This line of thinking easily has the flip-side of feeling bad about your own playing. You should probably be wary of it for your own mental health's sake.
I've always wondered how pianists would deconstruct music when they practice, but never expected someone to put huge effort to visualize it. Now I have this video, great work!
You make a very great point, Tiffany! People will always try to rank pieces by difficulty (most likely in relation to technique). But we will always have our strengths and weaknesses which make certain pieces more or less "difficult" than others. I don't think subjective takes on pieces and their associated "difficulty" is something that helps us much or at all on our musical journey as one might think. Thanks for an amazing vlog and food for thought!
@@datnguyen3441 Funny, I have pretty much the exact opposite problem. I love playing Bach and Mozart, but I have trouble with Chopin, Beethoven, etc. (somehow haven’t played Debussy but I’d imagine it would present similar challenges).
Yeah I totally get that! I’m pretty good at playing Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Rachmaninov, Debussy or Satie, yet I struggle so much with earlier composers like Handel, Bach, Haydn or Mozart. Edit: By the way I’m not some super virtuosic pianist that plays really difficult Rach and Liszt Ètudes or Concertos, I just play their easier works :)
It’s not always about technique either, like I have just revisited a couple of Chopin etudes Op.10 No.4 and Op.25 No.11 and while technically they’re pretty easy at this point, it’s another matter keeping up the mental stamina to play them through which has required an immense amount of practice I haven’t done in a while. I’m just not used to these kinds of relentless studies.
The precious thing about this video is that we can see what's in the mind of a professional pianist, during the practice sessions. You can learn so many things about structure, harmony, sight reading, memorization etc from a video like this.
I’d say Liszt’s writing is often way more comfortable than that of Chopin.... that being said, it can be comfortable but still extremely hard. And harder still to go past the textures and really play his music with maximum color.
you are literally amazing. every time I watch your videos I feel like I want to be a better person, even if it would be just a single step forward. not only about musicality and such, but everything in general. I am not a pianist, just a postgrad biomed student playing the piano for a hobby, but you are exactly the kind of person that I'd love to keep close (not to mention, it would be perfect if you lived next door so I can listen to you practising)
@@TiffanyPoonpianist you make lots of peoples days better, and you inspire me to learn, I have a kimball console upright and I am self teaching, it isn’t easy, and sometimes i lose motivation but the beauty of classical music always makes me want to keep and learning, and you, you are a voice to be heard, one that inspires many and may you continue to share your passion for music and continue to inspire many more
Watching you practice makes me wish that I still had a piano or keyboard to practice on. I’m not a classical pianist but I still enjoy watching videos related to classical music.
A great adjustment to the way you work/live. Musicians like Menuhin, Lipatti, and Schwarzkopf were versed in many art forms - literature, painting, etc. - and were friends with other artists. As a philosopher you are predisposed.
tbf I sightread through this one a while back and had a similar thought. It's not as complicated as it looks, most of the complications come from the number of accidentals. But even those are just a semitone away from whatever the chord is most of the time. I think the famous difficulty comes more from the execution of all the physically demanding movement than it does from reading. It's definitely no easy piece to perform. Oh and the story behind it, I never read the poem but I read a synopsis of the story and well... yeah mazeppa was no hero. If I rememeber he got accused of sleeping with the princess and was chained to a horse and sent off to die but somehow he survived and ended up in ukraine where he was saved and he joined the army. Something like that
Thank you for sharing this rare glimpse into the early learning process of a touring artist! What a fabulous resource. Your transparency is so refreshing.
Learning new things in different subjects is a great pleasure, Tiffany. I think you are right to follow your course of action. I wish you much joy as you gain new knowledge.
This has been an exceptionally happy week for me, hope for everyone here as well! And now a Tiffany Poon video to end the week, wonderfull! Thanks Tiffany, looking forward to GRWM vlogs when your concert in Germany happens. Also, pretty impressive how fast you learn :)
Thank you Tiffany for your willingness to share your love of classical music in such an open and personal way. It’s interesting how modern technology allows one to share their inner self broadly.
