I noticed in the beginning that you said you learned using synthesia videos. They’re good at first, but they make it more difficult in the long run to progress. This is because as you move to more difficult pieces you need to pause the video all the time because the music and hand placements are all over the place. With the sheet music all you need for any part of the piece is right there. I’m mostly self taught as well as well; I had a teacher through my school (I go to a performance arts high school) who largely encouraged exploring different genres of piano music to find one you love. He also said the most important thing was to *learn to read sheet music* it’s probably one of the most important things for progression. Start as soon as you can, every second benefits :)
@@erikwalter6598depends on the piece. the fist thing my piano teacher did was showing me notes, now I can read beginner pieces without too much thinking, harder pieces are easy to read while playing with one hand, but playing with both is a bit challenging. It also depends on how much you’re going to practice, I think for me it took around a month to be confident in my sheet reading:) Learning how to read sheet music is also way easier than you probably think, so don’t be discouraged from trying! (sorry if i made mistakes, English isn’t my native language)
@@jaskierxure7616 Are you saying you are making mistakes playing sheet music? Well... How do I put this... Of course you do? Everybody does? It's just normal not to be able to read everything correctly instantly
As a aspiring jazz pianist who mostly learnt through TH-cam through my four years playing I agree, finally getting around to learning sheet music and I see how important it is to
Depends on how much you practice each day? I dont go to school atm so i've got time for practicing 5 hours a day some people may only have 30 min a day. This person might have practiced even more who knows.
Is it really fast?? A week ago I bought myself a piano, in 2 days learned Mia and seb theme from La Land, then: where is my mind, and now I'm learning: chasing kou and I thought I wasn't progressing fast enough...
Bro, please play a full piece and trying to get 0 miss. Just imagine piano as rythem games that you need to full combo to get better score, not just trying to pass hard level and get nothing!
I study music and been learning piano for about 2 years now. What I can tell you can make you make a big improvement is reading sheet music, because at some point you're probably going to end up being stuck trying to learn a piece watching tutorial videos. And learning pieces like that make you waste a lot of time that you can use to practice more. Also while reading sheet music and knowing a little of music theory you can begin to practice making your own arrangements. You definitely have talent and your ear must be sufficiently trained because you play amazingly well for 1 year of training, but at some point reading sheet music is going to make a huge difference. If you feel like you can't push yourself enough to practice reading sheet music, I recommend you get into an academy or get a teacher, because there they're definitely gonna make you learn it the hard way and it gets really fun once you finally understand what's written in a sheet music.
Bro, i really recommend you to star reading sheet music. You are progressing really fast and at one point you’re gonna be stuck trying to learn one piece that doesn’t take that much time if you know how to read sheet music, Also try not to play hard pieces at full speed at first try to play them at the same speed you’ll gain the speed after you practice it. You are playing really good this are just recommendations keep playing!
I actually got to play the Fur Elise piece without learning/reading a music sheet. when I wanted to take piano seriously, it is when I realized I have to learn reading music sheets so yeah that's how I gave up when I was at the age of 10.. dum right...
As someone who is in the exact same boat as you (doesnt know sheet music and is self taught) the fact you played fantasie impromptu in 7 months motivates the hell out of me
I'm a self taught pianist❤️❤️❤️ and I've been playing for 15 years and same actually I don't know how to read sheet music, but look at me now I play for Philharmonics and play for huge audiences without sheet music but out of memory and listening!!! You got this I believe in you!!!❤️❤️❤️
Incredible progress! As many others have said learning to play Fantaisie Impromptu in just 6 - 7 months with no prior experience or musical background is really impressive! Clearly you have a lot of potential. Keep practicing hard and never give up!
learning Fantaisie Impromptu self taught whithin 7 month as a beginner without knowing how to read music sheets when this piece is a diploma level piece is insane , props to uuu
I've been practicing piano for a long time now, and I've been progressing very slowly. You have no idea how much this simple video inspires me and fills me with motivation... Keep going, don't stop, devastate the world of classical music, it's beautiful. Improve every day, you will be rewarded.
Hi! I just wanted to say that your passion is really amazing :) and that you shouldn’t give up. I heavily recommend going back to BASICS! While it feels really cool to play all of these super difficult pieces, there are levels and classes and tests for a reason, y’know? Not to say you have to do the tests or anything by any means. There’s technique and nuance that goes into learning that you miss just by watching the videos you’ve been watching. It’s so helpful for your development to learn how to read sheet music, and maybe find a teacher! It makes so much difference to learn technique, history, and for someone to point out mistakes and things to improve on. Good luck!
Guys you have to understand he was probably practising on a daily basis , unlike me im playing for 2 years but no where close to him cuz 1)i skipped 6 months😂2)i dont own a 88key which dosnt really matter ❤
I’m 17 and I started playing a piano only one month ago. Now I can play the song from “moving castle” and bella ciao. Thank you for this video. It really gaves me motivation to play better. I hope that one day I will play like you!) And YESSSS I can’t read sheet music yet… it’s pity a bit. But I’m really to lazy and afraid that it’s hard. Sorry for my bad English, I’m from Russia!
This is really cool to see. I am actually on a very similar path as you. I started playing 11 months ago and we have learned similar songs except that i learned Liebestraum no 3. Instead of fantasie impromptu but i have been super lazy with my piano playing. We are similar skill levels and its really nice knowing there is someone working right besides me. Seeing you actually learn a good amount of songs has inspired me to learn more because i only know Liebestraum, C sharp minor prelude, and clair de lune along with like 20-40 seconds of other songs like waltz of the flowers, revolutionary etude, ballad no 1 in g minor, and a lot more.
Well done. You did very well. I would suggest that you start learning to read the sheet music, it will really help you learn the pieces faster (you already know that😂) And try to learn some easier pieces that are more on your level of difficulty (a lot of the pieces you played are on the advanced level to super advanced) because that way you can learn to master those pieces and then gradually make the pieces harder. You play beautifully and keep on working hard!
