Я не ожидал, что кнопкотыкаеие можно преподавать! На гитаре из влечь тоже самое, но чисто, сложнее. Там если далеко от железки примешь, то дребезг будет ..
@fenteflushkinfentefhluhovi7178 what a great comment! I don't speak your language so I can't tell if it's a natural part of the language, your own personality, or a quirk of Google Translate, but I love calling a fret a _"piece of iron"_ & I've always described my version of piano playing as _"just pushing buttons with some parry tricks"_ (which is enough for me to have a job doing it haha!) Thanks for sharing!
Omg- gotta redo everything. If you’ve not played the piano for over 50 years, (yes, my 1890 Boston upright grand piano died) it’s so hard! I just bought a Yamaha 745 Clavinova, and I’m trying to do my scales. Way different from practicing at 16 and practicing at 66 😮.
i think the only thing i have in common with dr. rudess is the "oops!" (7:40). unlike dr. rudess, i said it more frequently although i never needed to, as anyone listening knew why i said it!
I could kind of see what he's doing... at 0.25x speed. Great insight, I try to do it his way since the arpeggios, not that I could do it yet, but it seems to be the right way.
I love how he weaves musicality into the drill. There’s no point in drilling silly fingering exercises that don’t reinforce the music, harmony, melody, rhythm. More Jordan Rudess please!!! How to play by ear would be amazing to see.
@cristianlang6971 I never wanted to say that... I just found the request for a “How to play by ear” video just funny because the question was asked so vaguely that you could have asked “How to play the piano” or “How to listen to music”.
@cristianlang6971 So the type of people who are particularly triggered by videos like this ... I don't consider myself a professional but I can't stand it when the piano is treated on the internet like RUclips guitarists do their craft.
Likely the best metal keyboardist of all time, and he's teaching us the C major scale. What a legend, I bet he came up with the progressions for the accompaniments on the spot.
what a stupid categorization. One of the best keyboardists of all time is merely just one of the best "metal keyboardists" of all time when there really aren't that many metal keyboardists?
@@nanthilrodriguez stupid? Idk, I think I carefully chose my words-there are amazing metal keyboardists that I think Rudess is better than like Yuhki and Joey Izzo (tough to say that, because those guys are incredible in their own right). There are also other keyboardists that dabble in metal like Martis "Zen" Cornelis that honestly I like more in terms of just general musicianship than Rudess. (I'm actually terrible with names so I have to look all these up, I have trouble remembering Mike Portnoy's first name sometimes and I really like DT. The point in these parentheses is that, when it comes to something like the classical and jazz traditions of music, there are a lot of names of people I can remember that I have no chance of telling you their names.) Moving on from metal though-let's note that I barely engage in any part of the classical or jazz music community-we start to compare Jordan Rudess to people like Frederic Chiu and pianists that we don't have direct recordings of going back centuries, and you expect me to drop "metal" and just say he is one of the best keyboardists of all time? He has a lot of competition there and I'm not sure I'd be able to make a very strong argument for him seeing as how a lot of the stuff he plays for LTE and DT doesn't show off the soloistic achievement that other keyboardists do. And that's ok. Metal is a very ensemble focused thing and the jazz and classical traditions feature solo work a lot more. I mean I like Jordan Rudess and I think he's probably the GOAT of metal keyboard playing, but I imagine jazz-heads alone would probably be able to rip me apart if I removed the word "metal" from that statement.
For me, as a keyboardist myself, is really hard to point out the best keyboardist when you have such keyboardist as Kevin Codfert, Mustis and Janne Wirman. Also because there's a lot of amazing Metal band's that are very underground, but there's a lot of amazing Metal keyboardists, contradicting what the other person which responded your comment, how many Metal keyboardist is out there? A lot really... Ohh and another amazing keyboardist/piano player that in fact is internationally renowned as one of the greatest Metal singers, Andre Matos, and he was an amazingly talented and skilled keyboardist/piano player as well, he was classical trained, he was a maestro/conductor and opera singer as well.
I am a 69 year old jazz pianist who all through my life hated the harder fingering I was taught. My whole improvisational approach has been how to comfortably improvise where my five fingers happen to be. My elbow and arm are constantly shifting back and forth to get my hands into position just like you demonstrate with playing a simple scale. I rarely do the thumb cross under thing anymore. Thanks for showing everyone this method.