You've really changed in this vlog! I'm talking about how more of a positive mindset you have and how you're ambitious for learning and educating yourself! It's really inspiring, especially coming from a person who's already more knowledgeable and experienced than millions of people. Thank you for being such a model!
Your a kind woman Tiffany. The 'Mazeppa' is music worth looking at and with you playing through we are able to assess our own levels of ineptitude and skill when deciding to take this music on. It seems perhaps less intellectually challenging while using good coordination and strength.
Finally someone says it. I'm nowhere near the technical level to ever play any of the Liszt Transcendental Etudes, but I have looked at them all and to me it was clear that Mazeppa is NOT the most difficult of them. It's most definately the one that is the most exhausting to play, but that has nothing to do with difficulty. And Liszt and his octaves: My favourite use of that device can be found in "Orage". Those are so incredibly satisfying to play, especially at the end when the resolution comes.
from what I've heard #11 Harmonies Du Soir is the most difficult, in fact Liszt wrote 3 versions of these Etudes during his lifetime. When he was young he wrote the easier forms, then in his middle years he re-wrote them to the point where he was the only person in the world who could play them which satisfied him, but as he grew older, he wanted others to be able to play them so he composed a 3rd version which some of the greatest players can struggle through them yet he could play them with ease. I read this in the #11 description. It has that monstrous run using 6 notes per hand going down the scale using flats, double flats, , naturals.. It takes me about 15 seconds just to figure out each chord and yet to hear the hole thing played in a run almost as fast as the flight of the bumble bee using massive chords is totally insane. From what I gather it's the re-written versions or the easier versions that we hear people play now.
Yessss!! Do what you want to do and I love the idea that you would love to keep learning!!! Support you as always❤️😘 BTW I'd like to thank you for making this vlog at this moment because I am learning a super challenging etude for an audition in August! This meant so much to me as it's such a powerful encouragement telling me to trust myself that I can do it! Thank you Tiffany!!❤️❤️❤️
Thank you so much for this video, you gave me the courage to try this piece as well, and you're right it wasn't as bad to sight read as I thought it would be! I've played the 10th transcendental etude before, which was much more difficult to sight read in my opinion, but I might like the Mazeppa a little more.
Superb video, Tiffany! Very interesting to see your insight - I actually was sight reading this the other day and the same thought occurred to me regarding empirical knowledge, especially with Liszt’s compositions. However, as I’m sure you know, the fun is trying to get up to a speed which conveys the madness and beauty in it’s entirety. Funnily, for me, the alternating chromatic octaves was one of the parts that made me doubt myself 😂
Agreed! Just got to practise some of the octave leaps in the dark ;) . To me, Feux Follets is so much more challenging. Thanks for the lovely video as always, Tiffany! Hopefully I'll be able to see you live one day.
Probably a year ago when I started watching your vids(approximately when I picked piano back up), the idea of noticing patterns was something I thought would need years more to learn. But hey, I’ve been playing a lot of Rachmaninov recently and I can occasionally predict things in his pieces! It helps a lot once I get the style of a certain composer for sure!
Your sight Reading skills are amazing. I sound like a type writer plucking keys who where my face right on the sheet music trying to read individual notes.
Holy cow... I have some thoughts while sight-reading and thought, "man, I want to write them down, but that would be such a pain." Then I find that you made a 25-minute video doing exactly that :0 such dedication!! can only imagine how much effort it took to collect all that footage and edit it... probably longer than actually learning Mazeppa lol
Playing such a piece is already so impressive to me (many unpredictable chords and transitions), but to be able to play it without a score seems unreal! I like this new style of practice vlog very much!
I like watching you learn like this. I used to read music a long time ago but now i can only play by copying people and examining what is being played slowly and memorising it, I hit a limit with my ability to follow and sight read when I was younger and after returning could not overcome this barrier.