A lot of these pieces i tried learning while i started too and ended up coming back later to fix them. I think its great because it forces technique on you but you'll be so focused on hitting the notes you miss out on the bigger picture. Its absolutely fantastic how far you got in a year but always have something simpler on the side you are learning that you can perfect. Also a good tip is to practice without petal it makes it so easy to spot mistakes.
this is really good! One advice though: try to play less fast. Then you could really try to get the method better, and even if it’s not as fast as the normal music, it will be just as good (like for example: fantasie impromptue: you play really fast and we hear you losing control and coordination of your fingers due to the speed). ps: i was like that too as a beginner, it’s been 12 years now, and I still do it sometimes, common mistake.
Trust me I can sight read and while it takes time to get good at reading the pieces you are playing( fairly high level) it is sooo worth it you are able to learn songs 10x faster. Essential to mastering an instrument
You've done a really amazing job, there is so much effort put in it. I know it's hard to stop but try to learn not the most difficult pieces first. After learning a while you'll probably be wanting to have your fingers fit in order to play not just what's written but exactly and precisely what you need. Bach Preludes and especially Fuges can teach really well how to control your fingers and master piano. Just choose a few of them fuges and eventually you're gonna be playing a lot better. Good luck and continue it
I tried learning fantaisie and Clair but lost interest, but watching you def gave me the courage and motivation to continue the songs and NEVER GIVE UP🗣️🗣️ I’m going to look back on this when I lack motivation and remember if you can do it so can I🙏
You have talent, but ( I hope you take no offense) you are progressing way to fast, and without learning sheet music? The thing with youtube tutorials and copying hand placements is that it’s always less accurate in many situations. Sheet music allows you to learn pieces completely with it’s dynamics, ornaments, etc. It’s also very important you learn music theory. I recommend buying solo piano books such as the Alfred’s series. They are great books that facilitate learning sheet music and theory. Also, I doubt you can FULLY complete those last few pieces with copying hand placements. Of course we go back to its dynamics and those things. But prove me wrong!
Hey,im self taught too. I first started with fur elise bc i had a keyboard,then my mom bought me a piano and i started to progress more. In january there will be 1 year from when i started playing. I can play fir elise,turkish march(a litlle) ,hungarian rhapsody nr 6, nocturne op 9 nr 2, moonlight sonata mv 1(half) . Thats it. I hope im going to be like you ( sorry for my english,im not a native speaker and im 13)
This progression video is so real, I’m learning a couple pieces as of current, and you really can get a lot of progress done in the span of a couple months, despite my setback of not owning a keyboard so I just use the music practice room at school
Classic, going to winter wind within the first year of being self taught is exactly what I did lmao. Good progress man. It’s been 4 years since I started but I still havent tackled a Chopin etude since I tried winter wind lol. I might learn one this summer tho!
Lmao attempting fantaisie improptu on day 24 is crazy! I'm actually self taught too, and this is super relatable, I would always try to play the hardest piece, but I wouldn't care about accuracy or if I was sloppy. I suggest dialing it down, master the basics, you won't people able to play successfully until you do. 7 months to play just the notes of Fantaisie impromptu is impressive, but you won't be able to play it without mistakes, and expressively without years more of training. That's unfortunate, but it's worth it. In the end, if you keep it up, and focus on perfection, these pieces will come a lot easier. If you practice like this, you really aren't good at piano... you're good at specific songs.
This is insane. I’ve been playing piano for over a decade on and off and recently decided to learn fantasie impromptu to challenge myself-I feel there must be a level of musical background or dishonesty with the amount of time you’ve spent learning piano, or you practice 5-7 hours a day, your form and hand speed is unbelievable for seven months. Either that or you are genuinely a genius.
@@randomplaypianoIf you play Geometry Dash you might be the type of person who jump from Deadlocked to Bloodbath, is it wrong? No but not efficient. You probably can play easy to insane demon first than try harder level
Learning music sheets is very easy and would help you learn whateevr u want without uaving to remember it all. A suggestion is to just look at read the wikipedia page "list of musical symbols" i learnt it from thete and since i can just read and learn whatever i want, well not everytjikg ofc
Really am impressed by how you learn so much in a year. It’s my third year learning piano already and I still can’t read note. I think it’s because I didn’t really put much effort on it, after watching your video motivated me to take it seriously this time. I’ll be practicing for real this time!
Really talented!! U ate❤ Rmb to learn reading sheet music though, I know it might be hard but u get familiar with it and it really helps! It might take some time but TRUST THE PROCESS
23:12 this was me half a year ago desperately trying to play this piece and it wasn’t worth it. you will develop muscle memory of you playing witch makes it way harder to play even then you have become good enough. trust me, pls try to learn pieces at your level before trying things like this. you have so much talent so pls don’t let it go to waste🙏 (btw English is now my first language so sorry if there is something you don’t understand😅)
@@shhhidd sorry if i didnt make it clear (as i said before English is not my first language). When you play a piece you will slowly develop muscle memory and that’s good for memorizing pieces BUT. If I you try to play a piece that is waaay to hard for your level (in this case la Campanella) were you won’t be able to play the right notes, play in the right tempo or using the right technique but play it anyways, muscle memory is a bad thing because instead of memorizing you playing the piece right, you will memorize playing it wrong. So when you one day will be able to play the piece, it will be much harder because you first have to basically erase ALL of your previous playing of the piece because you played it wrong.
keep going mate, i still have not properly learnt it even if i was in a piano class back in 2015. It's been 9 years since and I'm still passionate to learn my favorite songs and compose music.
