That 'imagine you're elbowing someone' analogy made something click in my brain and my movements became a lot smoother. You're an awesome teacher, thank you so much for the lessons.
Thanks for your explanation. It s very clear and useful. I m a french piano teacher, 56 years old. 7 years ago, I decided to begin violon...and 2 weeks ago, I decided to "try" to play cello, with a cello teacher. Bow technics are very différent between violon and cello : thank u really for tour vidéos🎻😊
Hi there, can you please make an explanation about how to bowing correctly. How to decide whether it should be up bow or down bow. Is there any rules about it?
Great video from a teacher that knows how to explain the involvement of the body when playing. Take a look around on YT and you will rarely find videos as useful as this one. It is hard to explain but I have come to personal conclusion: or you have people around that deceive themselves by thinking they are good teachers (but they are not) or there are a lot of people around that do not teach essential aspects on purpose.
This is so thorough. I’ve been thinking about my right arm a lot since I finished grad school and this is the most organized, thorough, SPECIFIC resource I’ve found for this exact topic 😭 Thank you for making this, it’s pretty much exactly what I’ve been looking for 🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️
I’m very interested learning cello, I don’t have one yet but I will soon and I’m here to get a head start so I’m not completely clueless when I do get my cello. This has been very helpful and any words of Encouragement or tips is greatly appreciated
Jonathan, thank you very, very much for this video. I am a violist (three years) and electric guitarist (30+ years) who is transitioning to the cello, been playing for about 6 weeks now. The viola playing has held me in good stead, surprisingly, as far as making rapid progress (worked through the first two Suzuki books fairly quickly), but my bowing is not that great. (My on-line teacher is a general string teacher but primarily a violinist). So this has video has been very helpful! A question that I have is how much angle do you put on your bow to get a good volume and pressure on the strings? I tend to get strange harmonics at times and harsh sounds. I will be following your lessons very closely from here on in.
Thank you so much for this, I will be doing this when I practice today! I do struggle with bowing nicely on the C string though, and I feel like it requires unique body mechanics. If you could cover the two extreme strings (C and A), that would be spectacular! Thanks so much again.
Jonathan what is the old film with cello instructionals that you often put in your videos?! Id like to check it out. Also thank you foe all your content!
want Jonathan to explore new musical challenges and share them with you? Check out the OKpal crowdfunding campaign for Jonathan's birthday! Type Okpal and Jonathan the cellocoach. Thank you.
want Jonathan to explore new musical challenges and share them with you? Check out the OKpal crowdfunding campaign for Jonathan's birthday! Type Okpal and Jonathan the cellocoach. Thank you.
Thank U Very Much Sir👍🏻 Very nice good n perfect to show the basic practice to control correct it.... Bow grip from hill to point that is really very much Important practice. 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤️
Very clear presentation on the instruction of elbow, knee, bow relationships. It would be nice to know, why doing these things (leading with elbow coming out until you pass the knee then extending the elbow, etc) is important to you. Otherwise we’ll done and thank you.
I'm confused because around 4:50 when you get past the knee the bow is sliding up towards the fingerboard. Because of that I thought you were going to say not to do this. Is that how it should be? I am extremely beginner, but I thought the bow was meant to stay at the same place along the string for the entire bow...
Hi Jonathan!!! Thank u so much for this video...this was really helpful...can u please suggest and make a video on yoga or physical exercises for a cellist...I would also like to know if there is any specific food to avoid for an adult cellist. Thank you.
Yoga for cello players? now that is an idea! as for food, another great point. Concerning your food query, prior to any playing where you might feel anxiousness, avoid caffeine. Stay clear of heavy carbs to not suffer from a glycemic crash, and eat a tiny bit of chocolate prior to a performance or recording
Thanks Sebas 9183. IMSLP.org is the first place for scores (public domain), whilst for modern music, MuseScore is the way to go! I have a Pro account and share my scores for free :-)
Hey, have you heard of the Chinese Erhu or the Mongolian Horsehead Fiddle (Morin Khur)? If so, have you attempted to play either? Also, if you redesigned the cello to be the most ergonomically friendly and had an engineering team guaranteed to make it with perfect sound, how would your design differ from the traditional one?
paytontech, you are a clever one! I will answer this question later this year, when I return to Cremona and visit my luthier Edgar Russ. He has a Monrin Khur in his shoppe!
