Please dont take any offense. I am a piano performance student, studying with Jeffrey Biegel. I also teach students different levels. Your technique is not right and i am afraid you might be hurting yourself and learning bad habits. I suggest you watch your hand posture, technique is all about using the proper hand shape to play the piano, the hand should almost never be stretched and hold the stretches, your fingers should not be stretching to the notes, your wrist needs to be properly aligned with your fingers. What helped me learn the proper way of playing piano is watching professional play, and analyzing what they are doing with the hands, it is hard to see if you dont know where to look, but once you understand you can pretty much play anything. Good luck to you)
Thank you for your advice! *no offense taken* My Mum has talked to me about my hand posture too, so yes that is something I am working on too. It is great to hear advice from someone who is studying at a college. But there is a reason why my fingering is off for those pieces, it's because I haven't learnt the whole piece, I was playing the pieces just based off of what I know, and me just remembering the notes. And yes, I have noticed throughout the video that the fingering throughout each piece is a little bit off (well mostly), but yes. I will always make sure that I have the right fingering for each piece, so that it can be played easier. Once again, thank you for your advice. (for references, you can check out my 70 sub special that's one of the pieces where I have the correct technique/finger positioning.)
hmm..I recommend you to work on your clarity of each notes, they sounded blurry (as a result of over petalling), and play it slow until you're making it so clear that you don't have a inconsistency in tempo. I think for your moonlight movement 3, you should practice each hand seperately with Staccato - they're also played wrong btw, its a four note arpeggios not three, and the tempos are off aswell. For the liszt, i really just recommend you to leave it for now until you're getting better to handle the piece, as playing a piece thats way too out of your own level will just cause injuries and potentially miss leading technique usage which you will need to spent more time fixing it than playing it at a competent level. do you have a teacher btw? though i don't want to be harsh about your playing as i do understand that this is for entertainment purposes only, there are just things that i feel really unconfortable if i don't talk about which can be easily fixed, as my personal opinion. But don't take it too hard, just keep practicing bud
Thank you for your advice. And yes, I'm the type of guy who'd feel uncomfortable too if I don't tell them something. (and yes I do have a teacher, my mum, but she didn't recommend me those pieces, the way I played those pieces were all from my knowledge of the piece, so it was basically me playing what I know *yes I could've gone into more detail for the pieces* but oh well, It'll sound better in the future. And again, thank you for giving me your opinion about how I play the pieces (No offense taken) ; )
I am not a pianist, but is there supposed to be that much pedal used in third movement of Moonlight Sonata? Like, the notes have too much sustain from what I remember. I see the "For entertainment purposes only" so I'm not trying to be a critic, sorry if it comes that way.
Love how you are showing the reality of a practice 😂😂 so good, keep going!!
lol thank you.
Liszt's tannhäuser overture is too crazy. I've read the score, but I cannot predict when I'll be able to play it on the stage😢
I tried playing the octaves on Tannhäuser overture. They are easier than they seem but they still are very hard to play and it requires a lot of skill
Correct.
I think I've reached that advanced level. 😂(please help me reach 100 subs before April Fools day) 🙏
Please dont take any offense. I am a piano performance student, studying with Jeffrey Biegel. I also teach students different levels. Your technique is not right and i am afraid you might be hurting yourself and learning bad habits. I suggest you watch your hand posture, technique is all about using the proper hand shape to play the piano, the hand should almost never be stretched and hold the stretches, your fingers should not be stretching to the notes, your wrist needs to be properly aligned with your fingers. What helped me learn the proper way of playing piano is watching professional play, and analyzing what they are doing with the hands, it is hard to see if you dont know where to look, but once you understand you can pretty much play anything. Good luck to you)
Thank you for your advice! *no offense taken* My Mum has talked to me about my hand posture too, so yes that is something I am working on too. It is great to hear advice from someone who is studying at a college. But there is a reason why my fingering is off for those pieces, it's because I haven't learnt the whole piece, I was playing the pieces just based off of what I know, and me just remembering the notes. And yes, I have noticed throughout the video that the fingering throughout each piece is a little bit off (well mostly), but yes. I will always make sure that I have the right fingering for each piece, so that it can be played easier. Once again, thank you for your advice. (for references, you can check out my 70 sub special that's one of the pieces where I have the correct technique/finger positioning.)
hmm..I recommend you to work on your clarity of each notes, they sounded blurry (as a result of over petalling), and play it slow until you're making it so clear that you don't have a inconsistency in tempo. I think for your moonlight movement 3, you should practice each hand seperately with Staccato - they're also played wrong btw, its a four note arpeggios not three, and the tempos are off aswell. For the liszt, i really just recommend you to leave it for now until you're getting better to handle the piece, as playing a piece thats way too out of your own level will just cause injuries and potentially miss leading technique usage which you will need to spent more time fixing it than playing it at a competent level. do you have a teacher btw? though i don't want to be harsh about your playing as i do understand that this is for entertainment purposes only, there are just things that i feel really unconfortable if i don't talk about which can be easily fixed, as my personal opinion. But don't take it too hard, just keep practicing bud
Thank you for your advice. And yes, I'm the type of guy who'd feel uncomfortable too if I don't tell them something. (and yes I do have a teacher, my mum, but she didn't recommend me those pieces, the way I played those pieces were all from my knowledge of the piece, so it was basically me playing what I know *yes I could've gone into more detail for the pieces* but oh well, It'll sound better in the future. And again, thank you for giving me your opinion about how I play the pieces (No offense taken) ; )
Why does your piano sound kinda tuneXD regardless it is amazing.
lol Ikr. I told you, it sounds more tuned then the 70 sub special video, cuz it was recorded on a different device.
how long do you play piano?
I started playing when I was 11 years old (now I'm 16). And I normally spend around an hour or an hour and a half practicing the piano.
I am not a pianist, but is there supposed to be that much pedal used in third movement of Moonlight Sonata? Like, the notes have too much sustain from what I remember.
I see the "For entertainment purposes only" so I'm not trying to be a critic, sorry if it comes that way.
nah you're all good. That was more of a practice for me, I don't really use pedals when I practice.