Omg just wowwwwwwwww! Ive been playing piano for ages and you're playing some songs that took me ages to learn at a much higher skill level hahha, keep going ur doing great! Also I noticed this when you were playing, I think you like to play faster songs? Idk if thats the case but thats true for me they're a lot more excited hahah. If so, then i would recommend you curl your fingers more when your playing, you're currently placing your fingers on the notes really flatly (if thats even a word), when u play u should visualise as if you're kind of holding a tennis bold in your hand, almost every pianist does this and this makes their hands 1. look much more elegant when they're playing lol & 2. you move around much faster when your hands are at this form! not to mention it prevents future damage to ur joints haha. Anyway great job!
heyy, ur progress is rlly good!! little piece of advice tho: i honestly think u should work on technique more than fast-paced show-off songs bcs from what im hearing ur technique is a quite lackluster for most of them rn and anyone with piano experience can tell😅 but hey this is already amazing good job!
I started playing piano about 1 year ago I also watched piano synthesia videos to learn fur Elise and the Turkish match I learned as my first to pieces I then learned lots of easier songs that weren’t classical. Later I came back to classical after learning Un sospiro if I could recommend you one song it would be passacaglia it has the same type of melody which made me fall in love with Un sospiro and moonlight sonata that I couldn’t find anywhere other than insanely hard Liszt pieces and trust me I’ve searched but it is now one of my favorite pieces to play and hear
you're doing amazing as a "beginner". this astonishes me since I am also a piano and currently playing libestraume (you should try it out!). great work dude!! keep it up
I love how as you progressively got better and better, the piano also got progressively more epic 🗿 You got very quickly good at it, great progress! Don't ever stop practicing
I got a keyboard and I want to learn playing it. I can play a few songs from youtube videos but I want to learn how to read sheet music. This video inspired me to start playing again. Good luck with your progress :D
Oh wow this is such an incredible progression! You're learning very fast and I know you'll be great at this in the future if you keep it up! :D I wish you good luck and have fun with your journey. ❤ New subscriber btw, looking forward to seeing more from you
Look, you clearly have a musical soul and you have that musical 'touch' to the way you play. I think that you can be very good at the piano. If you look to only play pieces to 'impress those who know nothing about the piano' then this is the way to go. But for someone who plays with a piano teacher, who practices scales/arpeggios etc., does daily sight reading etc it's clear that a lot of basics and structure is lacking here. It's a matter of personal choice: do you wanna play just for fun and not be too good? Then great, this works well and I hope that it offers you everything that you want cuz you do seem to be having fun and that's the most important thing. But if you want to actually get good at piano and sound good, you will need basics and a teacher (although I know they can be expensive!). Best of luck!
@@SurprisedGarterSnake-eh7tk You don't necessarily NEED a teacher although having one will be very helpful and you will likely learn faster. If you can't afford to pay for lessons then the next best thing is to buy some method books and start learning from those. I'd recommend Faber's Piano Adventures as I've heard a lot of good things about the Faber method in regards to sight reading and playing by ear etc. Also TH-cam is your friend. If you're having a lot of trouble with a certain technique or you can't figure out what you're doing wrong there are plenty of professional pianists who make very helpful videos and may be able to point you in the right direction.
A teacher might not be necessary - having good practice techniques and having good tutorials could definitely substitute a teacher I had a teacher for the fundamentals - which I realize I didn’t really need. Eventually I stopped doing lessons and learned pieces on my own, which worked really well.
You just earned a sub I also just got a electric piano and I found your vid I'm struggling to know what to do first and this helped me follow a guide thanks.❤
crazy that you played wet hands on day 19 and I played it on my day 365 haha you progressed a lot faster than I did, good on you! I taught myself to read sheet music because i found synesthesia hard to follow, you're lucky you can learn through synesthesia because a lot of times I want to learn songs from video games or anime and I can't find any sheet music for them. I've also just uploaded my own 1 year self taught piano progress video if you want to check it out :)
Hii! Just want to say that the amount of effort is amazing and the results are turning out great as well! however, I think those pieces that ur currently working on such as La Campanella and Winter Wind etude are still to hard for you as they are insanely difficult. I would strongly recommend you to try easier pieces and try to learn the basics and theory behind them first, even gn they seems like a boring and unnecessary things to learn but after you learn them they will help you more for understanding sheet music and what the composers want to express themselves throughout the piece. Anyway the result of fantaisie improptu was fantastic and I hope to hear more!! Keep the passion as you go even though some time it might be hard but after it you will succeed!❤
Yeah, he has advanced at about my speed. I only played piano for over two years, and I too can play La Campanella. Not perfectly, but a good majority of it.
Maybe not to most people or through traditional piano lessons. I’m just as surprised as you are. There are reason why the person in the above video is also just as good. There might be hidden myth that being self taught has a much higher advantage compared to traditional teaching, since you never have to wait until your piano teacher gives you a difficult piece above your level, you can instead challenge yourself with whatever you’re up for at any time.
@@You-lp7ne the guy in the video seems good, but in reality he is not. it doesn't take much to play difficult pieces if with all these errors, with incorrect technique and without following a rhythm. I think you also don't have an adequate level to play la campanella or anything
@@AL3_ But you can also self-teach proper technique. When I first decided to record myself, I then realized how weird my hands looked compared to any piano performance I saw online. My hands looked very crooked and improper. So over the coming months, I have slowly transformed my technique into a more relaxed and efficient way, and overall, more closely identical to performances online. Not perfect yet, but I’m getting there
Franchement bravo à toi je suis presque jaloux… Le seul conseil que je pourrai te donner : Travailler des pièces plus abordables ( moins ingrat une fantaisie impromptue ou qu’un prélude de Rachmaninov ) mais qui t’aideront à te forger des bases solides tout en étant satisfaisant à travailler. J’ai démarré un peu comme toi, en passant presque l’entièreté de le première année de pratique à vouloir jouer l’opus 55 no 1 de Chopin ( moins dur que la fantaisie impromptue mais j’en ai quand bien bavé surtout avec la coda ) tout ça pour un résultat qui, avec du recul n’était pas incroyable ( voire médiocre…) et je pense que si j’avais utilisé ce temps à bon escient j’aurais un meilleur niveau aujourd’hui ( le pire étant quand on me demandais de jouer autre chose que la pièce pour laquelle j’avais bavé pendant des mois et que je me retrouvais bredouille devant le piano) Enfin bref tu as quand même un très bon niveau technique, hâte de voir ce que ça donnera dans l’avenir !
