She's probably a drummer. This is essentially what all drummers are doing, that or a pianist or something. All musicians should have good timing, but hers is probably way better than the average amateur
@@theshizzz I made a comment on that! Im actually really intrigued on HOW she messed up the triplets (She did something uncommon and felt the groove as triplets and filled the "16ths" in). Dont blame her for messing that up, I think the only timed ive seen it done correctly is by Shaun Crowder--pro drummer lol.
What? Its all wrong tho She rushes She drags And she turned the triple quantized/16th note polyrhythm into a weird straight rhythm swing thing. Why does this impress you? I did & saw better in year one percussion back in middle school.
When she tried to do the triplets with her left hand while doing the 16th with her right, she did a clave beat instead. Though you can hardly blame her, since 3 against 4 polyrhythm is quite hard. She did correct herself when she did the opposite though
Rhythm is the skeleton, the thing that holds it all together, but yeah of course it can be the soul as well, together with the melody and the other components of the music.
But she literally did it wrong. & i imagine you probably couldn't even point out what that is she did wrong. Which is like 6 different things, but one of them is so obvious it hurts.
@@SamuTheFrog Wait what did she do wrong? I don’t get music theory anyway and honestly just thought it was impressive that she could do that but now I’m curious
@Yosei-the-Elf She rushed many strokes(this means played early, ofc) On the same hand, she also dragged(played late) many other strokes. During the second polyrhythm section, she should be still doing triplet quantized notes with the other hand doing straight rhythm 16th notes, instead she ends up giving the triplet hand a swing(which means to bounce between being on a straight rhythm, and not) This entire exercise is actually a thing they teach first year percussionists, it not only helps separate the hands but also helps develop a *flexible* internal rhythm if done properly. If done properly, it enforces some very good habits & builds a VERY solid foundation for percussionists. My problem with everyone praising it is that it is a year one thing, very much so. Most percussionists learn this and master it within a few weeks, i'm not even exaggerating. Go try it yourself, after about your 3rd day it becomes incredibly easier cause its just practicing and enforcing a muscle memory that is independent. Yet, here we are, "#musicteacher #musiclessons", everyone praising it, and its obvious to anyone who actually knows what this is, that shes spent little over a day practicing this before uploading this video.
@@Whimp500 wasn’t talking about the comments I’ve just come across a lot of people in my day who think playing an instrument or anything along those lines is easy and honestly what she’s doing right there is harder then the 4 years I played the saxophone I can’t even do that 🤣😂
This is waaaayyy harder than it looks. The concept makes pretty explainable sense to wrap your head around but the actual process takes so much practice.
my brain would hurt if i tried to do that, the amount of left-right dual-focus hand-eye coordination required to pull this off is actually insane. this video is one of the reasons that i respect tf outta ppl who play instruments edit: yall im not a musician, im just commenting on how impressive the video is. i dont want any music advice lmaoo
She is Highly competent music teacher , thats not easy at all, she made it so accurate step by step dynamically and best explanation about the value of each music note respectably ,
@@slowmomoose8546 i am sorry i disappoint you , but , thats not my business , beside english is NOT my native language neither language of god ( can you speak my language ? no ? 😂) , i speak 18 languages ( perfectly among them Hebrew and Chinese ) , i just learn english by my self about 2 years ago ,by reading George Orwell book " animal farm " ( how many language do you speak ? 1 ? 11/2 ? it good for you - dont get me wrong -- i admire your average english ability so much ) Some people they can read the extremely complicated codex of the incomplete long sentence and understood comprehensively the entire meaning its meaning , but YOU, can not understand something so clear before your eyes , and criticize other without telling what mistake , nor any corrrection , do you want top not stage ? i willing to give you publicly ,,,sincerely since your egocetrifugal starving for such english petition , dont worry , am i trying " to sound somewhat good " with " misserable english" ? ohh NO that was your idea ,,,not mine , such snobism does not even came into my mind ,not even a bit of , till you just makes me realized how snobis look like and sound like, thank you of your attention Baron,,,,, Do you understand my simplest message in " misserable english " ? i hope so , NATURALIA NON SUNT TURPIA Baron sliverdrillpickle nassau de oranye -- peace ✌🏼😪-
Это все для меня звучит: Тук-тук-тук, затем ускоряем и повторяем…. Так же и в школе для меня звучали ноты на уроках музыки😅 Преподаватель на пианино: Это нота ЛЯ - я слышу *пилинь* Это нота ДО - *пилинь* Ре - *пилинь* Ми - *пилинь* Так же и тут 😅 Метроном *тук…..тук* Девушка: тук-тук-тук и ускоряется….
Sorry but this isnt even close from being a teacher. Plus the only one decently hard is the 3-4s, and as a pianist, the ballade no 4 of chopin got like a 7-8s or something??? Well peapole generally just accelerate and slow down to simulate the time, but the real shit is when you need to make it clean, litteraly learning to do 7-8s.
I guess when you _don't_ understand something very well, doesn't matter how many times you watch someone bang a table with magic markers, it's not simple, not simply understood, it's just magic.
