In my opinion, having a well-trained ear is better than having a lot of theoretical knowledge. At the end of the day, music is all about hearing and emotions. So while learning theory is absolutely essential, don't forget the other side of the equation - being able to understand what is heard.
Michelle M 😂 I quit drums about 5 years ago, and finally decided to learn piano a year ago. Here’s to the next (hopefully) 50 years of getting to know it.
Most music teachers would show you the "door" to the music.. . while Warren would not only show you the "door".. .but also give you the "key" and explain how to use it .. . Thanks!
1. Practice singing major scale - 2:36 2. Practice singing two notes intervall - 3:28 3. Practice recognizing chords by their quality (major, minor, augmented ) - 5:45 4. Practice chord progression - 13:43
After taking stock of my playing, I had to admit that my greatest weaknesses are in the areas of identifying root movement, intervals, and chord quality. I checked out a bunch of people's videos to see if I could find something that would help, and while I discovered a lot of good stuff out there, none of it seemed to be quite what I was looking for . . . until I clicked on this one. You told me what I needed to learn, showed me how to get started, and gave me a plan to use as I move forward. Great lesson . . . many thanks!
Mr. Warren; your work is praiseworthy. I’m Cuban and have downloaded tons of videos before, trying to learn gospel and thus playing at church out of the seven-basic-chords style I learned. In the videos I’ve seen before, everybody, even Christians, plays beautiful chord progressions but never explain clearly, usually using clusters to hide the origin of the chords and their roots. But your videos are so clear, so different… I downloaded them all since they are premium study material… now I know where the chords are coming from and where they are heading to… a real teacher who wants people to learn. Thank you bro, may God continues blessing you both spiritually and materially because you deserve it!!! Excuse any written mistake, I’m a Spanish-speaking person, hope this comment makes sense.
SandinoTV no problem my friend, I'm Jamaican and my wife is Puerto Rican... over English is wanky too lol. But I understood you clearly... thank you for the kind words and for following my channel.
I know of another pianist called Warren Carr, he was on an Australian children's television show called Play School. He was the main pianist on the show from 1972 until his death in 1993!
I remember hearing a diminished passing chord and will never forgot that moment. Still my favorite chord today other than a sharp 5 flat 9 5 chord... Keep them coming Warren
I had no idea ear is everything in music. Looking back I wasted so much time and money learning how open my throat , breath , placement and so on which has turned singing into a nightmare. I’ll be working on my ear training. Thanks for a great video.
Thank you, Warren. Man since I have been watching your videos and practicing a little more, my playing in church as well as my group, has improved greatly. ThanK you so much. I am actually enjoying playing more.
Kenneth Robinson wahhh that's awesome 👏🏽 you have no idea how much it pleases me to here this man, thank you 🙏🏾. Hey, would you like to feature this comment as testimonial on my website? No pressure - I'm setting up a testimonial page and would like to feature ppl who have seen improvements in their playing from watching my videos. Let me know. Thanks,
Kenneth Robinson thank man. Could you email it to me with your name, and a pic? The pic is not mandatory, but it would be cool. My email: war85ren@gmail.com
Thankyou so much Warren. I’m trying to prepare for an aural exam where I need to identify chords. As a flute player I don’t think in chords - your approach makes so much sense. Thanks again for sharing your amazing knowledge xxxx
This is absolute gold, my friend. I don't even play piano(I play guitar), but man the way you explained things, plus your playing were just on point. Thanks a lot!
Thank you. I can play well enough to help out in churches but I also want to be able to lower the song without writing chords in other peoples books. I can see chords when I read music but I’m so used to seeing them I can’t hear them to lower the song without chords written on page. I’ve spent two entire days in front of the piano trying to hear chords through the melody of the song hadn’t even crossed my mind to try listening to the bass!!!!! Obviously the bass is where I read the chord on the hymn books!!! Maybe just maybe with a little more practice as you have laid out maybe I can play by ear and be able to play without drawing so much attention to myself needing chords written out and such!