Salut j'avais une question, j'ai commencé le piano le 13 août, j'ai déjà appris quelques sons et j'aurais aimé savoir si selon toi apprendre "merry go round of life" (je ne connais pas le nom en français mais ça viens du château ambulant) serai accessible pour moi. Merci pour ta réponse
Sounds great! But I'd definitely recommend learning how to read sheet music and making sure you know all note and rest values so you can improve your timing! However this is super impressive for someone new at piano, keep it up
Smth i could recommend is that you actually learn sheet music and the scales since these videos sometimes do not give the peice you actually want to listen cause it can help you for me i got taught by a paino teacher and sometimes sheet music does help since they dont show how to sustain except for the quater notes which is hold for 2 notes there are notes like eight notes where you have to play 2 notes in one beat so yea thats it i hope you find this useful because i have been learning paino for about 2 years or so and the harder it gets more poeple tend to quit so try doing a bit of sheet music and i think you can do it it will make it sound much better. And people dont take this too heart ok im just telling because dynamics are actually helpful in making a piece sound better
Thank you for this video! I will have my first piano next week, i hope i can be as good in one year!! :D Keep it up (Dont mind the writing, eng is not my main langage)
I've been following a method book and a structured guide on my foundational level of piano. But you have inspired me to also learn more complex pieces on the side, pieces that I actually want to eventually play.😊
@@ailinkawa I was initially following (still am to some extent) Faber's Adult Piano Adventures books. They have everything from theory, sight ready, technique and repertoire that you may need. Although, I'm mainly following PianoTV's online classes at the moment.
Could you share with us a bit of your learning method? Like, did you study any music theory or was it all just trying to play songs? And did you learn how to read sheet music?
Congrats! Although you still cannot play any of the pieces you showed, keep with the good work and in a few years you'll be able to play them properly!!🙏🙏 A little tip: study musical periods and their characteristics edit: not coming from a conservatory's student but from a self taught who got the opportunity to take particular classes for free
really good! just one small thing- when you play the faster parts, try to keep your fingers closer to the keys to avoid the tapping sound from the keyboard
the random speeding up during fur elise as a begginer is so real
The beginning is easy but when you get close to probably the third or fourth page and changes and gets harder
Lol I know 😂
real
it's smashing random notes at the end for me
She played so good
I noticed in the beginning that you said you learned using synthesia videos. They’re good at first, but they make it more difficult in the long run to progress. This is because as you move to more difficult pieces you need to pause the video all the time because the music and hand placements are all over the place. With the sheet music all you need for any part of the piece is right there.
I’m mostly self taught as well as well; I had a teacher through my school (I go to a performance arts high school) who largely encouraged exploring different genres of piano music to find one you love. He also said the most important thing was to *learn to read sheet music* it’s probably one of the most important things for progression. Start as soon as you can, every second benefits :)
How long do you think it will take for a beginner that starts to learn sheet to being auotmatic when it comes to reading the music?
@@erikwalter6598depends on the piece. the fist thing my piano teacher did was showing me notes, now I can read beginner pieces without too much thinking, harder pieces are easy to read while playing with one hand, but playing with both is a bit challenging.
It also depends on how much you’re going to practice, I think for me it took around a month to be confident in my sheet reading:)
Learning how to read sheet music is also way easier than you probably think, so don’t be discouraged from trying!
(sorry if i made mistakes, English isn’t my native language)
yeah but i fuck up the sheet notes in some place and cant seem to fix it no matter how hard i try, i ve been playing for 5 years now
@@jaskierxure7616 Are you saying you are making mistakes playing sheet music? Well... How do I put this... Of course you do? Everybody does? It's just normal not to be able to read everything correctly instantly
As a aspiring jazz pianist who mostly learnt through TH-cam through my four years playing I agree, finally getting around to learning sheet music and I see how important it is to
I honestly cannot comprehend how he made so much progress in so little time. This is, like, master level speed for a total beginner.
Ive been practicing piano 1 year and my best piece is river flows in you
Hmmmm by practicing much more than one year maybe
Depends on how much you practice each day? I dont go to school atm so i've got time for practicing 5 hours a day some people may only have 30 min a day. This person might have practiced even more who knows.
Btw the artist in your profile pic is e a legend, love the russian trance
Is it really fast?? A week ago I bought myself a piano, in 2 days learned Mia and seb theme from La Land, then: where is my mind, and now I'm learning: chasing kou and I thought I wasn't progressing fast enough...
There’s no feeling like successfully hitting each key and keeping that rhythm. You feel like a genius when you first learn to do it on your own.
Bro, please play a full piece and trying to get 0 miss. Just imagine piano as rythem games that you need to full combo to get better score, not just trying to pass hard level and get nothing!
:o i found my own species in the wild @@randomplaypiano
@@arandomperso4438 hi perso4438
yeah ure right
I love that analogy
This is what I think every time :3
Wow, Fantaisie impromptu on only month 7 is crazy, hope you never stop playing, you are amazing!
thank you Franz Liszt, i'm your biggest fan
La Campanella is a banger song
@@Qave_song ??? 💀
@@namit8921 im SO SORRY for saying SONG instead of PEICE… I should be BURNED ALLIVE!!!
@@Qave_yes
I highly belive u were born to do this. I mean u play fantasie impromptu op.66 with only 6 months of experience... wow man. Keep going!
reading this from Beethoven himself is crazy, i'm a huge fan
you are so much better in every way, but thank you very much!
@@randomplaypianoliterally made me laugh out loud 😭
@@randomplaypianolol 😂
Mozart was the Goat Ludwig with all respect x
I study music and been learning piano for about 2 years now. What I can tell you can make you make a big improvement is reading sheet music, because at some point you're probably going to end up being stuck trying to learn a piece watching tutorial videos. And learning pieces like that make you waste a lot of time that you can use to practice more. Also while reading sheet music and knowing a little of music theory you can begin to practice making your own arrangements. You definitely have talent and your ear must be sufficiently trained because you play amazingly well for 1 year of training, but at some point reading sheet music is going to make a huge difference.