Yo entiendo perfectamente lo que hace y quiere explicar pero yo no tengo esa capacidad de coordinación simultanea que tiene ella. No todos tenemos dedos para el piano.
It’s been a while… I can hear the drums of liberation. I’m hearing them for the first time in 800 years! I’m positive that he is here! Joy Boy has returned!
@@christophermyers4487The idea that women can use both sides of their brain simultaneously while men find it hard to do so is a common belief, but it's not entirely accurate. Research has shown that there are indeed some differences in brain structure and connectivity between men and women, but these differences do not necessarily translate into a strict division of brain usage or abilities¹². For example, it's been found that men may have more connections within each hemisphere of the brain, which could optimize motor skills, while women might have stronger connections between hemispheres, potentially aiding in combining analytical and intuitive thinking². However, these findings are general trends and don't apply to every individual. Moreover, the notion that one gender can use both sides of the brain more easily than the other has been debunked. A meta-analysis of studies involving hundreds of men and women found no evidence of significant differences in language lateralization between the sexes¹. Additionally, the size of the corpus callosum, the bridge of neurons connecting the two hemispheres, does not differ significantly between genders¹. It's important to interpret these differences with caution and not to overgeneralize. Both men and women are capable of using their entire brain, and individual variation is much greater than any average difference between genders. The human brain is highly adaptable and capable of forming new connections through learning and experience, regardless of gender. Source: Conversation with Bing, 5/14/2024 (1) Two Myths and Three Facts About the Differences in Men and Women's .... www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/brain-myths/201207/two-myths-and-three-facts-about-the-differences-in-men-and-womens-brains. (2) How Men's Brains Are Wired Differently than Women's. www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-mens-brains-are-wired-differently-than-women/. (3) 11 Facts About the Ambidextrous | Mental Floss. www.mentalfloss.com/article/30667/11-facts-about-ambidextrous. (4) Differences in Male and Female Brain Structure - HowStuffWorks. science.howstuffworks.com/life/inside-the-mind/human-brain/men-women-different-brains1.htm. (5) A Short Journey Into Male and Female Brains | Psychology Today. www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/explorations-of-the-mind/202401/a-short-journey-into-male-and-female-brains. (6) Men Do Hear -- But Differently Than Women, Brain Images Show. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/11/001129075326.htm.
Shave the dog gone butter. Shave is with both fingers, dog and butt is with one finger, the and ter is the other finger. Shave Dog Butt is triplet, shave the gone ter is 1/16th notes. Hope that made sense, goodluck! also, We merry men, is the pattern for 1/8th notes over triplets. we and ry for 1/8, we mer men for triplets.
@@PortalBreaker. why is that hard to believe in a world full of them? 😂 I play the piano almost every day as a hobby and I used to do exams my whole childhood up til my late teens along with theory. I wouldn't say I'm a professional no, but I consider myself still quite knowledgeable 🙏🏻
Well it depends on what level you are ig. Id imagine most musicians grade 8 or higher won't find this too difficult. 5 + 7 for example is way harder than 3 + 4
@@smallw1991you don’t play do you? It’s not that it’s hard. It’s that you need coordination that some people don’t have or you gotta practice for a year to get that independence.
@@theonewhoknows2 I feel that people who don't have the coordination initially would naturally gain it from having to play progressively harder stuff. I don't play drums seriously, but there was a grade 7 piano piece from the 2019 ABRSM syllabus that had 3+4 so I'd imagine something similar would appear in at least early as grade 8 if not 7 on most other instruments (obviously not violin or smthn like that ofc). For drums which is very rhythmic it probably crops up even earlier. So as a result you wouldn't necessarily need to practice specifically for this kind of thing unless you've NEVER encountered it which I'm assuming is unlikely
@@smallw1991been playing drums for 3 years and I've never encountered playing music with this😭. Depends on the genre ig. I still practice this independently tho and have improved. I progressed faster now that I'm better at drums tho compared to like a year ago when I couldn't get it regardless of how hard i tried
Beautiful work, it really demonstrates quarter,eighth,triplet,and sixteenths well. But it would be great to see you do something similar with whole and half to.
Hey man I’ve been playing self taught for a few months is there any great resource u could recommend to get me in the right direction? (Been playing about 8 or so months but I don’t feel like I’m progressing a lot rn)
@@kingrayne2363find songs a bit out of your comfort zone and no matter how hard they are just keep practicing and don’t stop. It will feel hopeless at times and there will be things you can’t play yet but if you just keep trying and take it slow you will get it eventually. PS: you don’t NEED to play hard songs if you don’t want to, just play what ever sounds nice to you
I really mean this with the least offense possible to her, but what she is aiming to do is not particularly difficult, and also she made a lot of mistakes. For example, she wasn't on the beat for many of her taps, and also her first 3 + 4 was completely incorrect.