As an architect learning to play piano (i'm sooo far away :)) my former teacher said: Scales are easy... just practice...Well, after a few years even today to play them well...and not just moving fingers,,, i found it difficult, to rly enjoy the flow of sound... even if for many others it seems the easiest thing to do. Oddly enough these vlogs i enjoy the most, but i guess i'm odd. Thank you
Great Video Tiffany!!!! One of my goals within the next five years is to be well-versed in extended techniques for the flute and to learn the Ibert Concerto, the Reinecke Undine Sonata, the Reinecke Concerto, the Gaubert Flute Sonatas, Mouquet La Flute de Pan, and to explore more repertoire by more female composers (the last piece that I played by a female composer was Valerie Coleman’s Danza de la Mariposa)🥰❤️
Hey Tiffany! Funny that you decided to read more, I've been following my interests a lot more as well. I decided to start learning Chinese (with apps until I get through some, then I'll look for a tutor). I don't need to or anything, but it just seems like such an interesting language, and I love learning languages where I can get appreciated by natives for being able to communicate with them in their mother tongue :D (+ the characters are so funny!)
Thank you for this video! Such a fascinating look behind the magic curtain. :) Musically Mazeppa is the most straightforward out of all the Transcendental Etudes, simple theme and variations - I think that its thematic simplicity and repetitiveness has something to do with the program, as it is basically a wild, involuntary horse ride (our dude, the Cossack "roi" is rope-bound to a horse which has been driven mad to run into the steppe until it dies of exhaustion). The near-constant hand-alternating might also be an allusion to galopping. There is an orchestral version of this piece as well (a symphonic poem), which has a much more elaborate mournful and victorious section to make a more balanced work (in my opinion). May I ask a cheeky question: have you really been sufficiently unfamiliar with this piece to be surprised by the slow, dramatic interlude towards the end? :) There are a few live concert performances of the complete Transcendental Etudes on TH-cam (Nelson Goerner, Boris Berezovsky, Daniil Trifonov) which might be worth even your time. Thank you again for a wonderful insight into your sight-reading process. Your performances always offer a fantastic experience - and your practicing is no less fascinating. Please keep us in the loop! :)
Great video. Please consider making some videos where you talk about the books you're reading. Would love to hear about them, and hear your thoughts on them. Doesn't matter if the subject matter is music or not.
We saw you play a few snippets of Shultz-Eveler “Blue Danube” Waltz.That would be a thrill to see in its entirety. Wagner-Liszt Tannhauser Overture would be a nice change of pace, or Brahms Handel Variations. Or Beethoven Hammerklavier...
@@TiffanyPoonpianist I definitely will, I'm planning to tackle the "raindrop prelude" by Chopin next. Unfortunately, I also have to deal with finals at school so it may take a while... Wish me luck.
@@Checkmate1138 A positive mindset really does help, I've come far enough to know that. Got any advice? I'm mostly struggling with (uneven) tempo and sight reading, those are the only things holding me back at the moment.
It is a very nice and important video and you are that person and pianist who people should listen to. :)) Well MY EXPERIENCE: in my very first year learning to play the piano the piece i wished to learn very hard was the 6 romanian dances from Béla Bartók. Everybody told me that this is too difficult to me. They did not give me the sheet music of it either. But i started to learn it after listening (i have pp too), and after six months of practice I was able to play it and i played it more better than any other easier pieces. The teachers in the conservatoire really enjoyed my playing. Why? - Because i just wanted to learn it because i love that music so much. My brain always sang those melodies. I have never thought about the difficulty of it. So i experienced that everything is possible to learn if you honestly want it. The secret is the mental playing but it comes natural if you get the flow by the love of that music. :))
I remember having the same experience with the 2nd movement of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 15 Pathetique. It was my favorite piano piece for years, and when I first heard the full version on You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown, I pretty much snapped. I immediately found the sheet music and started practicing it, and I managed to learn it when I was barely a teenager. Of course, my teacher found out about this and had me attempt to learn the 1st movement. I never managed to pull it off, though. That movement is very hard.