As mundane as this exercise seems, it's amazing how helpful it is to go through this whole lesson. I'm now following the same method for other keys (a bit more difficult since at least for some I have to alternate between 1-2-3 and 1-2-3-4), and I'm finding that this technique of working up one note at a time and really nailing the last one is really helping me to play scales faster and more evenly, which translates quite well into some of the pieces I'm working on.
This is important stuff. Even he has done this stuff, a billion times. That's how he got so good, by practicing from the ground up piece at a time. You just can't see the hundred thousand hours he's been at it... you see the end result. Go and practice!
Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast. Far too many wannabe-musicians out there who absolutely fall apart when you ask them to slow down, because they tried to run before they could walk. I'm looking at *you,* Dragonforce... Nuff said.
I've always wanted to play the piano since I was a kid. I've never done the under thumb thing fast; however, today, with this 10 min lesson, somehow, I'm flying across the keyboard. Practicing FAST to go FAST was the answer?! arg! So, basically, I gotta nail this scale and then move then keep practicing other scales in the same way; I'm guessing. cool! Can we have similar lessons on chords etc? I always find it fascinating how people just find the right keys in a chord in a split second.
Thank You Jordan! I would love to sign up today but I need to work on knowing my cords first. I stopped playing for a few years but now I want to get back into playing. You have really inspired me to keep learning. I hope in the future you will be hosting a live channel again. Thank you!
Wow! You are an amazing musician/keyboardist/teacher. As a beginner/baby intermediate, I was able to play this in 15 minutes. You are a genius Jordan. Thank you!
Last comment, I promise: I loved your take about how she went with a "no-edits" songwriting and production. It reminds me of what Björk did in her album Vulnicura. I don't know if you've reacted, but I highly recommend it. Might just be her magnum opus.
The greatest exercise ever...Ive learned 24 keys...but never got fast with the thumb under move...my Classical Teacher made me do right thumb up higher for Bach between black keys and turn outward ascending and over descending. This exersice can get a beginner to a "fake jazz" in a week or two with the Bass parts added. Throw in 11 1V 1s Blues Bass Walkups walkdowns etc and you can just play songs. This is sports science for Piano.
DT fan and drummer forever... Jordan inspired me to buy a piano and I love it... Love the way he teaches and makes it relatable... such a unique talent.
So many teachers teach scales to be done slow and precisely to begin with. And this is a valid starting point. The assumption here is perhaps that where you are, is slow and precise, but you need to speed up and this gives people the confidence and method to go fast. Love this, thanks ❤
Brilliant tutorial, thank you! How to use this technique in a scale which involves black keys? I suppose it is not the most practical thing to "jump" on a black key with the thumb. :)
Looks like a great approach I've never tried. I'm gonna try it! Another good approach which could complement this is to practice slowly while focusing on getting your imbalance sorted. Make sure your hand is relaxed and then increase speed gradually. Use the metronome as support. Usually, speed and evenly good technique comes mostly from relaxed and effortless playing more than only getting your fingers stronger and faster. Finger strength is still important, but will come anyway by time and practice. I would always recommend an acoustic piano action for real pianists as the digital ones are usually way to light with bad sensitivity. There are some exceptions like the top Kawai digital models though which is much better than anything else I tried of digital options. Happy practicing 🙂🎹🎶
IMHO a 10min tutorial is a bit useless, unless you're an absolute beginner. That's the first thing you'll learn, how to play a C major scale with thumb crossing after 3 and 4. What I'd keep from the video is the clear articulation, and the idea of power to do it. The steady quiet wrist while crossing thumb. If people got motivated to get rid of their limitations thanks to that video, great then ! Anyway, the only way I know to achieve faster playing is to play a lot during hours, and at various tempi so that you muscle memory gets to the automatic functionning. Beginning at 60 then 90 120 160 bpm. And practice the pyramid of rythms, playing your scale at half, quarter, triolet, eight, sextolet, sixteenth. And always articulating well the note so they're distinguishable.
I'm checking this out because I'm playing an accompaniment that has a couple runs down the harmonic minor C scale that are 6 notes per each beat at 120 bpm, so pretty close to the speed you're playing here. I've gotten up to about 100 bpm without your help, and I discovered the need for consistent arm movement while running the scale. I first noticed this when my fingers were kind of pulling my arm along, and I figured it would be better to move my arm just slightly ahead of my fingers instead of behind. I will take the other things I'm learning here and report back when I've improved. Thanks for the lesson!