@@Bigdumdum3 I’m more into the rock and metal style of playing and would like to branch out eventually to other styles whenever I feel like I’m comfortable enough in one style. Currently I’m practicing songs like enter sandman and californication and some parts come easier than others but I intend to stick with it and keep pushing
She's good. It was a great watch but don't all musicians do this? Pianists, drummers, clarinetists, etc? I'm no musician. I did a bit of recorder playing (badly) at school when I was 8. :-)
@@myla6135I'd say this is definitely more advanced. As a semi decent violinist, I didn't have such good timing while preparing for my grade exams 😂. Lord I wish I used metronome, I had to depend on a short tempered teacher using clapping to keep time lol
@@vincentadultman6226 Aww, thanks for that. There's me attributing all sorts to musicians. Whom, by the way, I love. Music ........ couldn't live without it.
Damn, i play piano for years and i probably cant switch between the rhythms as clean and good as she can. That is one amazing demonstration of skill and feeling.
No its not. Ive seen better in year one percussionists I'd literally bet you $100 if you spent 3 days working on this, you'd have it down better than her. She rushes She drags She even did the second polyrhythm totally wrong, turning it from a triplet quantization to a swing beat. & every stroke she made was uneven & ive seen more control in a sloth.
Real! Hers is not perfect buts it's pretty damn close. My ass can't even do the "spin one hand one way and the other the other way" thing without having a stroke 😅 this would kill me-
@@SamuTheFrog God Did your parents never hug you as a kid? Because no normal person should ever go to a comment section just to rant about the tiniest unnecessary mess ups in a beginners tutorial on Music Theory. Also, the user explicitly said they’ve spent years playing the piano Thats a lot of three days that didn’t suddenly make them good at pattern swapping As someone who picks onto patterns rather well, it takes me a whole 24 hours to get down a medium-skilled piano piece BY ear. But I wont judge anyone for how they learn, and neither should you. Tldr: Grow up. And look into getting a therapist for your childhood issues with perfectionism.
This is literally one of the only things I struggle with when reading music. I need to hear someone else play it just once while reading along to get the rhythm right.
Okay. This is actual witchcraft. Just. You did it almost flawlessly and with both hands. Playing 2 separate rhythms at the same time. Playing one (especially triplets) while hearing others play another is often hard enough, but here you show it with ease and a smile. Hats off to you. This is definite dedication to the craft, and a great method of teaching.
@JediLoreen two handed I will concede it might be easy, but "non-musicians" is a harsh term. 8+ years of trumpet. I can double-tongue, circular breathe, and other such skills. I would consider myself a musician, but everyone has different skills, and this is certainly not one of mine. Lol
@JediLoreen I've been a musician since I was 4. played many two-handed instruments since then. I could not do this now especially not as flawlessly as she just did. it's a difficult task and she did it very well. say what you like but this was impressive.
I play drums, and this is hard as hell, ESPECIALLY once you delve to polyrhythms. The only time I ever used polyrhythms is when I’d go play Meshuggah songs since their drummer is like a living clock
A LOT harder than it looks
Above harder
You're right and it looks really hard by the way😂😂
I know right. Coz I saw you trying and you were pulling your hair. =p
That's what I told you're Dad
Easy
The fact that she can do that both ways round is really amazing.
It's just a little percussion
最初の4-3は間違っています
I bought one for my son and still have no idea how it works-just me.
I can do it NO ways 😅
-_- -__- -___- -____- -_____-
My mind is blown.... How can you be this rhythmic and coordinated, let alone with both hands and at the same time is beyond me.
hard work + talent
She's probably a drummer. This is essentially what all drummers are doing, that or a pianist or something. All musicians should have good timing, but hers is probably way better than the average amateur
@@atticusfinch6038 I guess you're right. I never thought about that anyone considered a good drummer can essentially do this.. Amazing
Just gotta be a musician with a lot of practice
@@Saruman1000 im learning and JEESUS its difficult
As a visual learner this was very helpful thank you
I watched it 5 times and still blows my mind
She screwed it at the end and nobody's saying anything. It's so weird.
@@theshizzz I made a comment on that! Im actually really intrigued on HOW she messed up the triplets (She did something uncommon and felt the groove as triplets and filled the "16ths" in). Dont blame her for messing that up, I think the only timed ive seen it done correctly is by Shaun Crowder--pro drummer lol.
You need check up for your mind bro.😅
What?
Its all wrong tho
She rushes
She drags
And she turned the triple quantized/16th note polyrhythm into a weird straight rhythm swing thing.
Why does this impress you?
I did & saw better in year one percussion back in middle school.
Сосын миы ашып қалған адамға ұқсап қаласың, өйстіп!
Her brain can multitask on a different level 😂
Anyone who can play a drum kit is doing exactly this in real time with many different beats lol
Those are very basic percussion abilities.
It’s very simple for a musician or drummer
Recién entiendo los tiempos en la música. Que tal manera de ser didáctica, mis respetos y admiración a la Dama.
Basic necessary skill for a musician, but still very impressive.
That is what is called ✨️talent✨️
Left hand:1 then 2
Right hand : Nah I'ma do my own thing
That was actually insanely clever and clear explanation
I need to watch this every day for inspiration.
I was wondering what those things represent in musical charts
Yeah and I still wouldn’t be able to do it lol
I needed this in school 😂
@@smekxnqumalo1272развивает оба полушария мозга.
The amount of control you need to control your hand apart like that is insane.