@@CelloCoach Thanks. Look forward to it! I've been fiddling around (yes, pun intended) with making a silent electric fiddle (using an electromagnetic pickup, not a piezo). I've made one very simple prototype inspired by the two instruments mentioned above for easily less than $20 excluding an inexpensive bow and a used guitar pickup. I got a few "free" basic tools with it too. :-) I've at least figured out where to best place the pickup for good sound. I won't say where my sense of the more ergonomic design seems to point because I'm not a proper player and I don't want to seed the answer. I only played guitar a bit, myself but just seeking a simple instrument that's at least enough to let me cover the range of my voice with some extra room on either end... so not trying to play at Carnegie Hall or anything. Oh, and changing how to stop the strings in your hypothetical design is very much on the table. That is, your neo-cello doesn't have to have its strings stopped by pressing them to a fingerboard. My current prototype does but will be building another soon so will have to see what I go with on it...
Hello, I have a question after seeing this video. Is it possible for a person that is 52 years old with severe rheumatoid arthritis take up cello? I can say that my arms and fingers move fairly well,but my right arm is permanently bent at the elbow. After watching this helpful video. The question has now come to mind. Any feedback at all is helpful. I want thank you for these videos. I'm a subscriber to them! P.S. The angle of the bent arm is almost level with ground when I stand but it can move out from my side.
You should consult your physician, though I can tell you this: if a girl with only one arm can play cello (yes, she was a student of mine for a brief period and bowed with her right leg) than you can find a way too!
Okay, this all sounds good. I think I understand. I, however, have a different problem with my bow arm, and I have yet to see anyone talk about it. When I play I must constantly focus on relaxing my right shoulder or it begins to hurt. It hurts so much so that I cannot play for more than a few minutes. I'm sure a teacher could help with this but I live in a very rural area and there are no teachers for Many miles around - like 75 miles. Can you shed some light on this? Also, thank you for these wonderful lessons and insights. You're an excellent teacher!
You said, "I must constantly focus on relaxing my right shoulder or it begins to hurt.'' Why don't you constantly focus on it until it becomes natural to you? ...and then it won't hurt anymore, no?
So, you only move your elbow when you bow and don move your shoulders, right? The other thing is, what is the best height you think I should have my cello at? I’m a little until 5 foot 5 and sometime it’s really uncomfortable to keep the cello between the legs.
Yes, think of your bow arm moving in two different phases: Phase 1 (PH1) is inside the knee to the bridge, requiring you to move the more from the shoulder. The mechanics change with Phase 2 (PH2), outside the knee, when the elbow is the last point of movement on the arm. As to your 2nd question: every chair you sit on is different, and thus the endpin height varies. Your playing position should allow for a fluid torso, and can even move about between the knees. Find your position, Anna, and if it is comfortable and you can reach the full range fo the cello fingerboard and bow, you will be golden! Really good question I will answer in more detail with a video ;-)
Jonathan Humphries that makes more sense now. In December I was assessed at grade 1 in an ABRSM-style exam on cello, and the examiner’s comments were that I needed to have more control of the bow. Mind you, I’d only been learning for less than three months so I didn’t have a lot of time to learn how to fully control it. I think I’ll put this into practice.
Chad, that is a good cello! My friend ( a Google code poet) owns one and we both love it! The option for playing silently is important to many of us, hence I would keep it!
Why do you put your pinky on your bow like a violin grip? My teacher tells me that is incorrect and he is very informed and has expertise, but I'm curious?
Is bow-hand fatigue normal for new cello students? I find my bow hand feels like a tired noodle after ten or so minutes of bowing and then as my control slips so does the bow. I'm wondering whether I'm weak and just need to build up the stamina and strength of my right forearm/hand/fingers by bowing through the fatigue or whether I'm doing something incorrectly?
I appreciate this video because it helps me to understand just how Cello bow technique is completely different from Violin or Viola bow technique. It is a completely different discipline entirely. I sensed it had to be different, but I had no idea of the mechanics of it until now I begin to see it.
Hello, it’s me Lizete again 😂 I commented on a video once saying that I’ll have my first cello lesson soon! I have been playing cello for a month now and it’s amazing! You teach very similar to the way my teacher teaches so when I’m at home it’s really helpful to watch your videos! Also it was funny when you said to imagine that you are fighting with someone cause my teacher says that I have to imagine me poking in his eye with the bow on A string 😂😂😂😂
Leaving comments is good!1 No, really, this is a good question, one I have been planning to answer in a Cello Coach talk : How to Practice Cello when Injured. There are many things you can do - musically, mechanically, and mentally - to train when you body has fallen ill. Can you think of some?
