and I only have 3 years left until i graduate :(
    So what should I really focus on to become advanced in piano in little time ? I practice everyday but im improving quite slowly.. what should I do?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  2 месяца назад

      I made another video on this: ruclips.net/video/33qZYTEsHag/видео.htmlsi=A1rQ_odx6FU3kqVM
      I’m sorry for the late reply, but I hope this will help

  • @bufdud4
    @bufdud4 Год назад

    I want to play op25 no5 but idk if I'm ever ready

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      anything is possible with slow practice 😉

  • @NoRaengs99
    @NoRaengs99 Год назад

    잘봤습니당…

  • @yaryardank8357
    @yaryardank8357 Год назад

    Lang Lang enters the chat

  • @duqueadriano0081
    @duqueadriano0081 Год назад +1

    Neither Liszt nor Chopin: RACHMANINOFF

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      I don't completely disagree there. But Chopin understood the piano better than anyone in history.

  • @adrionsadler1834
    @adrionsadler1834 Год назад +7

    Liszt understood the piano better, he literally brought out so many techniques of the piano, that even Chopin could not. Chopin may have been the king of arpeggios, but Liszt made thematic transformation. His hands were so long and big he could make chords other composers could not. He played so compassionately to the point he broke strings during his performances.

  • @bobwatson6558
    @bobwatson6558 Год назад

    Please help with keeping your eyes on the music and don't rely on memorizing the piece (reading music faster).

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  2 месяца назад

      Every bad habit develops by you neglecting that specific part (whether conscious or unconscious). So although it’s very daunting, you have to force yourself to read the notes one by one. Do this enough times and you’ll be able to fix the problem. Ofc this is much easier said than done.

  • @okcsticksandkeys
    @okcsticksandkeys Год назад

    THE MOST important advice........ PRACTICE. Sub'd. 😁 There are no "tricks" or "hacks." It's all about practice. Knowledge doesn't help you at ALL if you can't execute it.

  • @povilasl5383
    @povilasl5383 Год назад

    2:40 ZA HANDO

  • @Humiliated1234
    @Humiliated1234 Год назад

    I play the guitar can this be applied to the guitar to?

    • @user-bt1pl9rj7v
      @user-bt1pl9rj7v Год назад

      kinda yeah. having the right hand in its natural position is good

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      Yes. This translates very well to guitar.

  • @kjwong4730
    @kjwong4730 Год назад

    I agree, Chopin is the greatest composer of all time for the piano. No one beats Chopin.

  • @n4meless24
    @n4meless24 Год назад +5

    ,.,., 2.6k-6d
    "If you don't do this you won't be able to play Flight of the Bumblebee faster than a kid with Cerebral Palsy"
    This is the kind of humour that gets me on the floor, one of the best piano related videos I've ever seen. Keep it up.

  • @dankr7009
    @dankr7009 Год назад

    I'm learning chopins op 25 no 1, any tips?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Keep you hands and wrists as close to the keys as possible. Especially for the jumps! Good luck 😃

    • @dankr7009
      @dankr7009 Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm alright. Thank you!

  • @sunhs6153
    @sunhs6153 Год назад

    How many hours do you practice per day?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад

      I try to get around 4-6 hours in for a day.

  • @townnet
    @townnet Год назад

    Hi, what is the tips not to hit the wrong note when speed up?

    • @seankimmmmmm
      @seankimmmmmm  Год назад +1

      Insuring that:
      1. you can play the correct notes when played slowly.
      2. When you do play slowly, you make sure that you're actually putting the full weight of your hand into that note.
      Practice like this 9/10 and you'll be able to play the correct notes on your 10th run-through.

    • @townnet
      @townnet Год назад

      @@seankimmmmmm Thanks Sean.