Ikr
Now imagine drummers with their precise control of legs too 😅
@@rem_0Actually it's easier than you think
The control to control your control is within your control.
@@oggyoggy1299😂
When she tried to do the triplets with her left hand while doing the 16th with her right, she did a clave beat instead. Though you can hardly blame her, since 3 against 4 polyrhythm is quite hard. She did correct herself when she did the opposite though
I don’t think people understand how difficult it is to actually do this! This is amazing
I cant really imagine it, i am a drumer an this is very easy to me
Drummers are genius’ to me!! I can even clap in time 😂😂
You have to be born with that talent to do that
Ez
We understand
rhythm is the soul of music
It's also a dancer.
😂@@mitchyoung93
Rhythm is the skeleton, the thing that holds it all together, but yeah of course it can be the soul as well, together with the melody and the other components of the music.
Meanwhile Classic music with no rhythm
@@Ur4nu5
For real, the original Is Just an ignorant statement, there Is music meant to be danceable and other meant to be atmospheric
Ok, she deserves a lot of respect for that because I had no idea this is how beats were measured
That is a simply brilliant way to explain what is difficult to understand...
This is why good teachers are so important and deserve a raise. She never said a word but explain so much.
I could never do that
facts
But she literally did it wrong.
& i imagine you probably couldn't even point out what that is she did wrong.
Which is like 6 different things, but one of them is so obvious it hurts.
@@SamuTheFrog Wait what did she do wrong? I don’t get music theory anyway and honestly just thought it was impressive that she could do that but now I’m curious
@Yosei-the-Elf She rushed many strokes(this means played early, ofc)
On the same hand, she also dragged(played late) many other strokes.
During the second polyrhythm section, she should be still doing triplet quantized notes with the other hand doing straight rhythm 16th notes, instead she ends up giving the triplet hand a swing(which means to bounce between being on a straight rhythm, and not)
This entire exercise is actually a thing they teach first year percussionists, it not only helps separate the hands but also helps develop a *flexible* internal rhythm if done properly. If done properly, it enforces some very good habits & builds a VERY solid foundation for percussionists.
My problem with everyone praising it is that it is a year one thing, very much so. Most percussionists learn this and master it within a few weeks, i'm not even exaggerating. Go try it yourself, after about your 3rd day it becomes incredibly easier cause its just practicing and enforcing a muscle memory that is independent.
Yet, here we are, "#musicteacher #musiclessons", everyone praising it, and its obvious to anyone who actually knows what this is, that shes spent little over a day practicing this before uploading this video.
Most people aren’t understanding how actually hard this is, props to you
most people just don't understand what the fuck she's doing that's all
How do you know they don't? They r not even saying it's easy on comments , and anyone with 5 brain cells know it's hard lol
@@AlainnCorcaigh 😂😂true
@@Whimp500 wasn’t talking about the comments I’ve just come across a lot of people in my day who think playing an instrument or anything along those lines is easy and honestly what she’s doing right there is harder then the 4 years I played the saxophone I can’t even do that 🤣😂
@@LeathermanSoftwash lol fr not even i can do that i have been playing 5 different instrument for like 3 years lol
I’m 41 yrs old and I’ve never understood music notes until this video WOW 😮
This is waaaayyy harder than it looks. The concept makes pretty explainable sense to wrap your head around but the actual process takes so much practice.
my brain would hurt if i tried to do that, the amount of left-right dual-focus hand-eye coordination required to pull this off is actually insane. this video is one of the reasons that i respect tf outta ppl who play instruments
edit: yall im not a musician, im just commenting on how impressive the video is. i dont want any music advice lmaoo
take it slow and steady, then you will master it by your own efforts.
fun fact: its from your muscle memory 💀
Don't think too much, feel it
thanks for the advice yall but im not a musician 😂😂 i simply admire their work, lol
As a musician, I can never do that shit even if my life depends on it 🤣
It’s actually pretty simple, other than the triplets. Those are really hard to
She is Highly competent music teacher , thats not easy at all, she made it so accurate step by step dynamically and best explanation about the value of each music note respectably ,
why is everything double spaced
@@endymonyt4268
emphasized
It's called polyrhythms lol
when you try to sound somewhat good at english but fail miserably:
@@slowmomoose8546
i am sorry i disappoint you , but , thats not my business , beside english is NOT my native language neither language of god ( can you speak my language ? no ? 😂) , i speak 18 languages ( perfectly among them Hebrew and Chinese ) , i just learn english by my self about 2 years ago ,by reading George Orwell book " animal farm " ( how many language do you speak ? 1 ? 11/2 ? it good for you - dont get me wrong -- i admire your average english ability so much )
Some people they can read the extremely complicated codex of the incomplete long sentence and understood comprehensively the entire meaning its meaning ,
but YOU, can not understand something so clear before your eyes , and criticize other without telling what mistake , nor any corrrection , do you want top not stage ? i willing to give you publicly ,,,sincerely since your egocetrifugal starving for such english petition , dont worry ,
am i trying " to sound somewhat good " with " misserable english" ? ohh NO that was your idea ,,,not mine , such snobism does not even came into my mind ,not even a bit of , till you just makes me realized how snobis look like and sound like, thank you of your attention Baron,,,,,
Do you understand my simplest message in " misserable english " ? i hope so ,
NATURALIA NON SUNT TURPIA Baron sliverdrillpickle nassau de oranye -- peace ✌🏼😪-
This needs an incredible amount of coordination, congrats on that!