If you feel like you can't push yourself enough to practice reading sheet music, I recommend you get into an academy or get a teacher, because there they're definitely gonna make you learn it the hard way and it gets really fun once you finally understand what's written in a sheet music.
Bro, i really recommend you to star reading sheet music. You are progressing really fast and at one point you’re gonna be stuck trying to learn one piece that doesn’t take that much time if you know how to read sheet music, Also try not to play hard pieces at full speed at first try to play them at the same speed you’ll gain the speed after you practice it. You are playing really good this are just recommendations keep playing!
Is that the truth? If I played for 3 years without sheets is this still relevant?
@@SprintyXyes 💀
I've been playing for 5 years without sheet music, am I cooked?
@@yessir1967 yes
I actually got to play the Fur Elise piece without learning/reading a music sheet. when I wanted to take piano seriously, it is when I realized I have to learn reading music sheets so yeah that's how I gave up when I was at the age of 10.. dum right...
As someone who is in the exact same boat as you (doesnt know sheet music and is self taught) the fact you played fantasie impromptu in 7 months motivates the hell out of me
You can do it!
This motivates me too but.. When I sit down to practice.. 😅
in 6 months we'll be there... just play it
this is CRAZZYYYY WHAT!! ive played piano for YEARSS and i think youre actually better than me, im actually flabbergasted 😭 good job man, wow
Right! Lowkey jealous aaa
I'm a self taught pianist❤️❤️❤️ and I've been playing for 15 years and same actually I don't know how to read sheet music, but look at me now I play for Philharmonics and play for huge audiences without sheet music but out of memory and listening!!! You got this I believe in you!!!❤️❤️❤️
Incredible progress! As many others have said learning to play Fantaisie Impromptu in just 6 - 7 months with no prior experience or musical background is really impressive! Clearly you have a lot of potential. Keep practicing hard and never give up!
learning Fantaisie Impromptu self taught whithin 7 month as a beginner without knowing how to read music sheets when this piece is a diploma level piece is insane , props to uuu
What other pieces are diploma ready or how does that even work?
I saw some dude saying this as an 8 level. What does it mean
Dude, you're so good and it shows me how persistence is important for classical music.
I've been practicing piano for a long time now, and I've been progressing very slowly. You have no idea how much this simple video inspires me and fills me with motivation... Keep going, don't stop, devastate the world of classical music, it's beautiful. Improve every day, you will be rewarded.
Hi! I just wanted to say that your passion is really amazing :) and that you shouldn’t give up.
I heavily recommend going back to BASICS! While it feels really cool to play all of these super difficult pieces, there are levels and classes and tests for a reason, y’know? Not to say you have to do the tests or anything by any means.
There’s technique and nuance that goes into learning that you miss just by watching the videos you’ve been watching.
It’s so helpful for your development to learn how to read sheet music, and maybe find a teacher! It makes so much difference to learn technique, history, and for someone to point out mistakes and things to improve on.
Good luck!
Noway bro is better after 12 months than me after 5 years 😭
Actually, help 😭😭
The power of directed practice is broken lol. He's not better than me yet, but he definitely will be soon haha
@@JustNeutral same here, but 9 years (im lazy ass to do something)
Me too 😭
Guys you have to understand he was probably practising on a daily basis , unlike me im playing for 2 years but no where close to him cuz 1)i skipped 6 months😂2)i dont own a 88key which dosnt really matter ❤
i cant comprehend how he can use both hands at day 12,
I'm so proud of you!! you advance very quickly and play so nicely
I’m 17 and I started playing a piano only one month ago. Now I can play the song from “moving castle” and bella ciao.
Thank you for this video. It really gaves me motivation to play better. I hope that one day I will play like you!)
And YESSSS I can’t read sheet music yet… it’s pity a bit. But I’m really to lazy and afraid that it’s hard.
Sorry for my bad English, I’m from Russia!
Its surprisingly easy try it. It is a necessary step to becoming a better pianist anyway the earlier you start the better !
good luck bro!! i’m gonna start now, too, after my exams are over
im also trying to learn merry go round of lifee! (hows moving castle ^^j)
This is really cool to see. I am actually on a very similar path as you. I started playing 11 months ago and we have learned similar songs except that i learned Liebestraum no 3. Instead of fantasie impromptu but i have been super lazy with my piano playing. We are similar skill levels and its really nice knowing there is someone working right besides me. Seeing you actually learn a good amount of songs has inspired me to learn more because i only know Liebestraum, C sharp minor prelude, and clair de lune along with like 20-40 seconds of other songs like waltz of the flowers, revolutionary etude, ballad no 1 in g minor, and a lot more.
keep it up
Well done. You did very well. I would suggest that you start learning to read the sheet music, it will really help you learn the pieces faster (you already know that😂) And try to learn some easier pieces that are more on your level of difficulty (a lot of the pieces you played are on the advanced level to super advanced) because that way you can learn to master those pieces and then gradually make the pieces harder. You play beautifully and keep on working hard!
A lot of these pieces i tried learning while i started too and ended up coming back later to fix them. I think its great because it forces technique on you but you'll be so focused on hitting the notes you miss out on the bigger picture. Its absolutely fantastic how far you got in a year but always have something simpler on the side you are learning that you can perfect. Also a good tip is to practice without petal it makes it so easy to spot mistakes.
this is really good! One advice though: try to play less fast. Then you could really try to get the method better, and even if it’s not as fast as the normal music, it will be just as good (like for example: fantasie impromptue: you play really fast and we hear you losing control and coordination of your fingers due to the speed).
ps: i was like that too as a beginner, it’s been 12 years now, and I still do it sometimes, common mistake.