The span of my left hand falls more than half inch short of what is recommended for my size cello, however - I keep at it and it is working so far - also there are smaller cellos - 7/8, 3/4 - I had considered going smaller... I hope and pray that you are able to work something out!!!
Ohhhh shoooot 😕😕😕 i clicked on the antique bronze statue and the cello, now my credit card is 🤯🤯😵🤪😵 statue 3280 💲 and cello stradivarius 0.73 million 💲 how can i reverse the situation ☹️😵helpppp needed 😣please why Amazon sell real stradivarius now 😭🤪🤯😳
How do you teach left headed people to play the Cello, we one of those few who play left handed? This video has been very informational for us and we look forward on playing or rather learning from scratch. Thank you!
I’m left-handed. Pretend you’re looking in a mirror. When he says right hand, think left. Otherwise it’s the same. However, my teacher said “Well, you’ll never play in an orchestra” so I told her I want to play in a marching band. She kicked me out. Now I play in my own band good luck.
Great video from a teacher that knows how to explain the involvement of the body when playing. Take a look around on YT and you will rarely find videos as useful as this one. It is hard to explain but I have come to personal conclusion: or you have people around that deceive themselves by thinking they are good teachers (but they are not) or there are a lot of people around that do not teach essential aspects on purpose.
Thanks, really very much Antal. My pedagogy is a product of 23 years of experience on 3 continents and ongoing via Skype for 4 years now. When I started to teach, I found it necessary to place myself in the students' position, and look at cello the way they do. And with clear, concise explanations that directly address concerns, the goal is the cellist not only plays like a cellist but thinks like one too.
@@CelloCoach I have several years under my belt of acting, dancing and martial arts. I do know that there is one piece of information of paramount importance : where does the movement start in your body? What is the part of your body that leads the movement and when?The information you shared with all of us in this video is a game-changer. Same truth holds for the video where you use the metaphor about rowing or putting a sword into its sheath.
That 'imagine you're elbowing someone' analogy made something click in my brain and my movements became a lot smoother. You're an awesome teacher, thank you so much for the lessons.
Wow, thank you!
a tip: you can watch series at Kaldrostream. Been using them for watching loads of movies recently.
@Harrison Victor Yup, I have been using kaldrostream for months myself :D
@Harrison Victor definitely, have been using KaldroStream for since december myself :)
I've recently taken up the cello and this backs up what my teacher has taught me about arm movement.
Fantastic
A mirror is essential. So much can be seen and corrected. Bravo, great lesson.
Thanks for your explanation. It s very clear and useful. I m a french piano teacher, 56 years old. 7 years ago, I decided to begin violon...and 2 weeks ago, I decided to "try" to play cello, with a cello teacher. Bow technics are very différent between violon and cello : thank u really for tour vidéos🎻😊
Yes, the technique is different but the basis of pedagogy is the same between violin and cello
You are an awesome teacher i've ever seen ❤❤
Thank you so much
Great video! As a music teacher who does not play strings, this is the way to understand the mechanics of the body in relation to performance.
Hi there, can you please make an explanation about how to bowing correctly. How to decide whether it should be up bow or down bow. Is there any rules about it?
I answered your question in this video - ruclips.net/user/live7MZCXwU_3GU?feature=share
Clear and precise explanation. I'm an adult cello learner, and your teaching help me a lot to improve my skills. Greetings from Ecuador 🇪🇨😊.
Happy to help
Great video from a teacher that knows how to explain the involvement of the body when playing. Take a look around on YT and you will rarely find videos as useful as this one. It is hard to explain but I have come to personal conclusion: or you have people around that deceive themselves by thinking they are good teachers (but they are not) or there are a lot of people around that do not teach essential aspects on purpose.
TY
Ü
Great video
It all comes down to correct process then muscle memory creation. So many instruments come down to this
Could not have stated it more succinctly accurate, Micah!
Amen
You are absolutely the BEST cello teacher on any you tube video. Thank you for sharing so much information with us.
This is so thorough. I’ve been thinking about my right arm a lot since I finished grad school and this is the most organized, thorough, SPECIFIC resource I’ve found for this exact topic 😭 Thank you for making this, it’s pretty much exactly what I’ve been looking for 🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️🙇🏻♂️
Merci. Le mecanisme est expliqué avec une
clarté et une simplicité remarcables
Thank you
You're welcome
Thank you for your style of speech and explanation. I’m a fan of it.