Great stuff!! That cheat sheet is going to help a lot of people. I myself have always used a few famous pop songs to "test" what interval is currently being sung/played in a piece of music. Like, if I suspect it might be the sixth note of the scale, I'll sing (to myself) the very tail end of 'She Loves You' by the Beatles, since that final extended "...yeeeaaahh" is a sixth above the root. Similarly, I'll often use ABBA's 'I Have a Dream' to test a note that I suspect is a fourth, since the word "dream" is a fourth above the root, etc. So yeah, if a person can just gather a few "go to" songs that work for them, they can then figure out intervals really easily at any given moment. 👍🏼
Hello Warren! When I play a song for the first time, I can never remember on the spot which chord progressions to play with a given song. And as I listen to a song in my head, I often have difficulty and am unable to make out the bass notes to identify the chord progressions. So I and I suspect many of us (consciously or subconsciously) use the following musical forms/patterns to extemporaneously reconstruct and play the chord progressions on the fly while walking through a song melody in our head: 1. The last root note of the basic chord (not inverted chords) of a song is almost always the same note (+1 or more octaves below) as the final note of the song/melody (or final note of the opening stanza/verse). 2. Otherwise, the root note of the basic chord is either 1, 3, or 5 note intervals BELOW the melodic notes played on the main down beats (or immediately after the main down beat when encountering passing melodic notes). Try playing some traditional Christmas carols on piano in the key of C to easily confirm this simple correspondence between melodic and root notes. 3. Form the chords by playing the root note and the notes at 5, 8, and 10 note intervals above the root note. Add intervals 7 and 9 to jazz it up. I’ve been able to use just these three simple patterns to identify the chords to play any given song melody (if you’re playing the piano) by simply and literally watching and visually identifying the melodic notes I am playing with my right hand on the main down beats - a process I’ve come to call “playing by sight” as opposed to “playing be ear” - a process that requires no abstract music theory and little or no mental effort. If you’re not playing the melody and just playing the chords, you’ll need to “play by ear” and use your ear to identify the melodic notes as you sing the melody in your head using the solfege (do-re-me) method and apply the steps above to identify the root notes and chords.
Thanks.I'm not yet a piano player, but as of today, I've been playing guitar over five years.But I'm frustrated that my musical ear is still not good.That's why I decided to check this out. After all, I learned basic music theory using a piano keyboard. In the future I can hopefully get to the point of transcribing piano songs to guitar, and I expect this video to help along the way achieve that ,as well as master my musical ear.
Thank you very much. I am a piano beginner and currently struggling with interval training. This is literally a video tutorial that I have been looking for!😳🤩
Warren, I find your channel is amazing and your way of explaining things is really authentic. Now, I need you please to advise me on how to use your playlists in order so I can watch them without skipping a drop. I am that type of guys who is very detailed. Also, I am an intermediate keyboard player but I keep watching beginner level lessons over and over again to help enforcing stuff and it works. Thanks
Wow!!! I can't believe this you're a superb teacher now I can find keys when playing songs with ur method u just explained using the sound Da da da.. God reachly bless you Sir
Thank you Warren for your kind heart, you are brilliant, I like all your tutorials. I bought your beginning's guide to learning the piano and intermediate's guide to learning the piano, you are explained all in details, slow and easy to understand, I enjoy them. Thank you Warren again.
Thank you for coming back to youtube with all of your videos I really appreciate your teaching. I understand the way you teach and I get everything. Keep going Warren because you do have followers.
Hey warren nice vid💯 I was wondering should I practice transcribe melodies (without chords) by ear. And if I do should I think of it in terms of intervals or from a scale point of view.
You should practice transcribing both chords and melodies. When transcribing chords, using the number system, and for melodies use both intervals and sulfege
Piano Lesson with Warren another question, when I’m practicing and breaking up a 30 min period into 10 minutes, should I consider the transcription as chord practice, or songs/repertoire
These are large topics that can’t be fully explained through a message reply. However, in short, you have to practice chords in a strategic way to learn and memorize them. In my program over at pianolessonwithwarren.com you learn all this stuff in step by step road map.
Warren, when you transcribe a melody, do you ear scale degrees (relative to the key center), chord tones (relative to the current chord) or intervals (relative to the previous note) ?