This method has nothing to do with music and everything to do with how your hand works as a human being. This is what I always tell my students about proper fingering, in general. If they had a robot hand, the lessons would be over after a minute lol.
I like this exercise and will be using it, but I think it will difficult for most folks to make good progress without understanding the importance of warming/loosening up, remaining relaxed, and preemptively reaching with the thumb. I'm not sure that this exercise will bring those points out on its own. Maybe they're covered in different vids but they should at least be mentioned in relation to playing scale quickly. Anyway, thanks for sharing this exercise!
Awesome lesson. If Pianote can get Rudess to play any track from his beautiful live acoustic album "An Evening With John Petrucci & Jordan Rudess" it would be a god send ❤️🎵
Are you ready to learn from the BEST keyboardist? 🔥Sign up for Jordan Rudess' course at Pianote here:
www.pianote.com/shop/30-days-to-better-technique
It's rare to find an incredible player who can actually teach
Also rare to find people whose skills are gifts for other people too
Я не ожидал, что кнопкотыкаеие можно преподавать! На гитаре из влечь тоже самое, но чисто, сложнее. Там если далеко от железки примешь, то дребезг будет ..
@fenteflushkinfentefhluhovi7178 what a great comment! I don't speak your language so I can't tell if it's a natural part of the language, your own personality, or a quirk of Google Translate, but I love calling a fret a _"piece of iron"_ & I've always described my version of piano playing as _"just pushing buttons with some parry tricks"_ (which is enough for me to have a job doing it haha!)
Thanks for sharing!
Yes, and Jordan Rudess always has a great positive attitude in all his videos too. Love his teaching.
⁰⁹😊😊😅😊😊
One of the best piano lessons I’ve seen in my 20 short years playing piano
Omg- gotta redo everything.
If you’ve not played the piano for over 50 years, (yes, my 1890 Boston upright grand piano died) it’s so hard!
I just bought a Yamaha 745 Clavinova, and I’m trying to do my scales.
Way different from practicing at 16 and practicing at 66 😮.
We need more Jordan Rudess on this channel please!
Amazingly, Wonderfully, Wizardly Pianist the world has got!
i think the only thing i have in common with dr. rudess is the "oops!" (7:40). unlike dr. rudess, i said it more frequently although i never needed to, as anyone listening knew why i said it!
I watched the video till the end. I'll be back in a year or two ... (both hands, up and down the scale ;-)
I could kind of see what he's doing... at 0.25x speed. Great insight, I try to do it his way since the arpeggios, not that I could do it yet, but it seems to be the right way.
Thank You, Jordan!
GENIAL.Merci pour ce Super Cours..C est COOL😊😊❤❤
The dynamics is so hard, getting it to accent on the last note in each step
Excelent chunk explanation. Love it
not human
7:25 strong For the Love of God moment
I absolutely love these videos! 🔥I want to improve my speed and nothing best that learning from the fasty experienced guy 🩵
Fsus4 ?
👍
I love how he weaves musicality into the drill. There’s no point in drilling silly fingering exercises that don’t reinforce the music, harmony, melody, rhythm. More Jordan Rudess please!!! How to play by ear would be amazing to see.
Why not a "how to play the piano" ... that would be a specific area of expertise
@cristianlang6971 exacty 😆 ... except that they are not the ones you should turn to as a beginner.
@cristianlang6971 I never wanted to say that...
I just found the request for a “How to play by ear” video just funny because the question was asked so vaguely that you could have asked “How to play the piano” or “How to listen to music”.
@cristianlang6971 thanks Christian Lang Lang 😅
@cristianlang6971 So the type of people who are particularly triggered by videos like this ... I don't consider myself a professional but I can't stand it when the piano is treated on the internet like RUclips guitarists do their craft.
We need more Jordan Rudess on this channel please!
Likely the best metal keyboardist of all time, and he's teaching us the C major scale. What a legend, I bet he came up with the progressions for the accompaniments on the spot.
what a stupid categorization. One of the best keyboardists of all time is merely just one of the best "metal keyboardists" of all time when there really aren't that many metal keyboardists?