I've been thinking about this etude for past few months, and wanted to try to play it, but as a 16 years old piano student I was really afraid of it (and still am 😅) But now I found some courage to at least start sight reading it, still idk if I have the ability and technique to play it or not, but lets see what happens!😁 Thank you so much Tiffany!
I was afraid about the heroic polonaise, because the tecnical difficulties and octaves, but I started to learn it 3/2 months ago and now I play it very good, and i played it in front of people, very nervous but I can. You can do that with the mazzeppa, maybe I can start sight reading it step by step
m.s.= mano sinistra ( left hand )
m.d.= mano destra ( right hand )
All the abbreviations are in Italian language
Her 10 mins of sight reading, I probably have to spend 1 week to practice.... incredible
you suck, not me :)
I'd spend 1 month 😭😭😭
This line of thinking easily has the flip-side of feeling bad about your own playing. You should probably be wary of it for your own mental health's sake.
Just one week? Hahahahah
@@oannabonana, exactly me too
I've always wondered how pianists would deconstruct music when they practice, but never expected someone to put huge effort to visualize it. Now I have this video, great work!
Huge respect for the amount of work you put in this video!
🤓 My eyes thank you 🙏😵
You make a very great point, Tiffany! People will always try to rank pieces by difficulty (most likely in relation to technique). But we will always have our strengths and weaknesses which make certain pieces more or less "difficult" than others. I don't think subjective takes on pieces and their associated "difficulty" is something that helps us much or at all on our musical journey as one might think. Thanks for an amazing vlog and food for thought!
Yessss thank you 🙏🙏🙏 I'm so glad you understand 🤗🙏🎶
Yea this is true, I can play Debussy and Chopin stuffs but struggles to play Bach and Mozart stuffs, even their “easier” works.
@@datnguyen3441 Funny, I have pretty much the exact opposite problem. I love playing Bach and Mozart, but I have trouble with Chopin, Beethoven, etc. (somehow haven’t played Debussy but I’d imagine it would present similar challenges).
Yeah I totally get that! I’m pretty good at playing Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Rachmaninov, Debussy or Satie, yet I struggle so much with earlier composers like Handel, Bach, Haydn or Mozart.
Edit: By the way I’m not some super virtuosic pianist that plays really difficult Rach and Liszt Ètudes or Concertos, I just play their easier works :)
It’s not always about technique either, like I have just revisited a couple of Chopin etudes Op.10 No.4 and Op.25 No.11 and while technically they’re pretty easy at this point, it’s another matter keeping up the mental stamina to play them through which has required an immense amount of practice I haven’t done in a while. I’m just not used to these kinds of relentless studies.
The precious thing about this video is that we can see what's in the mind of a professional pianist, during the practice sessions. You can learn so many things about structure, harmony, sight reading, memorization etc from a video like this.
This video actually helped me out. It makes Mazeppa look so much more simpler. Thanks Tiffany! :)
Yay!!! 🤗🙏🤗🎹
I legitimately can't believe how good you are at sight reading!!! It almost sounds like you've played the piece before.
Of course she have
I‘m always soo excited for new videos from her since they never fail to inspire me to practice especially in this pandemic !😷
🤗💪🎶
“Mazeppa isn’t that difficult”
Not all of us are virtuosos Tiffany.
In all seriousness great insights
it's only like doing rocket science while trying to juggle flaming rocks and reciting beowulf backwards all at the same time.
Yes it’s obviously very technically challenging, but Liszt’s music is generally VERY intuitive to pianists musically/pianistically/harmonically
I’d say Liszt’s writing is often way more comfortable than that of Chopin.... that being said, it can be comfortable but still extremely hard. And harder still to go past the textures and really play his music with maximum color.
