Rachmaninoff Elegie Op. 3, No. 1 Piano Tutorial

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  • Опубликовано: 26 мар 2020
  • Rachmaninoff Morceaux de fantaisie Op. 3, No. 1. Élégie in E-Flat Minor. Level 8, E Flat Minor. Added score to 2014 tutorials, combined the two parts.
    Please do not play the way I did. Am just showing you the notes and fingering.
    This masterclass teacher at Steinway Gallery is superb, in fact, he mentions this piece on how to play loudly or softly:
    • Piano Lesson on Loud a...
    sites.google.com/site/pianoan...
    Jane, a retired university math teacher, started this volunteer project in April 2009. Positive feedback from wonderful viewers worldwide keeps her motivated. Jane is a strong advocate of reading music. She made unconventional sight-reading lessons that simplifies reading music.
    sites.google.com/site/pianoan...

Комментарии • 51

  • @neilramantoniojardimromcy
    @neilramantoniojardimromcy 4 года назад +12

    Thank you very much for this great teaching and piece, Jane.

  • @evanofelipe
    @evanofelipe 4 года назад +4

    Thanks Jane, glad to see you’re well, this should keep us inside for quite some considerable time. ‘Distance = Existence’.

  • @ramonaquileshernandezbernal
    @ramonaquileshernandezbernal 4 месяца назад

    Thanks for video.
    ❤😊
    Congratulations from Mexico.

  • @fionanogawa1730
    @fionanogawa1730 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for all your valuable help Jane

  • @ResearchUX
    @ResearchUX 2 года назад +1

    This is a piece I would love to learn one day. Thank you so much for the tutorial. I have a bigger chance my dream come true

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  2 года назад

      It is a beautiful piece. Hope your dream comes true ☺️

  • @kerawelt2008
    @kerawelt2008 4 года назад +2

    Such an endearing piece ! I'm sure Rachmaninoff had Chopin in mind when he wrote it. Wishing well to you and Mike !

  • @felixduong5162
    @felixduong5162 4 года назад +1

    Thank you Jane! You are doing god work! Keep it up !

  • @ludicroussealanimations3643
    @ludicroussealanimations3643 4 года назад +1

    Hello jane, thanks a lot for this video! I was wondering if you could cover the 8th kreisleriana from schumann? I would be very greatful

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад +1

      Please post under my request video? Votes will move it up the wait list. Good luck

    • @ludicroussealanimations3643
      @ludicroussealanimations3643 4 года назад +1

      @@janepianotutorialsoh sure, thanks :)

    • @ludicroussealanimations3643
      @ludicroussealanimations3643 4 года назад

      @@janepianotutorials hey sorry, could you maybe link me to the request video? Im having problems finding it 😅🤣

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад +1

      @@ludicroussealanimations3643 Links get tossed into Spam. Google search "how to make request jane"

  • @RobinDaelman
    @RobinDaelman Год назад

    Hi Jane, where can I find tutorials that are showing these scores for learning purposes? I know it is not the way how to play it but it helps.
    Kr, Robin

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  Год назад

      Hello Robin, scores are free to download on IMSLP, if that's what you mean.

  • @mariagabrielamartincu9314
    @mariagabrielamartincu9314 4 года назад +1

    Hello Jane can you post the vocalise of rahmaninoff but slow please. I got the sheet music.

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад

      Quite certain I did the vocalise. Use the search box on my website?

  • @matthewliu9127
    @matthewliu9127 4 года назад

    Great thanks

  • @konradkyt
    @konradkyt 3 года назад

    A very thorough and helpful tutorial. I am asking if it is acceptable to play the treble of the left hand with the right hand? This is much more practical in my opinion in a few moments, of course if we keep the rhythm and the melody. This is just my suggestive question. I am curious how others play it, if they always keep their hands aligned with the staff. Best regards:)

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  3 года назад +1

      The answer is yes. "...Be especially careful to choose the fingering which best suits your hand and the phrasing of the passage. Good editions of music usually have sensible fingerings, but if there is any department of piano playing where you should follow your own judgment it is that of fingering. The best teachers will always tell you that. Even such fine editing as that of Rafael Joseffy should not be followed in its fingering unless you feel it suits you. In fact Joseffy had some strange fingering crotchets -- such as changing fingers on repeated notes even in molto adagio passages -- which few wish to follow..." Charles Cooke, _Playing the Piano for Pleasure_

    • @konradkyt
      @konradkyt 3 года назад +1

      ​@@janepianotutorials Thank you very much for your answer. This is valuable information for me :)

  • @bradforddavis6497
    @bradforddavis6497 3 месяца назад

    Nice touch. Reminds me of my last root canal. Jk.. slow and even yeah yeah

  • @ninanikiforenko151
    @ninanikiforenko151 3 года назад

    БЛАГОДАРЮ СЕРДЕЧНО ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @angelvaldivia5106
    @angelvaldivia5106 4 года назад +1

    Mrs. Jane tutorial you hace tutorial 3er movement moonlight bethoven excuse me english please

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад

      Yes, did the entire moonlight sonata. Use the search box on my website?