@@nanthilrodriguez stupid? Idk, I think I carefully chose my words-there are amazing metal keyboardists that I think Rudess is better than like Yuhki and Joey Izzo (tough to say that, because those guys are incredible in their own right). There are also other keyboardists that dabble in metal like Martis "Zen" Cornelis that honestly I like more in terms of just general musicianship than Rudess.
(I'm actually terrible with names so I have to look all these up, I have trouble remembering Mike Portnoy's first name sometimes and I really like DT. The point in these parentheses is that, when it comes to something like the classical and jazz traditions of music, there are a lot of names of people I can remember that I have no chance of telling you their names.)
Moving on from metal though-let's note that I barely engage in any part of the classical or jazz music community-we start to compare Jordan Rudess to people like Frederic Chiu and pianists that we don't have direct recordings of going back centuries, and you expect me to drop "metal" and just say he is one of the best keyboardists of all time? He has a lot of competition there and I'm not sure I'd be able to make a very strong argument for him seeing as how a lot of the stuff he plays for LTE and DT doesn't show off the soloistic achievement that other keyboardists do. And that's ok. Metal is a very ensemble focused thing and the jazz and classical traditions feature solo work a lot more.
I mean I like Jordan Rudess and I think he's probably the GOAT of metal keyboard playing, but I imagine jazz-heads alone would probably be able to rip me apart if I removed the word "metal" from that statement.
For me, as a keyboardist myself, is really hard to point out the best keyboardist when you have such keyboardist as Kevin Codfert, Mustis and Janne Wirman. Also because there's a lot of amazing Metal band's that are very underground, but there's a lot of amazing Metal keyboardists, contradicting what the other person which responded your comment, how many Metal keyboardist is out there? A lot really...
Ohh and another amazing keyboardist/piano player that in fact is internationally renowned as one of the greatest Metal singers, Andre Matos, and he was an amazingly talented and skilled keyboardist/piano player as well, he was classical trained, he was a maestro/conductor and opera singer as well.
@@Ouvii nah, you're fine. the guy above you is tripping. too many sad&sour people with internet these days.
@@Ouvii Jordan Rudess is one the best keyboardists of all time bro.
Not only an amazing player but a pretty decent teacher as well.
I am a 69 year old jazz pianist who all through my life hated the harder fingering I was taught. My whole improvisational approach has been how to comfortably improvise where my five fingers happen to be. My elbow and arm are constantly shifting back and forth to get my hands into position just like you demonstrate with playing a simple scale. I rarely do the thumb cross under thing anymore. Thanks for showing everyone this method.
What a nice treat to see Rudess doing tutorials for mortals like me! What a legend!
After 30 years of playing I wish I was thought like this!!! Thanks Jordan!
Still my struggle area... but using this lesson to improve. Thanks
As mundane as this exercise seems, it's amazing how helpful it is to go through this whole lesson. I'm now following the same method for other keys (a bit more difficult since at least for some I have to alternate between 1-2-3 and 1-2-3-4), and I'm finding that this technique of working up one note at a time and really nailing the last one is really helping me to play scales faster and more evenly, which translates quite well into some of the pieces I'm working on.
This is important stuff. Even he has done this stuff, a billion times. That's how he got so good, by practicing from the ground up piece at a time.
You just can't see the hundred thousand hours he's been at it... you see the end result.
Go and practice!
I always see a Kronos with this man on his videos. The best for the best 🎹💪🏻
Legendary player. Legendary teacher.
Can you please teach me piano...
I wish play in church..
But I don't have money to pay. Sorry
I you can...
Check out our content! You will find plenty of videos to learn this beautiful instrument.
Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast. Far too many wannabe-musicians out there who absolutely fall apart when you ask them to slow down, because they tried to run before they could walk. I'm looking at *you,* Dragonforce... Nuff said.
I've always wanted to play the piano since I was a kid. I've never done the under thumb thing fast; however, today, with this 10 min lesson, somehow, I'm flying across the keyboard. Practicing FAST to go FAST was the answer?! arg! So, basically, I gotta nail this scale and then move then keep practicing other scales in the same way; I'm guessing. cool! Can we have similar lessons on chords etc? I always find it fascinating how people just find the right keys in a chord in a split second.