@@ruthsalgado6775 No one asked, quit your bragging
@@ruthsalgado6775 I doubt you can play it with even mediocre technique or phrasing, let alone speed.
you are literally amazing. every time I watch your videos I feel like I want to be a better person, even if it would be just a single step forward. not only about musicality and such, but everything in general. I am not a pianist, just a postgrad biomed student playing the piano for a hobby, but you are exactly the kind of person that I'd love to keep close (not to mention, it would be perfect if you lived next door so I can listen to you practising)
🥺 This is exactly what I try to be and do on TH-cam and social media... Thank you for writing this comment ❤️🥺
whooo happiest moment of the day
🤗
@@TiffanyPoonpianist I love the Kinderszenen intro! I'd love to hear you play op 15 no 1 in another video!
@@TiffanyPoonpianist you make lots of peoples days better, and you inspire me to learn, I have a kimball console upright and I am self teaching, it isn’t easy, and sometimes i lose motivation but the beauty of classical music always makes me want to keep and learning, and you, you are a voice to be heard, one that inspires many and may you continue to share your passion for music and continue to inspire many more
I've been anticipating this video for a while. 🙇
Now we can start anticipating the next one ;)
2-week break, but a 25 min video: YES please! Hope everyone is doing well! (Day 22)
Watching you practice makes me wish that I still had a piano or keyboard to practice on. I’m not a classical pianist but I still enjoy watching videos related to classical music.
Never too late to start 🎹😉
I'm currently learning this, is a truly challenging piece Tiffany!
Dear Tiffany:
I love to watch and hear you practice!.... it's uplifting and invigorating!
Thank you so much 💕😘
A great pianist, and a nice person!!!
🙂
It's amazing you can sight read this crazy piece....wow!! I love the second part in particular. So beautiful!
A great adjustment to the way you work/live. Musicians like Menuhin, Lipatti, and Schwarzkopf were versed in many art forms - literature, painting, etc. - and were friends with other artists. As a philosopher you are predisposed.
Ahhh 25 minute vlog can’t wait to watch it all with my breakfast :D!
Thanks i really love your sight reading videos. Im happy you keep doing them
tbf I sightread through this one a while back and had a similar thought. It's not as complicated as it looks, most of the complications come from the number of accidentals. But even those are just a semitone away from whatever the chord is most of the time.
I think the famous difficulty comes more from the execution of all the physically demanding movement than it does from reading. It's definitely no easy piece to perform.
Oh and the story behind it, I never read the poem but I read a synopsis of the story and well... yeah mazeppa was no hero. If I rememeber he got accused of sleeping with the princess and was chained to a horse and sent off to die but somehow he survived and ended up in ukraine where he was saved and he joined the army. Something like that
Interesting. Didn’t he become a Ukrainian war hero though? Forgive my ignorance
Thank you so much for putting out these videos, they're a great source of inspiration.
Love this content! Talking - analyzing - and also playing! Just love it!
Let's appreciate for a moment the effort put in editting these sight-reading videos. Great job!
Huge respect to you, your efforts and your work ethic. You're a chad musician and I wish you the best.
Thank you for sharing this rare glimpse into the early learning process of a touring artist! What a fabulous resource. Your transparency is so refreshing.
another inspirational video, I'll have to save this for when I am feeling down.
Learning new things in different subjects is a great pleasure, Tiffany. I think you are right to follow your course of action. I wish you much joy as you gain new knowledge.
This has been an exceptionally happy week for me, hope for everyone here as well! And now a Tiffany Poon video to end the week, wonderfull! Thanks Tiffany, looking forward to GRWM vlogs when your concert in Germany happens. Also, pretty impressive how fast you learn :)
Incredible to behold! Great to hear /see the mental process that helps you work it out on the fly
Thank you Tiffany for your willingness to share your love of classical music in such an open and personal way. It’s interesting how modern technology allows one to share their inner self broadly.
Brilliantly said and played :) especially love the explanation of 'not bragging' versus 'something that you find interesting or exciting'
Omg i've been waiting for this so long, ever since I saw your insta story I got so excited
You've really changed in this vlog! I'm talking about how more of a positive mindset you have and how you're ambitious for learning and educating yourself! It's really inspiring, especially coming from a person who's already more knowledgeable and experienced than millions of people. Thank you for being such a model!
