*You are an amazing teacher.* Wow! You so nicely, easily and with such technical illustrations explained such a seemingly complex rhythm in just less than 5 minutes. Whereas with an Indian teacher/s (mostly who are actually talented performers in the strict sense) would have taken weeks or more than a month or even probably a year to make his student/s make understand & ably recreate such concepts. And in the process, keep students gravitating to him and let them remain amazed by making them think what a high level of rhythmic complexity - Indian rhythms are !!! LOL.
Thanks for your kind words sir! While Indian rhythms definitely are very complex, it doesn’t have to seem so unattainable to new learners! Breaking it down into simple steps is the way, and I am blessed to have a great teacher to help me help others understand this.
Hey Neil, this videeo is great! Thank you! Since uploading this, have you covering the vocal sounds and their meaning? I feel this would assist me, and perhaps some others too quite likely, in better understanding.
WOW Mind blown! Subbed Great video. Thanks One curiosity I noticed oddly "tanga" is only 2 syllables, but lasts 3 beats! any explanation or reason? Thanks again
Hey Drew, thanks for the sub! Yes any syllable can last for more than 1 beat. So 'thangu' is 3 beats, you can think of it as follows: Tha - aang - gu', where 'tha -aang' is two beats, but vocalised as one syllable. It's common to also vocalise the 'aang' part as a separate syllable, to make counting the 3 beats simpler. Hope this helps!
Beautifully explained.
Glad it was helpful!
Fantastic explanation.
quick simple and clear explanation - thanks
You're very welcome Girlie! Have you tried Carnatic rhythms before?
@@neilchanmusic I did have a few basic lessons years ago at uni but never pursued it.
Needed this for a project, thanks!
Glad I could help!
Wowww😍😍
Glad to wow you :D
Thank you so much.
Welcome!
Great intro, thank you!
👍👍very useful, thank you
You are welcome Matthias!
Love from India ✨🥰🥰🥰
Thank you! Love from Singapore to India :)
U r a genius
Thank you Abhishek! Happy to help you out on your carnatic music journey :)
Beautiful
Thank you Jishnu!
Wow this helped me so much, thank you!
Glad you're enjoying carnatic rhythms!
Thank you so much🙏❤️
You are very welcome!
*You are an amazing teacher.*
Wow! You so nicely, easily and with such technical illustrations explained such a seemingly complex rhythm in just less than 5 minutes. Whereas with an Indian teacher/s (mostly who are actually talented performers in the strict sense) would have taken weeks or more than a month or even probably a year to make his student/s make understand & ably recreate such concepts. And in the process, keep students gravitating to him and let them remain amazed by making them think what a high level of rhythmic complexity - Indian rhythms are !!! LOL.
Thanks for your kind words sir! While Indian rhythms definitely are very complex, it doesn’t have to seem so unattainable to new learners! Breaking it down into simple steps is the way, and I am blessed to have a great teacher to help me help others understand this.
❤ಸೂಪರ್ ❤
Love it🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Thank you for watching!
Thank you!
Thanks Brother ❤️🔥☺️
Most welcome Akash!
Awesome 👍💕🙏 Hare Krishna Narayana padmanabha mahaprabho ponnunnikanna guruvayurappa 🙏💞 Har Har Mahadev Shambo 💕🙏
Cool vid keep at it
I will Javier, thank you! hope you learnt something interesting :)
very nice..! Where can i get the lyrics of this rhythm
Hey Neil, this videeo is great! Thank you! Since uploading this, have you covering the vocal sounds and their meaning? I feel this would assist me, and perhaps some others too quite likely, in better understanding.
👌🏻😍
:) thanks Melo
WOW Mind blown! Subbed
Great video. Thanks
One curiosity I noticed oddly "tanga" is only 2 syllables, but lasts 3 beats!
any explanation or reason? Thanks again
Hey Drew, thanks for the sub! Yes any syllable can last for more than 1 beat. So 'thangu' is 3 beats, you can think of it as follows: Tha - aang - gu', where 'tha -aang' is two beats, but vocalised as one syllable. It's common to also vocalise the 'aang' part as a separate syllable, to make counting the 3 beats simpler. Hope this helps!
🔥🔥
:D
😍😍😍😍
:)
👏👏👏👏🙏🕉
Thank you!
🙏👍👌🤝
How can I learn from you?
Last one was extra ?? Isn't it 33
Yes you are right! the last beat just signals the start of a new cycle, so it’s beat 1 of a brand new cycle of 32 beats
@@neilchanmusic sir plz make some more videos on carnatic , no video available by anything india
First
Good to be first 🙂