I’m very interested learning cello, I don’t have one yet but I will soon and I’m here to get a head start so I’m not completely clueless when I do get my cello. This has been very helpful and any words of Encouragement or tips is greatly appreciated
Go for it!
An interesting raised 4th in that introduction passage caught me off guard!
This video is very useful for me as a beginner😊. Thank you so much 🙏🏻
Glad it was helpful!
Jonathan, thank you very, very much for this video. I am a violist (three years) and electric guitarist (30+ years) who is transitioning to the cello, been playing for about 6 weeks now. The viola playing has held me in good stead, surprisingly, as far as making rapid progress (worked through the first two Suzuki books fairly quickly), but my bowing is not that great. (My on-line teacher is a general string teacher but primarily a violinist). So this has video has been very helpful! A question that I have is how much angle do you put on your bow to get a good volume and pressure on the strings? I tend to get strange harmonics at times and harsh sounds. I will be following your lessons very closely from here on in.
Thank you! I will try this bowing.
Merci beaucoup m'sieur.
Thank you for your instruction. Getting a mirror very soon. Excellent
Glad to help
Thank you so much for this, I will be doing this when I practice today! I do struggle with bowing nicely on the C string though, and I feel like it requires unique body mechanics. If you could cover the two extreme strings (C and A), that would be spectacular! Thanks so much again.
Check out this video : ruclips.net/video/GECMOAtOUfQ/видео.html
@@CelloCoach Exactly what I wanted -- merci bien !
Thanks, Jonathan. Helps with my current lesson.
Jonathan what is the old film with cello instructionals that you often put in your videos?! Id like to check it out. Also thank you foe all your content!
His name is André Navarra, and he was educated in my city! ruclips.net/video/XqIj3bGBBLQ/видео.html
Well articulated and a clean presentation. As a parent myself, I will be really proud if my kids turn up to be like you.
Wow, thank you Paul! And I hope you and yours are having a healthy 2020!
This video is hands down excellent. Thanksss
Thank you!
Very useful explanation! Thank you so much!!!
want Jonathan to explore new musical challenges and share them with you? Check out the OKpal crowdfunding campaign for Jonathan's birthday! Type Okpal and Jonathan the cellocoach. Thank you.
want Jonathan to explore new musical challenges and share them with you? Check out the OKpal crowdfunding campaign for Jonathan's birthday! Type Okpal and Jonathan the cellocoach. Thank you.
Great info for us nubbies
Thank you so much for all yours vidéos !
And thank you for enjoying and learning with us! :-)
Excellent!very helpful thank u
Thank U Very Much Sir👍🏻
Very nice good n perfect to
show the basic practice to
control correct it....
Bow grip from hill to point
that is really very much
Important practice.
👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤️
You're just awesome!!!! Thank you!!
Great video. Thank you!
Very clear presentation on the instruction of elbow, knee, bow relationships. It would be nice to know, why doing these things (leading with elbow coming out until you pass the knee then extending the elbow, etc) is important to you. Otherwise we’ll done and thank you.
great question
Thank You, Jonathan!
You are welcome, Bernard!
Im teaching myself tagelharpa, i think i can apply what you say...thanks
Go for it!
I'm confused because around 4:50 when you get past the knee the bow is sliding up towards the fingerboard. Because of that I thought you were going to say not to do this. Is that how it should be? I am extremely beginner, but I thought the bow was meant to stay at the same place along the string for the entire bow...
Your bow should stay relatively in the same point of contact along the stroke. Focus on keeping your arm mass above the bow to maintain tone.
Hi Jonathan!!! Thank u so much for this video...this was really helpful...can u please suggest and make a video on yoga or physical exercises for a cellist...I would also like to know if there is any specific food to avoid for an adult cellist.
Thank you.
Yoga for cello players? now that is an idea! as for food, another great point. Concerning your food query, prior to any playing where you might feel anxiousness, avoid caffeine. Stay clear of heavy carbs to not suffer from a glycemic crash, and eat a tiny bit of chocolate prior to a performance or recording
Thanks for this great lesson!
Excellent!
Much obliged!
Thank you very much for your lessons :)
great teaching!