Wow, the 3 on 4 is really impressive!! Nicely done 🤩
You got it now?
Well...
Tomorrow is the concert!
She explained a lot without saying a word & doing 2 different beats at the same time is impressive too
She showed Metronome live version .
Wie kan man das lernen?
It’s what literally every drummer does for every song…
Это все для меня звучит: Тук-тук-тук, затем ускоряем и повторяем….
Так же и в школе для меня звучали ноты на уроках музыки😅
Преподаватель на пианино:
Это нота ЛЯ - я слышу *пилинь*
Это нота ДО - *пилинь*
Ре - *пилинь*
Ми - *пилинь*
Так же и тут 😅 Метроном *тук…..тук*
Девушка: тук-тук-тук и ускоряется….
@@Traumwelt130 Practice
It's a beautiful thing when a teacher shows you why they're a teacher.
I bought one for my son and still have no idea how it works-just me.
Yes❤
Sorry but this isnt even close from being a teacher. Plus the only one decently hard is the 3-4s, and as a pianist, the ballade no 4 of chopin got like a 7-8s or something??? Well peapole generally just accelerate and slow down to simulate the time, but the real shit is when you need to make it clean, litteraly learning to do 7-8s.
@@emanuelepoggi2620 it's 9-8 but ya. I play that too
You are right. She is a teacher. A fun one. Its one of the simplest ways I've seen to breakdown count. Non verbal and smiling all the way.
I have no idea why i liked this so much... but i am grateful that found this all the same
The coordination is INSANE
Teóricamente se le entiende, pero en la práctica la coordinación es un desafío. 😅
😅😅😅
Ну координация-то так себе.
Wow her coordination is on another level
Drummers:
@@sticksnstonespatriot1728
A lot of drummers can't manage this.
@@skylined5534 I've played percussion for about 2 months and i can do this. As well as EVERYONE in my school's drumline can do this.
@@skylined5534bruh polyrhythms arent even that hard its everywhere in piano music
Genia!!!! Gracias por ser tan buena maestra....asi se entiende mejor y no usaste ni una palabra.... Gracias...
Briliant. Music ed at school for 6 years and only now I understand the notation. Thank you!!!!
It's amazing that people can keep the beats straight in their heads!
頭いい
Total
Not that difficult once you learn
metronome
@@OfficialDarkstalker”once you learn”
She may just smile, sit there and make it look easy but this is an incredibly disciplined and difficult task. Very well done 👏
Practice makes Women perfect 😂
Agreed
That's not difficult! It's bloody impossible 😂😂😂
Fr this is talent bro
As a tabla player
Once you grasp it, it will be in the tips of your hands and you will start doing it even when you are zoned out.
She uses both sides of her brain 🧠 highly intelligent individual
As a trombonist. This is very satisfying!!!!
The kid tapping on his desk right next to me during the test:
I wish
Telling me all the answers in Brails language
thats me
@@dinotyrantyou know we have Morse Code for stuff like that
real
Absolutely amazing Well done
Keren bangeett..
Fucking easy lol
That's the easiest one dude
It wasn't even played right
she played 3/4 wrongfully though....
I’m not musically inclined at all so I’m thoroughly impressed.
She has developed two hemispheres of the brain at once
When you understand something very well you can explain it very simply. This is spot on !
Bon idée et simple ❤
I guess when you _don't_ understand something very well, doesn't matter how many times you watch someone bang a table with magic markers, it's not simple, not simply understood, it's just magic.
Yo entiendo perfectamente lo que hace y quiere explicar pero yo no tengo esa capacidad de coordinación simultanea que tiene ella. No todos tenemos dedos para el piano.
But she did it WRONG
My god the comment section down here has never seen a drummer before apparently 😭😭😭😭😭😭
It’s been a while… I can hear the drums of liberation. I’m hearing them for the first time in 800 years! I’m positive that he is here! Joy Boy has returned!
10/10 comment 😂😂😂
Best thing I've ever read
amazing, lol
Same here😂
What does this mean 😭
She’s amazing!!❤
100 раз пересматривал- это круто!!!!!
She got an incredible sense of rhythm and timing.
More so coordination. Many people with a sense of timing and rhythm can not do this.
@@lwills8609Agree, especially in things like 2-3 or 3-4
Insane separation ability. Drummers would kill for such ambidexterity.
As a percussionist, nothing that some practice can't handle.
This is actually a biological thing as well. Women can use both sides of their brain at once, much harder for men to do.
@@thisguyoverhere4746actually you don't even need practice because if you look closer and not pay attention to the notes she's just doing flams
Sorprendente.
@@christophermyers4487The idea that women can use both sides of their brain simultaneously while men find it hard to do so is a common belief, but it's not entirely accurate. Research has shown that there are indeed some differences in brain structure and connectivity between men and women, but these differences do not necessarily translate into a strict division of brain usage or abilities¹².