Tiffany, your editing skills are very impressive😃.
This is a great video on how you look at things.. and its something we dont get often. Thank you
was so excited to watch this video!! all your time editing surely paid off :D
Your a kind woman Tiffany. The 'Mazeppa' is music worth looking at and with you playing through we are able to assess our own levels of ineptitude and skill when deciding to take this music on. It seems perhaps less intellectually challenging while using good coordination and strength.
Finally someone says it. I'm nowhere near the technical level to ever play any of the Liszt Transcendental Etudes, but I have looked at them all and to me it was clear that Mazeppa is NOT the most difficult of them. It's most definately the one that is the most exhausting to play, but that has nothing to do with difficulty.
And Liszt and his octaves: My favourite use of that device can be found in "Orage". Those are so incredibly satisfying to play, especially at the end when the resolution comes.
its easier than feux follets, but most would agree its in the top 3 with chasse neige
It is still top 3, with feux follets and chasse niege, agree with person above me
from what I've heard #11 Harmonies Du Soir is the most difficult, in fact Liszt wrote 3 versions of these Etudes during his lifetime. When he was young he wrote the easier forms, then in his middle years he re-wrote them to the point where he was the only person in the world who could play them which satisfied him, but as he grew older, he wanted others to be able to play them so he composed a 3rd version which some of the greatest players can struggle through them yet he could play them with ease. I read this in the #11 description. It has that monstrous run using 6 notes per hand going down the scale using flats, double flats, , naturals.. It takes me about 15 seconds just to figure out each chord and yet to hear the hole thing played in a run almost as fast as the flight of the bumble bee using massive chords is totally insane. From what I gather it's the re-written versions or the easier versions that we hear people play now.
They get progressively difficult. The last one is the most difficult one.@@kurtmorris454
What Victor Hugo says has the final measure
"he finally falls ..... and gets up king!"
I love watching your sight readings💝🥰
🙏😬🤓🙏
Thank you. Completely agree about taking on the new works of Liszt. Pattern is everything.
Yessss!! Do what you want to do and I love the idea that you would love to keep learning!!! Support you as always❤️😘
BTW I'd like to thank you for making this vlog at this moment because I am learning a super challenging etude for an audition in August! This meant so much to me as it's such a powerful encouragement telling me to trust myself that I can do it! Thank you Tiffany!!❤️❤️❤️
Good luck!!! 🤗❤️ You can do it 🎶
Yay!...that was so fun watching you play through that.
Very insightful...you would make a great teacher at any level. 😁👍👏
Thank you Tiffany, this video inspires me and give me motivation to practice
This is how intelligent people live and grow. great inspiration for lifelong learning!
Interesting! Can't thank you enough for all these elaborate explanations!
You are way too awesome! Thank you for these tips. I hope to meet you sometime in the future. God bless you!
I love these vlogs. I love watching other professional musician practice and learning what others do to improve.
Another great video! Thank you for being an inspiration to me!
A new Tiffany video is an automatic good day😀
Ever inspiring and motivating. Makes me think of how much I need to improve my sight-reading. Still, goals right? Thank you, Tiffany.
Thank you so much for these insights
Hi Tiffany! Had been waiting for your video 😁.
I know... 🙈❤️
Thank you for narrating your thought process. This is extremely helpful as I'm trying to sight-read better
I love Lizst (the original concert pianist superstar). Thanks for this very detailed video. I know how much effort it takes to produce these. 👍👍👍
Thank you so much for this video, you gave me the courage to try this piece as well, and you're right it wasn't as bad to sight read as I thought it would be! I've played the 10th transcendental etude before, which was much more difficult to sight read in my opinion, but I might like the Mazeppa a little more.
Superb video, Tiffany! Very interesting to see your insight - I actually was sight reading this the other day and the same thought occurred to me regarding empirical knowledge, especially with Liszt’s compositions. However, as I’m sure you know, the fun is trying to get up to a speed which conveys the madness and beauty in it’s entirety. Funnily, for me, the alternating chromatic octaves was one of the parts that made me doubt myself 😂
Agreed! Just got to practise some of the octave leaps in the dark ;) . To me, Feux Follets is so much more challenging. Thanks for the lovely video as always, Tiffany! Hopefully I'll be able to see you live one day.