I like this guy. “If you mess up and make a mistake I won’t tell anyone” lol
That moment he said Ooops!... That just tells us even the master himself (deliberate or not) makes mistakes. We just have to keep practicing.
Well he was coming up with some fairly intricate chord accompaniment on the spot (I assume)
I absolutely love this guy and these bursts. Saved to my Practice folder! Amazing lesson, thank you.
Fantastic video. At 00:56, he plays the chord "F♯⌀" with the left hand. What does the "⌀" mean here? Couldn't find anything on the internet.
Half diminished
@@linus.olofssonn Thanks a bunch!
Wow!!! 🤩 My girls who always compete in who can play faster will love this. Thank you! 😊
Thank You Jordan! I would love to sign up today but I need to work on knowing my cords first. I stopped playing for a few years but now I want to get back into playing. You have really inspired me to keep learning. I hope in the future you will be hosting a live channel again. Thank you!
Wow! You are an amazing musician/keyboardist/teacher. As a beginner/baby intermediate, I was able to play this in 15 minutes. You are a genius Jordan. Thank you!
Great video… wish I had a piano teacher as cool as this guy.
4:50
Background movie music 🤔
Last comment, I promise: I loved your take about how she went with a "no-edits" songwriting and production. It reminds me of what Björk did in her album Vulnicura. I don't know if you've reacted, but I highly recommend it. Might just be her magnum opus.
The greatest exercise ever...Ive learned 24 keys...but never got fast with the thumb under move...my Classical Teacher made me do right thumb up higher for Bach between black keys and turn outward ascending and over descending.
This exersice can get a beginner to a "fake jazz" in a week or two with the Bass parts added.
Throw in 11 1V 1s Blues Bass Walkups walkdowns etc and you can just play songs.
This is sports science for Piano.
man i really felt metropolis pt 2 in that.... in the light that surrounds me... free of the fear and the pain
The magican is flying again over the keys. Unbelievably gifted musician.
He's been playing for over 60 years. Lots of hours!
What a beautiful lesson!
I needed to slow down to 0.25% speed to see what he was doing with his thumb but even then it was fast
Even Mozart would be extremely impressed by the skill of Jordan Rudess. Imagine how impressed i am🤯
I bet they’d have a race
I don't know for sure, but I don't believe even Mozart was ever as good as Jordan. Incredible.
Jordan Rudess seems more skilled than Mozart
Sir, this is Most valuable lession. Thanq.
I feel less like tucking the thumb under and more just like positioning it while I slide the whole hand. Which also helps with slower tempos too.
Jordan writing the next DT epic whilst teaching scales 😅 👌
The first thing that will help you get speed is to build solid muscle memory of the scales .
What an absolute legend Jordan is
And his chin
i'm no piano player but i'm amazed at how much i like the sound of the "practice with jordan" sections of this video. So beautiful
DT fan and drummer forever... Jordan inspired me to buy a piano and I love it... Love the way he teaches and makes it relatable... such a unique talent.
2:46 with 0.25x I only able see his fingers. His fingers are crazy fast.
This is what lifetime of practicing 48 hours a day gets you!
lol
Rudess is fastastic live!!
Ethan bortnick the young talented artist, has changed the game with using scales and arpeggios in his music. Its unreal. Godbless the master 🙏 jordy
this is awesome, i was following along though i dont have my keyboard here, thanks for the class ❤❤❤
I only play guitar, but to watch this guy shows you he's a music god.
Amazing skills!
Thank you so much! I love how you accompanied, it made me so happy!
If u wanna improve ur keyboard skills just follow Jordan rudess this man is the most complete and skilled keyboardists of all times
So many teachers teach scales to be done slow and precisely to begin with. And this is a valid starting point. The assumption here is perhaps that where you are, is slow and precise, but you need to speed up and this gives people the confidence and method to go fast. Love this, thanks ❤
As if there had never been students who played faster than they were allowed to 😂
Can you look into Sunset Rubdown- Random Spirit Lover please! Rock, piano. Please.