For example, it's been found that men may have more connections within each hemisphere of the brain, which could optimize motor skills, while women might have stronger connections between hemispheres, potentially aiding in combining analytical and intuitive thinking². However, these findings are general trends and don't apply to every individual.
Moreover, the notion that one gender can use both sides of the brain more easily than the other has been debunked. A meta-analysis of studies involving hundreds of men and women found no evidence of significant differences in language lateralization between the sexes¹. Additionally, the size of the corpus callosum, the bridge of neurons connecting the two hemispheres, does not differ significantly between genders¹.
It's important to interpret these differences with caution and not to overgeneralize. Both men and women are capable of using their entire brain, and individual variation is much greater than any average difference between genders. The human brain is highly adaptable and capable of forming new connections through learning and experience, regardless of gender.
Source: Conversation with Bing, 5/14/2024
(1) Two Myths and Three Facts About the Differences in Men and Women's .... www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/brain-myths/201207/two-myths-and-three-facts-about-the-differences-in-men-and-womens-brains.
(2) How Men's Brains Are Wired Differently than Women's. www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-mens-brains-are-wired-differently-than-women/.
(3) 11 Facts About the Ambidextrous | Mental Floss. www.mentalfloss.com/article/30667/11-facts-about-ambidextrous.
(4) Differences in Male and Female Brain Structure - HowStuffWorks. science.howstuffworks.com/life/inside-the-mind/human-brain/men-women-different-brains1.htm.
(5) A Short Journey Into Male and Female Brains | Psychology Today. www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/explorations-of-the-mind/202401/a-short-journey-into-male-and-female-brains.
(6) Men Do Hear -- But Differently Than Women, Brain Images Show. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/11/001129075326.htm.
Thats really impressive! I play drums, guitar, bass, and piano. I understand how hard that is. Your talented!
the 1st and 4th are just the perfect bass x kick for a dubstep banger 🔥🔥🔥
People dont understand how hard that actually is. Like what she did was flawlessly amazing!
People understand,, believe me
Nah it’s not that hard
@@noahchoi2502shut it
@@noahchoi2502how you do it,anything containing 3 beats(in this video) is really hard to do,even if I’m a musician
@@noahchoi2502пиздеть - не мешки таскать.
I've watched this video about 10 times and i can tell you, it gets more impressive every time.
Ik my dum brain whenever I switch to different note with my hand I would tap the exact same with my other hand
The 4 and 3 combo hit so hard
If you memorize the beat, cool. Have someone direct you randomly. That's a true show of mastery
That 3 and 4 together was crazy!!
Great job!!!
да. триоль на квартоль сыграть - это мощно!
와!!!!
완전 놀랐어요!!
대박!!!
Shave the dog gone butter. Shave is with both fingers, dog and butt is with one finger, the and ter is the other finger. Shave Dog Butt is triplet, shave the gone ter is 1/16th notes. Hope that made sense, goodluck! also, We merry men, is the pattern for 1/8th notes over triplets. we and ry for 1/8, we mer men for triplets.
Rytheme Hell belike
Sounded like drum n bass
As a drummer.......this should be a staple in teaching young ones. Great lesson!!!
I’m not a drummer but I’m good at stuff like this. My dad is a bass player and was a roadie with one of the best drummers there is lol
I've said it before I'll say It again, musicians are fuckin geniuses
i completely agree....first thought was she is an instructor or a drummer.... possibly both
Im a leader in drums😅
Drummers that know, her 3:4 needs work…
BRAVO! There is absolutely no way I could do this. The ability to change like that is incredible
No words spoken but still the best explanation ever.
Not only does this give a very good visual to how note work in 4/4 time, it also highlights the importance of a metronome
uwu dad
Now do it again with some weird times like Danny Carey from tool does
This deserves a thumbs up
Open my brain with this knowledge
Hand - eye coordination is GOD-LIKE
More like hand independence
There is barely any hand eye coordination here
It’s the ear eye coordination, hand eye part is just moving the markers to the right spot
its not hand-eye coordination but ik what ur trying to say
What? You don't need eye coordination to do this bro, blind musicians are a thing
40 years old and music notes finally make sense to me. Btw WOW! How you flawlessly keep 2 different time in your head is mind blowing 🤯👏👏👏
Три
In the musical mind it is all just one time just different beats within that time.
@@noshame2389 ok, I'll rephrase, its amazing how she can keep 2 different beats in her head while keeping perfect time
She is so good!
This woman's motor coordination is truly incredible. ❤
Surely she knows how to play the piano
yaa, piano woman
@enigma2303 I was thinking the drums becausexI can use this for my students, too. Nice ❤
BUT HOW can we sure she had correct knocks ?
@@aprintojoss8079 Count the ticks, in the interval from one tick to another there must be 1, 2, 3 or 4 depending on the place indicated
Damn, as a musician even I don't think I could do that without practice. She is amazing! Very impressed
And who says she did it without practice?
Yeah I don't think she did it without practicing either...
"As a musician" yeah sure bud
Oh no I wasn't implying she didn't practice, I was just saying that I couldn't do it without practicing it a lot, as a statement, you know?