Trust me I can sight read and while it takes time to get good at reading the pieces you are playing( fairly high level) it is sooo worth it you are able to learn songs 10x faster. Essential to mastering an instrument
You've done a really amazing job, there is so much effort put in it. I know it's hard to stop but try to learn not the most difficult pieces first. After learning a while you'll probably be wanting to have your fingers fit in order to play not just what's written but exactly and precisely what you need. Bach Preludes and especially Fuges can teach really well how to control your fingers and master piano. Just choose a few of them fuges and eventually you're gonna be playing a lot better. Good luck and continue it
I tried learning fantaisie and Clair but lost interest, but watching you def gave me the courage and motivation to continue the songs and NEVER GIVE UP🗣️🗣️ I’m going to look back on this when I lack motivation and remember if you can do it so can I🙏
the board fingers like made me grimace but the improvement over a year is crazy. keep it up!!
You have talent, but ( I hope you take no offense) you are progressing way to fast, and without learning sheet music? The thing with youtube tutorials and copying hand placements is that it’s always less accurate in many situations. Sheet music allows you to learn pieces completely with it’s dynamics, ornaments, etc. It’s also very important you learn music theory. I recommend buying solo piano books such as the Alfred’s series. They are great books that facilitate learning sheet music and theory. Also, I doubt you can FULLY complete those last few pieces with copying hand placements. Of course we go back to its dynamics and those things. But prove me wrong!
you're totally right, i have to
@@randomplaypiano I’m just saying this for your greater good in piano. I hope you improve much more!
Hey,im self taught too. I first started with fur elise bc i had a keyboard,then my mom bought me a piano and i started to progress more. In january there will be 1 year from when i started playing. I can play fir elise,turkish march(a litlle) ,hungarian rhapsody nr 6, nocturne op 9 nr 2, moonlight sonata mv 1(half) . Thats it. I hope im going to be like you ( sorry for my english,im not a native speaker and im 13)
Hitting the piano keys when making a mistake is so relatable 😭🙏 4:01
This progression video is so real, I’m learning a couple pieces as of current, and you really can get a lot of progress done in the span of a couple months, despite my setback of not owning a keyboard so I just use the music practice room at school
Classic, going to winter wind within the first year of being self taught is exactly what I did lmao. Good progress man. It’s been 4 years since I started but I still havent tackled a Chopin etude since I tried winter wind lol. I might learn one this summer tho!
Considering how well you're playing after teaching yourself in such a short time is breathtaking. You might be a musical genius 🫡
Lmao attempting fantaisie improptu on day 24 is crazy! I'm actually self taught too, and this is super relatable, I would always try to play the hardest piece, but I wouldn't care about accuracy or if I was sloppy. I suggest dialing it down, master the basics, you won't people able to play successfully until you do. 7 months to play just the notes of Fantaisie impromptu is impressive, but you won't be able to play it without mistakes, and expressively without years more of training. That's unfortunate, but it's worth it. In the end, if you keep it up, and focus on perfection, these pieces will come a lot easier.
If you practice like this, you really aren't good at piano... you're good at specific songs.
Dang bro. U r cooking on the piano!!! I hope ur self teaching was worth your pian journey
This is insane. I’ve been playing piano for over a decade on and off and recently decided to learn fantasie impromptu to challenge myself-I feel there must be a level of musical background or dishonesty with the amount of time you’ve spent learning piano, or you practice 5-7 hours a day, your form and hand speed is unbelievable for seven months. Either that or you are genuinely a genius.
I think so as well.
Eat your heart out r/pianolearning, this guy just brute forced a grade 8 piece in 7 months.
what does a “grade 8” represent? i don't really know how conservatory work
i mean the piece is not that hard
@@veryrealcat we are about to start the spark that creates the second fanchen
@@randomplaypianoIf you play Geometry Dash you might be the type of person who jump from Deadlocked to Bloodbath, is it wrong? No but not efficient. You probably can play easy to insane demon first than try harder level
@@kemalavicennafaza8985ain't no way, you play geometry dash that's sick. How many demons have you completed
Fantaisie Impromptu at month 3 is crazy 😨 Im a beginner too but inspired by you. Good luck. Hope 4-5 years back we’ll be legendary
Learning music sheets is very easy and would help you learn whateevr u want without uaving to remember it all. A suggestion is to just look at read the wikipedia page "list of musical symbols" i learnt it from thete and since i can just read and learn whatever i want, well not everytjikg ofc
Really am impressed by how you learn so much in a year. It’s my third year learning piano already and I still can’t read note. I think it’s because I didn’t really put much effort on it, after watching your video motivated me to take it seriously this time. I’ll be practicing for real this time!
keep on going I know your gonna be a great pianist one day!
I love watching your progress, you play beautifully. I as well am learning paino.
Really talented!! U ate❤
Rmb to learn reading sheet music though, I know it might be hard but u get familiar with it and it really helps! It might take some time but TRUST THE PROCESS
that's crazy, I'm almost a decade into piano and I think ur better then me xD
23:12 this was me half a year ago desperately trying to play this piece and it wasn’t worth it. you will develop muscle memory of you playing witch makes it way harder to play even then you have become good enough. trust me, pls try to learn pieces at your level before trying things like this. you have so much talent so pls don’t let it go to waste🙏 (btw English is now my first language so sorry if there is something you don’t understand😅)
What do you mean?? Can u explain?
@@shhhidd sorry if i didnt make it clear (as i said before English is not my first language). When you play a piece you will slowly develop muscle memory and that’s good for memorizing pieces BUT. If I you try to play a piece that is waaay to hard for your level (in this case la Campanella) were you won’t be able to play the right notes, play in the right tempo or using the right technique but play it anyways, muscle memory is a bad thing because instead of memorizing you playing the piece right, you will memorize playing it wrong. So when you one day will be able to play the piece, it will be much harder because you first have to basically erase ALL of your previous playing of the piece because you played it wrong.