Brilliant tutorial, thank you! How to use this technique in a scale which involves black keys? I suppose it is not the most practical thing to "jump" on a black key with the thumb. :)
Looks like a great approach I've never tried. I'm gonna try it! Another good approach which could complement this is to practice slowly while focusing on getting your imbalance sorted. Make sure your hand is relaxed and then increase speed gradually. Use the metronome as support. Usually, speed and evenly good technique comes mostly from relaxed and effortless playing more than only getting your fingers stronger and faster. Finger strength is still important, but will come anyway by time and practice. I would always recommend an acoustic piano action for real pianists as the digital ones are usually way to light with bad sensitivity. There are some exceptions like the top Kawai digital models though which is much better than anything else I tried of digital options. Happy practicing 🙂🎹🎶
This was really helpful, thank you!
There is literally no one better. Complete mastery of his instrument AND a phenomenal teacher.
I,m very very very very very glad that U use the Kronos again❤, not the naughtylus😂
IMHO a 10min tutorial is a bit useless, unless you're an absolute beginner. That's the first thing you'll learn, how to play a C major scale with thumb crossing after 3 and 4.
What I'd keep from the video is the clear articulation, and the idea of power to do it. The steady quiet wrist while crossing thumb.
If people got motivated to get rid of their limitations thanks to that video, great then !
Anyway, the only way I know to achieve faster playing is to play a lot during hours, and at various tempi so that you muscle memory gets to the automatic functionning. Beginning at 60 then 90 120 160 bpm. And practice the pyramid of rythms, playing your scale at half, quarter, triolet, eight, sextolet, sixteenth. And always articulating well the note so they're distinguishable.
¡Thanks! I din't know you're teaching in Internet: Thank you very much... I'll keep in touch here as much as I can...
Jordan rudess is a legend. That man has always been my biggest inspiration
I don't even play keyboard but I just love to watch him play
I'm checking this out because I'm playing an accompaniment that has a couple runs down the harmonic minor C scale that are 6 notes per each beat at 120 bpm, so pretty close to the speed you're playing here. I've gotten up to about 100 bpm without your help, and I discovered the need for consistent arm movement while running the scale. I first noticed this when my fingers were kind of pulling my arm along, and I figured it would be better to move my arm just slightly ahead of my fingers instead of behind.
I will take the other things I'm learning here and report back when I've improved. Thanks for the lesson!
Luv it.
Yes, the elbow-thing ... Guilty as charged. I try to practice against this habit ...
This method has nothing to do with music and everything to do with how your hand works as a human being. This is what I always tell my students about proper fingering, in general. If they had a robot hand, the lessons would be over after a minute lol.
I like this exercise and will be using it, but I think it will difficult for most folks to make good progress without understanding the importance of warming/loosening up, remaining relaxed, and preemptively reaching with the thumb. I'm not sure that this exercise will bring those points out on its own. Maybe they're covered in different vids but they should at least be mentioned in relation to playing scale quickly. Anyway, thanks for sharing this exercise!
Never did i thought i would see Jordan Rudess teaching scales here. Im so happy
Wow! Pianists have really dexterous hands😅
A B S O L U T E !!!!🔨💪🏼🍫 Thanks alot🙏🏼🌍✨✨✨✨
Hi, if you have time, can you please look up this song "Everytime I" by Mario Vasquez. I would love to have a tutorial
Love the humour! And I will try this next time I’m sitting at the keyboard.
Jordan, could you do one of Richard Smallwood's compositions come ye?Disconsolate
@jordanrudess
Should I avoid turning my wrist and elbow for arpeggios too?
Very neat!
Dude! you are a Masterpiece .💕💕
Very very veryyy nice finger prectice 😊😊 thankyou Jordan rudess
you really amazing with sooo important tricks and tips❤😊
Love the chord progression 😮😮😮
please, keep Jordan coming!
Genius !! 🎹🎹
I'm still afraid jordan 😅. Someday. 😅 great lesson!
Wow. So inspiring to watch him❤.
Getting to F with my thumb was easier than getting to the E with my index afterwards :(
I'm learning, I'm not even a keyboardist/pianist
Jord could u love to teach me about ethiopian scales and the chords that the scale used🙏🙏🙏
Awesome lesson. If Pianote can get Rudess to play any track from his beautiful live acoustic album "An Evening With John Petrucci & Jordan Rudess" it would be a god send ❤️🎵
That album is a rare gem, i don't know how not many people know about it!
Next guest Justin Lee Schultz, pleaseeee 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Incredible ❤ but I'm finding it difficult to read staffs 😢