@@PortalBreaker. why is that hard to believe in a world full of them? 😂 I play the piano almost every day as a hobby and I used to do exams my whole childhood up til my late teens along with theory. I wouldn't say I'm a professional no, but I consider myself still quite knowledgeable 🙏🏻
A LOT harder than it looks, especially in 3 4 polyrhythm
As a drummer I had to learn to do this, and you definitely made it look easy
People who've studied music can fully appreciate how insanely challenging this is. And that she did it progressively, and with alternating hands!!
Да и не только те кто музыкой занимается, в принципе тяжело это сделать😊
Must be a drummer
In fact for us, muscicians for mant years its quite simple
I wish she would do it correctly at least….
she wasn’t on beat with the 3-4 notes
The independence that she has is sublime. Drummers struggle with perfecting this.
Well it depends on what level you are ig. Id imagine most musicians grade 8 or higher won't find this too difficult. 5 + 7 for example is way harder than 3 + 4
@@smallw1991you don’t play do you? It’s not that it’s hard. It’s that you need coordination that some people don’t have or you gotta practice for a year to get that independence.
@@smallw1991 5 + 7 ? 😮😮😮
@@theonewhoknows2 I feel that people who don't have the coordination initially would naturally gain it from having to play progressively harder stuff. I don't play drums seriously, but there was a grade 7 piano piece from the 2019 ABRSM syllabus that had 3+4 so I'd imagine something similar would appear in at least early as grade 8 if not 7 on most other instruments (obviously not violin or smthn like that ofc). For drums which is very rhythmic it probably crops up even earlier.
So as a result you wouldn't necessarily need to practice specifically for this kind of thing unless you've NEVER encountered it which I'm assuming is unlikely
@@smallw1991been playing drums for 3 years and I've never encountered playing music with this😭. Depends on the genre ig. I still practice this independently tho and have improved. I progressed faster now that I'm better at drums tho compared to like a year ago when I couldn't get it regardless of how hard i tried
Beautiful work, it really demonstrates quarter,eighth,triplet,and sixteenths well. But it would be great to see you do something similar with whole and half to.
I never realized how the last two make up a good chunk of music
As a music lover who never could grasp music theory in school...this is one of the coolest things I've ever seen.
You act like you’re trying to understand quantum physics, bro
@@lazarusvillagomezit's still too complicated for your brain 😂
Impressive 🎉❤
@lazarusvillagomez Well, it...kinda felt like I was 😅
@@yuukichan12 BRUH lmao
Drummer, 20+ years...people don't realize just how tough that/this is! She killed it!
As a non drummer. I understand This doesn’t look easy.
I can't pat my head and rub my stomach at the same time... I definitely understand how extremely difficult this is. Lol
Haven't seen a single person who's saying this isn't difficult.
20 years experience and you didn't notice she messed up the 3 over 4s?
@@koochlambot9317
You ought to read more of the comments then. Loads of pretentious douchenozzles saying just that 😂
That’s incredibly impressive.
Rush E without music:
Insidious goes to sleep:
I've been playing guitar and piano, self taught, for a looooong time. That was the best lesson on time I have ever seen.
Hey man I’ve been playing self taught for a few months is there any great resource u could recommend to get me in the right direction? (Been playing about 8 or so months but I don’t feel like I’m progressing a lot rn)
@@kingrayne2363find songs a bit out of your comfort zone and no matter how hard they are just keep practicing and don’t stop. It will feel hopeless at times and there will be things you can’t play yet but if you just keep trying and take it slow you will get it eventually. PS: you don’t NEED to play hard songs if you don’t want to, just play what ever sounds nice to you
I really mean this with the least offense possible to her, but what she is aiming to do is not particularly difficult, and also she made a lot of mistakes. For example, she wasn't on the beat for many of her taps, and also her first 3 + 4 was completely incorrect.
@@Bigdumdum3 I’m more into the rock and metal style of playing and would like to branch out eventually to other styles whenever I feel like I’m comfortable enough in one style. Currently I’m practicing songs like enter sandman and californication and some parts come easier than others but I intend to stick with it and keep pushing
The best ❤
Think about the integration and clarity and grip of understanding her brain has for every cordination of move she did.
Simply Amazing!.
She's good. It was a great watch but don't all musicians do this? Pianists, drummers, clarinetists, etc? I'm no musician. I did a bit of recorder playing (badly) at school when I was 8. :-)
@@myla6135I'd say this is definitely more advanced. As a semi decent violinist, I didn't have such good timing while preparing for my grade exams 😂. Lord I wish I used metronome, I had to depend on a short tempered teacher using clapping to keep time lol
@@vincentadultman6226 Aww, thanks for that. There's me attributing all sorts to musicians. Whom, by the way, I love. Music ........ couldn't live without it.
Ha ensayado muchas muchas veces
Relaja
Crazy. And I love that you look like a music teacher. :)
This is absolutely mesmerizing
Damn, i play piano for years and i probably cant switch between the rhythms as clean and good as she can. That is one amazing demonstration of skill and feeling.
No its not. Ive seen better in year one percussionists
I'd literally bet you $100 if you spent 3 days working on this, you'd have it down better than her.