Feux follets 😬 I can't... 🙈
I really loved it. This is my dream video.
had been waiting for this! ♡
Thank you for showing more of the learning process of classical music😀
Beautiful Tiffany, so talented.
I was literally going to sight read this piece it's an amazing one and I love it! Also thank you for your inspirations!
Your sight reading is equivalent to about my 2 week practice, even after then I stop and forget notes. Excellent job Tiffany ❤️
Probably a year ago when I started watching your vids(approximately when I picked piano back up), the idea of noticing patterns was something I thought would need years more to learn. But hey, I’ve been playing a lot of Rachmaninov recently and I can occasionally predict things in his pieces!
It helps a lot once I get the style of a certain composer for sure!
love ur vids tiffany!!
Your sight Reading skills are amazing. I sound like a type writer plucking keys who where my face right on the sheet music trying to read individual notes.
I love that the first thing I hear is kinderszenen 💖
2 years later, I was about to like this comment, then realised it’s my own comment
Holy cow... I have some thoughts while sight-reading and thought, "man, I want to write them down, but that would be such a pain." Then I find that you made a 25-minute video doing exactly that :0 such dedication!! can only imagine how much effort it took to collect all that footage and edit it... probably longer than actually learning Mazeppa lol
Is always fascinating watching your vlogs!!!!! Hello from England!!!! :) :) :)
👋❤️🤗
Playing such a piece is already so impressive to me (many unpredictable chords and transitions), but to be able to play it without a score seems unreal!
I like this new style of practice vlog very much!
I like watching you learn like this. I used to read music a long time ago but now i can only play by copying people and examining what is being played slowly and memorising it, I hit a limit with my ability to follow and sight read when I was younger and after returning could not overcome this barrier.
The same thing happened to me - try sight reading pieces you can play fro memory. That’s what helped me
As an architect learning to play piano (i'm sooo far away :)) my former teacher said: Scales are easy... just practice...Well, after a few years even today to play them well...and not just moving fingers,,, i found it difficult, to rly enjoy the flow of sound... even if for many others it seems the easiest thing to do. Oddly enough these vlogs i enjoy the most, but i guess i'm odd. Thank you
I'm odd, too 😅 It's absolutely fine to find things difficult, it's perfectly fine to be different 😊
Great Video Tiffany!!!! One of my goals within the next five years is to be well-versed in extended techniques for the flute and to learn the Ibert Concerto, the Reinecke Undine Sonata, the Reinecke Concerto, the Gaubert Flute Sonatas, Mouquet La Flute de Pan, and to explore more repertoire by more female composers (the last piece that I played by a female composer was Valerie Coleman’s Danza de la Mariposa)🥰❤️
2:16 "A or 2".
I love your sense of humor!
lol
Hey Tiffany! Funny that you decided to read more, I've been following my interests a lot more as well. I decided to start learning Chinese (with apps until I get through some, then I'll look for a tutor). I don't need to or anything, but it just seems like such an interesting language, and I love learning languages where I can get appreciated by natives for being able to communicate with them in their mother tongue :D (+ the characters are so funny!)
Woah, your sight reading skills are so good. I wish to play like you one day. Thank you for the calming vlog Tiffany :^)
This is a great video, and you are a great performer and educator. Keep up with the work! I really enjoy your videos
Thank you for this video! Such a fascinating look behind the magic curtain. :)
Musically Mazeppa is the most straightforward out of all the Transcendental Etudes, simple theme and variations - I think that its thematic simplicity and repetitiveness has something to do with the program, as it is basically a wild, involuntary horse ride (our dude, the Cossack "roi" is rope-bound to a horse which has been driven mad to run into the steppe until it dies of exhaustion). The near-constant hand-alternating might also be an allusion to galopping. There is an orchestral version of this piece as well (a symphonic poem), which has a much more elaborate mournful and victorious section to make a more balanced work (in my opinion).