David I have a course coming out in 7-14 days on my website - it will be one of the best ear training courses for beginners and intermediates, so be on the look for that
I never though that a 1,2,3,4 chord had to do with intervals (by the way why do they use these fancy names in music like intervals ? if your a beginer it makes it sound harder then it is, makes me think of gymanstics or something.) so its like an A chords to a C is the song ``mad world`` and then I know the distance for that key, so I only have to remeber the notes like if I play the note G the 3d interval is a B?sry if its a dumb question, I think the ability to see the practical with the theory and also why are we learning etc has to be one of the first things people should learn, I wish I knew about this lessons sooner, instead of learning these ``bits`` of theory here and there, great lesson and its good that it covers all those aspects like the practical part with using your ears and theory and also some musicality which I like most with music
I enjoyed you lesson! Here is my question for musicians like me who can not sing at all, how will do we match the intervals like the the fourth in amazing grace?
Thank you for your expeditious response. I can recognize the pitches;I just can not sing them well! Thank you again,you are an outstanding teacher!@@PianoLessonwithWarren
Thanks for the explanation! It's intersting for me when did you start to train your own ears? Or it just has been coming with experience? What is your opinion about ear training not from childhood? I'm 19 yo and It seems like too late for training ear or composition for example.. Seeming like age may be a barrier, the brain isn't so fresh like in 10 for instance. Thank you if you reply!
Big thank you for you for making this video. This is very helpful. I've been trying to find ways I can learn music learning by ears to teach myself to play piano quicker. I will try to do what you told in your video lesson. It's very interesting approach by the way. Do you think a person still can play the piano well by ears even though they have reached old age like 42? or our capability degenerate as we get old?. I consider myself late learners and do not learn music consistently because of my mood. Sometimes I take a break too long and then continue learning again. I don't know why but as I get old I am more and more in love with learning to play a song specially as I learn I play along with it and just explore and make mistakes and explore all the cords I can find. Yours associating cords with emotion is awesome approach. Hopefully this will ingrain in my memory quicker and become automatic like yours.
Yes. The 70 year old here who had the requisite piano lessons from our chruch organist, all kinds of note reading, practiced to do that recital at the church, did well, but me that 10 year old did not have his heart and soul into it. Kinda pushed from Grandma. Well, here I am again and watch out. I'm bustin loose and the fingers are flying. I don't care, learning to fake it a bit and those arpeggios I contrive don't hurt at all too. Who's gonna know? Thank You Warren Dean Jackson Seattle
Do you usually play one handed triad chords with four notes, not three, one doubled? If so, regardless of inversion? Like E G C E for C major first inversion?
hey amazing video, it helped me a lot !! but i don't see the link of the song list based on intervals that you mention in the video.. can you share it please ?
✅ Download The Interval Recognition Cheat Sheet: pianolessonwithwarren.com/interval-recognition-cheat-sheet/
In my opinion, having a well-trained ear is better than having a lot of theoretical knowledge. At the end of the day, music is all about hearing and emotions. So while learning theory is absolutely essential, don't forget the other side of the equation - being able to understand what is heard.
Piano Lesson with Warren a
thank you warren my 8 year old daughter is learning from you
Piano Lesson with Warren thank God I'm just a drummer, lol
Michelle M 😂 I quit drums about 5 years ago, and finally decided to learn piano a year ago. Here’s to the next (hopefully) 50 years of getting to know it.
TightSqueeze Jam at FB Just a drummer?
major - felling great
minor - depression
diminished - losing sanity
augmented - pshycopath
Love this 😊🙏🏾👍🏽
Retro Gaming - Clash Of Clans that is as true as pshycopath
I call the diminished chord the "Snidley Whiplash" chord.
Dominant?
Most music teachers would show you the "door" to the music.. . while Warren would not only show you the "door".. .but also give you the "key" and explain how to use it .. . Thanks!
PY CHOU lol love this analogy, thanks ❤️
Wow that’s so true
I enjoyed singing out loud with you today. When I'm sad i'll come back and sing with you ok.
Pete S awe okay. What about playing? You don’t play the piano?
wow i practice this for 2 weeks and I noticed improvement in recognizing chords...thank u so much
YOG
Samuel Gyamfi you’re welcome
1. Practice singing major scale - 2:36
2. Practice singing two notes intervall - 3:28
3. Practice recognizing chords by their quality (major, minor, augmented ) - 5:45
4. Practice chord progression - 13:43
After taking stock of my playing, I had to admit that my greatest weaknesses are in the areas of identifying root movement, intervals, and chord quality. I checked out a bunch of people's videos to see if I could find something that would help, and while I discovered a lot of good stuff out there, none of it seemed to be quite what I was looking for . . . until I clicked on this one. You told me what I needed to learn, showed me how to get started, and gave me a plan to use as I move forward. Great lesson . . . many thanks!