She rushes
She drags
She even did the second polyrhythm totally wrong, turning it from a triplet quantization to a swing beat.
& every stroke she made was uneven & ive seen more control in a sloth.
I’ve played cello for almost 5 years now and I still don’t see how this works
No one asked about your poser skills
Real! Hers is not perfect buts it's pretty damn close. My ass can't even do the "spin one hand one way and the other the other way" thing without having a stroke 😅 this would kill me-
@@SamuTheFrog God
Did your parents never hug you as a kid?
Because no normal person should ever go to a comment section just to rant about the tiniest unnecessary mess ups in a beginners tutorial on Music Theory.
Also, the user explicitly said they’ve spent years playing the piano
Thats a lot of three days that didn’t suddenly make them good at pattern swapping
As someone who picks onto patterns rather well, it takes me a whole 24 hours to get down a medium-skilled piano piece BY ear. But I wont judge anyone for how they learn, and neither should you.
Tldr: Grow up. And look into getting a therapist for your childhood issues with perfectionism.
Impressive! Not only her amazing ability but the simple yet effective way to show it clearly even for those like me that are not musicians in any way.
I'm not a musician but that is IMPRESSIVE
This is literally one of the only things I struggle with when reading music. I need to hear someone else play it just once while reading along to get the rhythm right.
The way she's smiling, she knows she's too good at it, bless her ❤️❤️
このすごさわかる人もっと増えて欲しい
僕はノーツがあればいける()
16分と3連は難しい。
157万いいねされてるから。考えろ
@@user-lw3vg7bu4j
それはいけてないが❓
for real i cant do this even if i try 😅😅
هذي قوه التركيز ورب يبارك بالجميع
ドラムを7年続けているものです。リズム変化をこんなに流暢に行えるなんて尊敬いたします!
単純なリズムですが変化が複雑でとてもすごいです!引き続き頑張ってください!
Ella podría repetirlo...?😅
Newbie
3つのやつが絡んだら難しいんだよな
ドラム7年やってミスに気づかないの草
Okay. This is actual witchcraft. Just. You did it almost flawlessly and with both hands. Playing 2 separate rhythms at the same time. Playing one (especially triplets) while hearing others play another is often hard enough, but here you show it with ease and a smile. Hats off to you. This is definite dedication to the craft, and a great method of teaching.
It's not that hard if you already play a two-handed musical instrument.
It's hard for you nonmusicians.
@JediLoreen two handed I will concede it might be easy, but "non-musicians" is a harsh term. 8+ years of trumpet. I can double-tongue, circular breathe, and other such skills. I would consider myself a musician, but everyone has different skills, and this is certainly not one of mine. Lol
th-cam.com/users/shortsovw91E2i744?si=3lOHHBWjy9DcWJR1
I was vibing and headbanging😂😂😂😂
@JediLoreen I've been a musician since I was 4. played many two-handed instruments since then. I could not do this now especially not as flawlessly as she just did. it's a difficult task and she did it very well. say what you like but this was impressive.
She should be a drummer in a band since she can keep great timing
She did that amazingly
WE ARE GONNA PASS THE TEST WITH THIS ONE🗣
She explained it way in a way i understand without speaking one word!
What did she explain
@@annya3048 Music theory
@@annya3048how rythm works
@@annya3048time signatures.
Reasons I’m a woodwind and not a percussionist. Mad respect to anyone who can separate their hands and brains like this. I’m super envious.
Same. Im a clarinet, you?
I play drums, and this is hard as hell, ESPECIALLY once you delve to polyrhythms. The only time I ever used polyrhythms is when I’d go play Meshuggah songs since their drummer is like a living clock
As a saxophone player, yeah that looks hard as hell
It’s not separation, it’s rhythm. 2/3 is just a paradiddle, and 3/4 can be done by saying “pass the goddamn butter” and tapping on syllables.
Скорее надо объединить мозги с руками
This is incredibly impressive
That was actually impressive
That level of multitasking was just mind blowing to watch 🤯 ❤
You will never have dementia. That is serious brain skills. Amazing!
that's certainly one of the compliments of all time.
Dementia is a disease that doesn't discriminate
😂😂@@lukefortune8314
@@lukefortune8314LMAOOOOO it’s such a thing to say to someone
@@lukefortune8314I know right? Wtf ahhahaha
THIS MAKES ME UNREASONABLY HAPPY
That's how a horror film starts
My brain would melt trying to figure out the rhythm, you are so good 👍
My brain melted just watching her
@@joshsowerbuttsno
My self confidence tells me i can do this, my hand eye coordination problems are crying in the corner
🤖@@danielschwegler5220
Just say pass the goddamn butter for 3/4, everything else is even easier
I dont think people realize how incredibly focused amd talented you need to be to do this
Not really. Anyone can do this. It's just repetition learning.
Тут не нужен особый талант, только терпение и чувство ритма. А оно есть почти у всех.
Ну, и много-много тренировок
Now you can appreciate the pianist better... and the drummer too.
@@Joker-yu6luanyone can do *almost* anything with practice and training that's how it works
Her coordination is amazing