Hope you will understand
@@MesterMonata Totally clear, and i agree with you, its always a bad idea to try learning pieces that are too hard
Bro ur 3 month progress is my 5 yr progress :0 Like ur cubes!
Nah that's Insane Progress through hard work. Well done👌🏻👍🏻
Are you a alien your progression is amazing
keep going mate, i still have not properly learnt it even if i was in a piano class back in 2015. It's been 9 years since and I'm still passionate to learn my favorite songs and compose music.
month 2 progress was insane!
Omg just wowwwwwwwww! Ive been playing piano for ages and you're playing some songs that took me ages to learn at a much higher skill level hahha, keep going ur doing great! Also I noticed this when you were playing, I think you like to play faster songs? Idk if thats the case but thats true for me they're a lot more excited hahah. If so, then i would recommend you curl your fingers more when your playing, you're currently placing your fingers on the notes really flatly (if thats even a word), when u play u should visualise as if you're kind of holding a tennis bold in your hand, almost every pianist does this and this makes their hands 1. look much more elegant when they're playing lol & 2. you move around much faster when your hands are at this form! not to mention it prevents future damage to ur joints haha. Anyway great job!
Well done! Keep going (as long as you want to) :)
You're doing great, keep going!
Try getting a teacher, its expensive but 100% worth it. Hope you continue to play ❤
heyy, ur progress is rlly good!! little piece of advice tho: i honestly think u should work on technique more than fast-paced show-off songs bcs from what im hearing ur technique is a quite lackluster for most of them rn and anyone with piano experience can tell😅 but hey this is already amazing good job!
bro, how are you so good after just three months? I'm here struggling to play with both hands together 😭
Hes not good
@@fionauys4958He played fantesie impromtu
@@fionauys4958 true, i'm not
@@randomplaypianoyou are don’t listen to that guy
I started playing piano about 1 year ago I also watched piano synthesia videos to learn fur Elise and the Turkish match I learned as my first to pieces I then learned lots of easier songs that weren’t classical. Later I came back to classical after learning Un sospiro if I could recommend you one song it would be passacaglia it has the same type of melody which made me fall in love with Un sospiro and moonlight sonata that I couldn’t find anywhere other than insanely hard Liszt pieces and trust me I’ve searched but it is now one of my favorite pieces to play and hear
this is absolutely crazy
Wow! This is so inspiring! Thank you!🤩
No. It's an example what you shouldn't do
@@nilwendilwhy
@@celinamodi9492 because i learned with synthesia + the pieces are above my level
you're doing amazing as a "beginner". this astonishes me since I am also a piano and currently playing libestraume (you should try it out!). great work dude!! keep it up
I love how as you progressively got better and better, the piano also got progressively more epic 🗿
You got very quickly good at it, great progress! Don't ever stop practicing
Thanks, i will 🗿
Awesome progress!! I just started so seeing this is great inspiration for me 🙏🏼
i'm glad if this video can inspire you
You are so amazing and inspiring!!
I got a keyboard and I want to learn playing it. I can play a few songs from youtube videos but I want to learn how to read sheet music. This video inspired me to start playing again. Good luck with your progress :D
1:28 KINDA SOUNDS LIKE i AM PLACing BlocKS AnD sH- Cuz IM In FUCk-ng MiNecRaFT
Oh wow this is such an incredible progression! You're learning very fast and I know you'll be great at this in the future if you keep it up! :D I wish you good luck and have fun with your journey. ❤
New subscriber btw, looking forward to seeing more from you
BUDDY UR TALENTED DONT GIVE UP!!!
NOCTURNE IN 9 MONTHS OMG THATS ACTUALLY SO GOOD
thats soo inspiring man
i'm glad to read these kinds of comments, thank you
Look, you clearly have a musical soul and you have that musical 'touch' to the way you play. I think that you can be very good at the piano.
If you look to only play pieces to 'impress those who know nothing about the piano' then this is the way to go. But for someone who plays with a piano teacher, who practices scales/arpeggios etc., does daily sight reading etc it's clear that a lot of basics and structure is lacking here.
It's a matter of personal choice: do you wanna play just for fun and not be too good? Then great, this works well and I hope that it offers you everything that you want cuz you do seem to be having fun and that's the most important thing. But if you want to actually get good at piano and sound good, you will need basics and a teacher (although I know they can be expensive!).
Best of luck!
thank you so much for your time, i actually play for fun, but yeah, to get good, i need to train the fundamentals more seriously
Do I actually need a teacher, I'm about 2 months self taught and a teacher would definitely help, but my parents ain't paying for allat
@@SurprisedGarterSnake-eh7tk You don't necessarily NEED a teacher although having one will be very helpful and you will likely learn faster. If you can't afford to pay for lessons then the next best thing is to buy some method books and start learning from those. I'd recommend Faber's Piano Adventures as I've heard a lot of good things about the Faber method in regards to sight reading and playing by ear etc. Also TH-cam is your friend. If you're having a lot of trouble with a certain technique or you can't figure out what you're doing wrong there are plenty of professional pianists who make very helpful videos and may be able to point you in the right direction.
A teacher might not be necessary - having good practice techniques and having good tutorials could definitely substitute a teacher
I had a teacher for the fundamentals - which I realize I didn’t really need. Eventually I stopped doing lessons and learned pieces on my own, which worked really well.