Excellent! Thank you for this. :)
My pleasure, Ross
I love you Jonathan
Where do you get your online sheet music from, I would like to play it and I can't find it, thank you and I love your vids
Thanks Sebas 9183. IMSLP.org is the first place for scores (public domain), whilst for modern music, MuseScore is the way to go! I have a Pro account and share my scores for free :-)
Powerful thank you so much
What's the name of that song you played at the beginning?
One of the themes from 'William Tell' by Rossini
Hey, have you heard of the Chinese Erhu or the Mongolian Horsehead Fiddle (Morin Khur)? If so, have you attempted to play either?
Also, if you redesigned the cello to be the most ergonomically friendly and had an engineering team guaranteed to make it with perfect sound, how would your design differ from the traditional one?
paytontech, you are a clever one! I will answer this question later this year, when I return to Cremona and visit my luthier Edgar Russ. He has a Monrin Khur in his shoppe!
I like Morin Khuur same as Celllo!!!
@@CelloCoach Thanks. Look forward to it! I've been fiddling around (yes, pun intended) with making a silent electric fiddle (using an electromagnetic pickup, not a piezo). I've made one very simple prototype inspired by the two instruments mentioned above for easily less than $20 excluding an inexpensive bow and a used guitar pickup. I got a few "free" basic tools with it too. :-) I've at least figured out where to best place the pickup for good sound.
I won't say where my sense of the more ergonomic design seems to point because I'm not a proper player and I don't want to seed the answer. I only played guitar a bit, myself but just seeking a simple instrument that's at least enough to let me cover the range of my voice with some extra room on either end... so not trying to play at Carnegie Hall or anything.
Oh, and changing how to stop the strings in your hypothetical design is very much on the table. That is, your neo-cello doesn't have to have its strings stopped by pressing them to a fingerboard. My current prototype does but will be building another soon so will have to see what I go with on it...
Hello, I have a question after seeing this video. Is it possible for a person that is 52 years old with severe rheumatoid arthritis take up cello? I can say that my arms and fingers move fairly well,but my right arm is permanently bent at the elbow. After watching this helpful video. The question has now come to mind. Any feedback at all is helpful. I want thank you for these videos. I'm a subscriber to them! P.S. The angle of the bent arm is almost level with ground when I stand but it can move out from my side.
You should consult your physician, though I can tell you this: if a girl with only one arm can play cello (yes, she was a student of mine for a brief period and bowed with her right leg) than you can find a way too!
Okay, this all sounds good. I think I understand. I, however, have a different problem with my bow arm, and I have yet to see anyone talk about it. When I play I must constantly focus on relaxing my right shoulder or it begins to hurt. It hurts so much so that I cannot play for more than a few minutes. I'm sure a teacher could help with this but I live in a very rural area and there are no teachers for Many miles around - like 75 miles. Can you shed some light on this? Also, thank you for these wonderful lessons and insights. You're an excellent teacher!
Btw, I do not suffer from arthritis. ( thank goodness )
You said, "I must constantly focus on relaxing my right shoulder or it begins to hurt.'' Why don't you constantly focus on it until it becomes natural to you? ...and then it won't hurt anymore, no?
So, you only move your elbow when you bow and don move your shoulders, right? The other thing is, what is the best height you think I should have my cello at? I’m a little until 5 foot 5 and sometime it’s really uncomfortable to keep the cello between the legs.
Yes, think of your bow arm moving in two different phases: Phase 1 (PH1) is inside the knee to the bridge, requiring you to move the more from the shoulder. The mechanics change with Phase 2 (PH2), outside the knee, when the elbow is the last point of movement on the arm.
As to your 2nd question: every chair you sit on is different, and thus the endpin height varies. Your playing position should allow for a fluid torso, and can even move about between the knees. Find your position, Anna, and if it is comfortable and you can reach the full range fo the cello fingerboard and bow, you will be golden!
Really good question I will answer in more detail with a video ;-)
Jonathan Humphries that makes more sense now. In December I was assessed at grade 1 in an ABRSM-style exam on cello, and the examiner’s comments were that I needed to have more control of the bow. Mind you, I’d only been learning for less than three months so I didn’t have a lot of time to learn how to fully control it. I think I’ll put this into practice.
Thanks ,
how to get Jonathan Humphries Pro account ? intend to get Ave Maria & The Swan cello lesson score sheet
Hi again from L.A.
Do you have an opinion of learning on the Yamaha SVC 110? I'm not sure if I should sell it and just stick with my acoustic cello.