May I ask a cheeky question: have you really been sufficiently unfamiliar with this piece to be surprised by the slow, dramatic interlude towards the end? :) There are a few live concert performances of the complete Transcendental Etudes on TH-cam (Nelson Goerner, Boris Berezovsky, Daniil Trifonov) which might be worth even your time.
Thank you again for a wonderful insight into your sight-reading process. Your performances always offer a fantastic experience - and your practicing is no less fascinating. Please keep us in the loop! :)
Great video. Please consider making some videos where you talk about the books you're reading. Would love to hear about them, and hear your thoughts on them. Doesn't matter if the subject matter is music or not.
It's not about hard, it's a beauty and passion.
Enjoyed the facial expressions as you practiced through the Mazepa Etude. You look very human when working like this.
We saw you play a few snippets of Shultz-Eveler “Blue Danube” Waltz.That would be a thrill to see in its entirety. Wagner-Liszt Tannhauser Overture would be a nice change of pace, or Brahms Handel Variations. Or Beethoven Hammerklavier...
I'm so excited to see her play this piece.
Thank you for sharing your process with us. Fascinating.
Beautiful as always🥰😘
Ahh good, so in 10 years I may be able to play it too...
Keep striving 😉🤗
@@TiffanyPoonpianist I definitely will, I'm planning to tackle the "raindrop prelude" by Chopin next. Unfortunately, I also have to deal with finals at school so it may take a while... Wish me luck.
Who knows? Maybe in less time than that, with a positive mindset 😊
@@Checkmate1138 A positive mindset really does help, I've come far enough to know that. Got any advice? I'm mostly struggling with (uneven) tempo and sight reading, those are the only things holding me back at the moment.
@@Checkmate1138 was so
Happy reading. 🙂
18:03 What fingering does anyone use for the descending 3rd passages in the right hand? I really want to know.
I love your sight reading videos ! 📖🤓
Thank you so much for this. This is a gold lesson.
Alway very enjoy your practice vlog
Very useful this video 🙂🎵👍
It is a very nice and important video and you are that person and pianist who people should listen to. :))
Well MY EXPERIENCE: in my very first year learning to play the piano the piece i wished to learn very hard was the 6 romanian dances from Béla Bartók. Everybody told me that this is too difficult to me. They did not give me the sheet music of it either.
But i started to learn it after listening (i have pp too), and after six months of practice I was able to play it and i played it more better than any other easier pieces. The teachers in the conservatoire really enjoyed my playing.
Why? - Because i just wanted to learn it because i love that music so much. My brain always sang those melodies. I have never thought about the difficulty of it. So i experienced that everything is possible to learn if you honestly want it. The secret is the mental playing but it comes natural if you get the flow by the love of that music. :))
I remember having the same experience with the 2nd movement of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 15 Pathetique. It was my favorite piano piece for years, and when I first heard the full version on You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown, I pretty much snapped. I immediately found the sheet music and started practicing it, and I managed to learn it when I was barely a teenager.
Of course, my teacher found out about this and had me attempt to learn the 1st movement. I never managed to pull it off, though. That movement is very hard.
Nice to hear it played slowly. Rather beautiful. You convinced me it isn’t that difficult. (Of course it is to get it good!)
I've been thinking about this etude for past few months, and wanted to try to play it, but as a 16 years old piano student I was really afraid of it (and still am 😅)
But now I found some courage to at least start sight reading it, still idk if I have the ability and technique to play it or not, but lets see what happens!😁
Thank you so much Tiffany!
Don't be afraid! Go ahead 🤗💪🎶
I was afraid about the heroic polonaise, because the tecnical difficulties and octaves, but I started to learn it 3/2 months ago and now I play it very good, and i played it in front of people, very nervous but I can. You can do that with the mazzeppa, maybe I can start sight reading it step by step