  • @coy2960
    @coy2960 4 года назад

    Hey jane. I have a question for you. Do you think showing people exactly how to play pieces like this that are truly amazing, like this? If they can't read it themselves, its not the right piece for them. I am not telling you to stop ofcourse, your videos are helpful for us since sometimes we dont quite understand a bar or something like that, so we can come here and see what we did wrong. Im just asking if you think this is the correct way to learn these pieces.

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад +4

      No I don’t. My project goal is to encourage reading music. This math person made unique reading lessons based on logic, not acronyms. Thereafter, these tutorials are for occasional reference. However, a big HOWEVER, there are countless talented players out there. They’re among those genuinely musical who can play by ear. Most in the past have gone into improvisation - jazz. Synthesia opened the door for them to classical piano. They came to my tutorials for fingering. Well, good grief, was I shocked! The most outstanding one is Sean Rooney, my 1st scholarship awardee. Sean won silver playing his interpretation of the Chopin ballade 1. There are countless others like him. They play better than most traditional students. We from the “old” school (left-brained) should open our eyes and welcome these pianists (right-brained) with open arms instead of skepticism, and at times, disdain! Agree?

    • @coy2960
      @coy2960 4 года назад +1

      @@janepianotutorials very much agree. I learned this piece by ear. But i still don't get it, how does giving the people the exact way to play, every note very slowly, will encourage them reading music? Since you show them how to play it, they will think "i don't need to read music at all! I have jane to do it for me and show me how to play it" Again, im not saying that you doing these tutorials are bad for the students, its actually very useful to people who can read music. My question was if you think this is the right way to teach. Thank you for your answer

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  4 года назад +4

      You’re right, these right-brained learners will not read music, you must know they tried! As this left-brained learner will never play by ear. Believe me, I tried !! The answer to your question, is this the right way to teach them? My tutorials are their synthesia. I teach them nothing. They are SELF-taught. I don’t teach you anything either, even though you use my tutorials. True? Tutorial is a RUclips term. I would have used “robot slow demo”. Question. Do you read music?

    • @coy2960
      @coy2960 4 года назад

      @@janepianotutorials i see. I do read music, but not perfect. Im sight reading pretty well only with jazz music, since its played more freely. I use your tutorials to see if im playing correctly, but i never learn from your videos new parts of the piece. You are very good and smart, so i see you like my teacher, that shows me the Teqnich on how to play different parts of the piece. But i realise now how you not really "spoonfeeding" Them, since they can just go to synthesized versions of the piece and slow them down and learn from them.

    • @RoxyPoxy25
      @RoxyPoxy25 3 года назад

      @coy 2 For example, I studied piano as my second instrument for a few years therefore I can sightread but since then, it's been almost 10 years and I have no teacher now...I finally afforded a piano though so these videos are really helpful for me since I lack in technique and fingering.
      Once , back in school, I learned a piece by myself because the teacher rarely showed up at class and then at the end of the semester when it was time for the evaluation he made me change all of my fingering and that was awful to do sooo point is , yeah these videos are great for people like me , that have a bit of musical knowledge but need a bit of help on the way .
      P.S. English is not my native language so please excuse any grammatical errors 🙈

  • @dieseltieger4173
    @dieseltieger4173 Год назад

    Ich finde den Fingersatz 1-3-1-3-1....in der linken Hand viel besser als überzugreifen.

    • @janepianotutorials
      @janepianotutorials  Год назад

      Thanks for writing, we do need to adjust fingering to suit our hand structure ☺️

  • @karlmarxxxx
    @karlmarxxxx Год назад

    2:49

  • @tonyukuknemesis9742
    @tonyukuknemesis9742 3 года назад +2

    So hard piece 😏

  • @mariagabrielamartincu9314
    @mariagabrielamartincu9314 4 года назад

    Sorry, I see the tutorial you have this piese on youtube