Chad, that is a good cello! My friend ( a Google code poet) owns one and we both love it! The option for playing silently is important to many of us, hence I would keep it!
Why do you put your pinky on your bow like a violin grip? My teacher tells me that is incorrect and he is very informed and has expertise, but I'm curious?
My pinky is short, that is why. We are anatomically different.
Is bow-hand fatigue normal for new cello students? I find my bow hand feels like a tired noodle after ten or so minutes of bowing and then as my control slips so does the bow. I'm wondering whether I'm weak and just need to build up the stamina and strength of my right forearm/hand/fingers by bowing through the fatigue or whether I'm doing something incorrectly?
By angling you bow slightly downward, you leverage the mass of your arm as a force to make sound. Otherwise, yes, bowing fatigue is natural.
@@CelloCoach Thank you!
Can u do a clip about playing cello by ear...? Because I desperately want to master this...please mr Jonathan
ok, it's in the queue. What genre would you like presented or song?
Jonathan Humphries pop song or any acoustic vibed song ..it’s hard to master this ....
I appreciate this video because it helps me to understand just how Cello bow technique is completely different from Violin or Viola bow technique.
It is a completely different discipline entirely.
I sensed it had to be different, but I had no idea of the mechanics of it until now I begin to see it.
My teacher would slap you down for that bow hold
so sorry my technique sucks. i am just a mediocre player anyways ...
Hello, it’s me Lizete again 😂 I commented on a video once saying that I’ll have my first cello lesson soon! I have been playing cello for a month now and it’s amazing! You teach very similar to the way my teacher teaches so when I’m at home it’s really helpful to watch your videos! Also it was funny when you said to imagine that you are fighting with someone cause my teacher says that I have to imagine me poking in his eye with the bow on A string 😂😂😂😂
Are we downloading from the same server? 😅
I cut my fingertips off on my left hand in the past week. Its killing me on cello, i get your notifications and cant do anything with them.
Leaving comments is good!1 No, really, this is a good question, one I have been planning to answer in a Cello Coach talk : How to Practice Cello when Injured. There are many things you can do - musically, mechanically, and mentally - to train when you body has fallen ill. Can you think of some?
The span of my left hand falls more than half inch short of what is recommended for my size cello, however - I keep at it and it is working so far - also there are smaller cellos - 7/8, 3/4 - I had considered going smaller... I hope and pray that you are able to work something out!!!
你拉的是草原蒙族曲子。👍。
Cello philippe
Is that your cat playing with its reflection in the mirror???
Ohhhh shoooot 😕😕😕 i clicked on the antique bronze statue and the cello, now my credit card is 🤯🤯😵🤪😵 statue 3280 💲 and cello stradivarius 0.73 million 💲 how can i reverse the situation ☹️😵helpppp needed 😣please why Amazon sell real stradivarius now 😭🤪🤯😳
How do you teach left headed people to play the Cello, we one of those few who play left handed? This video has been very informational for us and we look forward on playing or rather learning from scratch. Thank you!
I’m left-handed. Pretend you’re looking in a mirror. When he says right hand, think left. Otherwise it’s the same. However, my teacher said “Well, you’ll never play in an orchestra” so I told her I want to play in a marching band. She kicked me out. Now I play in my own band good luck.
I'm left handed and I play normally?
Funny looking guy, little psiho but a good man. Nice tips
Thank you kindly
Gah
Who was that man teaching and speaking French?
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9_Navarra
@@CelloCoach thank you very much!
Перевод на русский
Great video from a teacher that knows how to explain the involvement of the body when playing. Take a look around on YT and you will rarely find videos as useful as this one. It is hard to explain but I have come to personal conclusion: or you have people around that deceive themselves by thinking they are good teachers (but they are not) or there are a lot of people around that do not teach essential aspects on purpose.
Thanks, really very much Antal. My pedagogy is a product of 23 years of experience on 3 continents and ongoing via Skype for 4 years now. When I started to teach, I found it necessary to place myself in the students' position, and look at cello the way they do. And with clear, concise explanations that directly address concerns, the goal is the cellist not only plays like a cellist but thinks like one too.
@@CelloCoach I have several years under my belt of acting, dancing and martial arts. I do know that there is one piece of information of paramount importance : where does the movement start in your body? What is the part of your body that leads the movement and when?The information you shared with all of us in this video is a game-changer. Same truth holds for the video where you use the metaphor about rowing or putting a sword into its sheath.