@@SurprisedGarterSnake-eh7tk I love hamburgers 😀
You just earned a sub I also just got a electric piano and I found your vid I'm struggling to know what to do first and this helped me follow a guide thanks.❤
assez dingue le progrès continue comme ca!
merci beaucoup !
i used to play from ages 6 to 13 and you got better than me in 2 months LMAOO
crazy that you played wet hands on day 19 and I played it on my day 365 haha you progressed a lot faster than I did, good on you! I taught myself to read sheet music because i found synesthesia hard to follow, you're lucky you can learn through synesthesia because a lot of times I want to learn songs from video games or anime and I can't find any sheet music for them. I've also just uploaded my own 1 year self taught piano progress video if you want to check it out :)
you hold the motivation I wish I had right now. sigh
+1 Sub
You have my respect bro
I'm 19 and playing since a month and I only know to play fur elise
I need motivation from you to walk on this journey
DANG YOU LEARNED SO FAST, I am self taught since 2023 but can only do grade 5 pieces
Hii! Just want to say that the amount of effort is amazing and the results are turning out great as well! however, I think those pieces that ur currently working on such as La Campanella and Winter Wind etude are still to hard for you as they are insanely difficult. I would strongly recommend you to try easier pieces and try to learn the basics and theory behind them first, even gn they seems like a boring and unnecessary things to learn but after you learn them they will help you more for understanding sheet music and what the composers want to express themselves throughout the piece. Anyway the result of fantaisie improptu was fantastic and I hope to hear more!! Keep the passion as you go even though some time it might be hard but after it you will succeed!❤
This is the most believable progression I’ve ever seen 😂
At this point bro is gonna be the next Lang Lang in a year
Yeah, he has advanced at about my speed. I only played piano for over two years, and I too can play La Campanella. Not perfectly, but a good majority of it.
@@You-lp7ne This isnt possible
Maybe not to most people or through traditional piano lessons. I’m just as surprised as you are. There are reason why the person in the above video is also just as good. There might be hidden myth that being self taught has a much higher advantage compared to traditional teaching, since you never have to wait until your piano teacher gives you a difficult piece above your level, you can instead challenge yourself with whatever you’re up for at any time.
@@You-lp7ne the guy in the video seems good, but in reality he is not. it doesn't take much to play difficult pieces if with all these errors, with incorrect technique and without following a rhythm. I think you also don't have an adequate level to play la campanella or anything
@@AL3_ But you can also self-teach proper technique. When I first decided to record myself, I then realized how weird my hands looked compared to any piano performance I saw online. My hands looked very crooked and improper. So over the coming months, I have slowly transformed my technique into a more relaxed and efficient way, and overall, more closely identical to performances online. Not perfect yet, but I’m getting there
This can be you if you stay consistent like him
Franchement bravo à toi je suis presque jaloux…
Le seul conseil que je pourrai te donner :
Travailler des pièces plus abordables ( moins ingrat une fantaisie impromptue ou qu’un prélude de Rachmaninov ) mais qui t’aideront à te forger des bases solides tout en étant satisfaisant à travailler.
J’ai démarré un peu comme toi, en passant presque l’entièreté de le première année de pratique à vouloir jouer l’opus 55 no 1 de Chopin ( moins dur que la fantaisie impromptue mais j’en ai quand bien bavé surtout avec la coda ) tout ça pour un résultat qui, avec du recul n’était pas incroyable ( voire médiocre…) et je pense que si j’avais utilisé ce temps à bon escient j’aurais un meilleur niveau aujourd’hui ( le pire étant quand on me demandais de jouer autre chose que la pièce pour laquelle j’avais bavé pendant des mois et que je me retrouvais bredouille devant le piano)
Enfin bref tu as quand même un très bon niveau technique, hâte de voir ce que ça donnera dans l’avenir !
Salut j'avais une question, j'ai commencé le piano le 13 août, j'ai déjà appris quelques sons et j'aurais aimé savoir si selon toi apprendre "merry go round of life" (je ne connais pas le nom en français mais ça viens du château ambulant) serai accessible pour moi. Merci pour ta réponse
@@mmd3389 est ce que je pourrais avoir un de tes réseau pour t'en parler s'il te plaît ?
was waiting for the part where you bought a new keyboard
1:25 that is me everyday
Sounds great! But I'd definitely recommend learning how to read sheet music and making sure you know all note and rest values so you can improve your timing! However this is super impressive for someone new at piano, keep it up
Smth i could recommend is that you actually learn sheet music and the scales since these videos sometimes do not give the peice you actually want to listen cause it can help you for me i got taught by a paino teacher and sometimes sheet music does help since they dont show how to sustain except for the quater notes which is hold for 2 notes there are notes like eight notes where you have to play 2 notes in one beat so yea thats it i hope you find this useful because i have been learning paino for about 2 years or so and the harder it gets more poeple tend to quit so try doing a bit of sheet music and i think you can do it it will make it sound much better. And people dont take this too heart ok im just telling because dynamics are actually helpful in making a piece sound better
Thank you for this video! I will have my first piano next week, i hope i can be as good in one year!! :D Keep it up
(Dont mind the writing, eng is not my main langage)
I don't think people would mind your english it's good when you compare to other people. Good luck with your piano :)
I've been following a method book and a structured guide on my foundational level of piano. But you have inspired me to also learn more complex pieces on the side, pieces that I actually want to eventually play.😊
hey, can I ask what books have you consulted? ty:)
@@ailinkawa I was initially following (still am to some extent) Faber's Adult Piano Adventures books. They have everything from theory, sight ready, technique and repertoire that you may need.
Although, I'm mainly following PianoTV's online classes at the moment.
Could you share with us a bit of your learning method? Like, did you study any music theory or was it all just trying to play songs? And did you learn how to read sheet music?
bro you are a beast in 12 days you do what i do in 1.5 month
this is amazing!!!!
HEYYYY !!!!!!!! I STARTED WITH WET HANDS TOO !! (That's it i'm just happy someone else did the same as me)
Crazy progress dude! Tryna be like you one day
Appreciate that, you can do it
this is such a glow up with the improving piano and everything
Incredible…
Congrats! Although you still cannot play any of the pieces you showed, keep with the good work and in a few years you'll be able to play them properly!!🙏🙏
A little tip: study musical periods and their characteristics
edit: not coming from a conservatory's student but from a self taught who got the opportunity to take particular classes for free
@@Erick-nn5gt thanks for the tips, i will
Ain't no way i got a simply piano ad before the video (it's playing rn while i'm typing this)
really good! just one small thing- when you play the faster parts, try to keep your fingers closer to the keys to avoid the tapping sound from the keyboard
talented AF