Dr. Boyd, Another amazing and practical one. It is sooooo helpful👍👍👍! Your explained so clearly! I was just wondering when should I come off it occasionally. I got the answer today 😁😁😁 Love your channel 🤗🤗🤗
Thank You, thank you. Now i understand much better how to practise with metronom. Its much more fun when i understand why this is so good for playing understand. You are a great teacher!
I offer no tips but a request for a short video where you subdivide out loud. Perhaps show the notes on a board and then speak them. This is Such a valuable video! Thank you!
Thank you for another great lesson. Your channel is one of my favourites. I love your teaching. It is always deep and so practical. It inspires and is interesting. All the best from Germany.
To subdivide beats, you just count numbers out loud as you play each beat, and then speak the syllables between the beats to depict the subdivisions. Typical 16th-note subdivisions in English would be 1-e-and-a, 2-e-and-a, 3-e-and-a, etc. There are also other systems to subdivide beats, such as the Takadimi system. Here's a short video I made where I demonstrate subdividing in a Chopin prelude: ruclips.net/user/shortsTUPbUnJN6Ic
Watch next: Metronome Practice at the Piano: Don't Make These 5 Mistakes! ruclips.net/video/mQf4zq9nSSk/видео.html
I love your videos & how systematic and methodic you are in your approach!! It's very good for people with mathematical or scientific minds like me :)
Thanks...please keep those gems coming
I appreciate your comment! It helps keep me motivated to make more videos! 😊🎹
Dr. Boyd,
Another amazing and practical one. It is sooooo helpful👍👍👍! Your explained so clearly! I was just wondering when should I come off it occasionally. I got the answer today 😁😁😁
Love your channel 🤗🤗🤗
Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm so glad you have been finding my videos helpful! 😊🎹🔥
Very useful advices. Thank you again for your videos
Thank You, thank you. Now i understand much better how to practise with metronom. Its much more fun when i understand why this is so good for playing understand. You are a great teacher!
Great to hear! Glad to help! 🎹😊
Thank you so much. I have used it on every piece and be patient with it❤🙏
Fantastic- you got this!
I offer no tips but a request for a short video where you subdivide out loud. Perhaps show the notes on a board and then speak them.
This is Such a valuable video! Thank you!
Good idea! I'll do that in the new year! Thanks for the suggestion!
Thanks Kate. 🎉
☺️
Of course! Glad you liked it ☺️
Thank you for another great lesson. Your channel is one of my favourites. I love your teaching. It is always deep and so practical. It inspires and is interesting. All the best from Germany.
Thank you so much! Glad you are enjoying it! I lived in Germany for 4 years - Germany has a special place in my heart! Viele Grüße!
Your video is a anwser on my questions. I now change to a classical metronome. Thank you
Glad to hear it- good luck!
Hi Kate, LOVE your utube instruction piano videos.. SOoooo helpful. How do you subdivide beats? Can you demonstrate? Thank you.
To subdivide beats, you just count numbers out loud as you play each beat, and then speak the syllables between the beats to depict the subdivisions. Typical 16th-note subdivisions in English would be 1-e-and-a, 2-e-and-a, 3-e-and-a, etc. There are also other systems to subdivide beats, such as the Takadimi system. Here's a short video I made where I demonstrate subdividing in a Chopin prelude: ruclips.net/user/shortsTUPbUnJN6Ic
@@ThePianoProfKateBoyd Many thanks Kate!
Mam , I Play according to note value .
I don’t understand the part of subdividing. Meaning break the peace into small parts?? I don’t get it. If you can explain it to me that’d be great 👍🙏
Here is a blog post that explains the concept of subdividing in music: www.instructables.com/How-to-Count-Rhythms-Better-by-Using-Subdivision/
whats the best metronome you would suggest for Jazz/blue bossa nova piano practice? Thanks in advance.
A metronome is designed to keep a steady beat, so I'd recommend using any metronome regardless of style.
@@ThePianoProfKateBoyd Thanks I'll go ahead with buying DB90.