Awesome, glad to hear the video helped ❤️
Mr. Warren; your work is praiseworthy. I’m Cuban
and have downloaded tons of videos before, trying to learn gospel and thus playing at church out of the seven-basic-chords style I learned.
In the videos I’ve seen before, everybody, even Christians, plays beautiful chord progressions but never explain clearly, usually using clusters to hide the origin of the chords and their roots.
But your videos are so clear, so different… I downloaded them all since they are premium study material… now I know where the chords are coming from and where they are heading to… a real teacher who wants people to learn.
Thank you bro, may God continues blessing you both spiritually and materially because you deserve it!!! Excuse any written mistake, I’m a Spanish-speaking person, hope this comment makes sense.
SandinoTV no problem my friend, I'm Jamaican and my wife is Puerto Rican... over English is wanky too lol. But I understood you clearly... thank you for the kind words and for following my channel.
what's the song you played when you first started you video....it's bugging' me...can't remember the song....lol thank you!
That intro was straight 🔥
Vincent Robinson awe thanks man 😊👍🏾
@@PianoLessonwithWarren I feel it coming by the weekend.
I know of another pianist called Warren Carr, he was on an Australian children's television show called Play School. He was the main pianist on the show from 1972 until his death in 1993!
Oh wow, may God rear his soul 😊🙏🏾
my 8 year old girl took piano over the years now she does guitar and she is a great singer thank you mr warren
Edwin Rivera you’re welcome 😊🙏🏾
I remember hearing a diminished passing chord and will never forgot that moment. Still my favorite chord today other than a sharp 5 flat 9 5 chord... Keep them coming Warren
Sure thing bro 😊🙏🏾
Really wonderful ! Anyone who studies with this man is fortunate ! He really knows what he is talking about !!!!!
Associating intervals and chords with emotions is an excellent method along with singing etc. Thanks Warren🙌🏾.
But when you sing clean intervals, they don't fit the evened-out intervals of the piano.
Excellent explanation! I’ve been singing for years and this will be valuable for practicing intervals! Thank you!!
Awesome, glad i able to help 😊🙏🏾👌🏾
Thank you! My RCM Test is just in about four hours! You've helped me so much. Wish me luck!
Mr. Warren, thank you so much for your generosity, these lessons are priceless!
I had no idea ear is everything in music.
Looking back I wasted so much time and money learning how open my throat , breath , placement and so on which has turned singing into a nightmare.
I’ll be working on my ear training.
Thanks for a great video.
As a gesture of my grattitude, i finished all d ads...bcause of ds blessing
Aweee thanks bro 😊🙏🏾👍🏽
I learn a lot from all your videos please keep it coming. Thanks God Bless you.
Edmond J thank you 😊
In just 5 minutes I learned more than from anyone else on how to finally hear chords. Thank you sir
Thank you, Warren. Man since I have been watching your videos and practicing a little more, my playing in church as well as my group, has improved greatly. ThanK you so much. I am actually enjoying playing more.
Kenneth Robinson wahhh that's awesome 👏🏽 you have no idea how much it pleases me to here this man, thank you 🙏🏾.
Hey, would you like to feature this comment as testimonial on my website? No pressure - I'm setting up a testimonial page and would like to feature ppl who have seen improvements in their playing from watching my videos. Let me know.
Thanks,
Piano Lesson with Warren Go for it! Man. It would be an honor.
Kenneth Robinson thank man. Could you email it to me with your name, and a pic? The pic is not mandatory, but it would be cool. My email: war85ren@gmail.com
Thankyou so much Warren. I’m trying to prepare for an aural exam where I need to identify chords. As a flute player I don’t think in chords - your approach makes so much sense. Thanks again for sharing your amazing knowledge xxxx
Maureen Thomson you’re welcome 😉
This is absolute gold, my friend. I don't even play piano(I play guitar), but man the way you explained things, plus your playing were just on point. Thanks a lot!
XS0780 thanks, man
Warren is the savior of humanity.
You just don’t know how much this has just helped me. God bless you 💯
The more I learn the more I wanna learn. Warren always refreshes us.
God bless u sir
Thank you. I can play well enough to help out in churches but I also want to be able to lower the song without writing chords in other peoples books. I can see chords when I read music but I’m so used to seeing them I can’t hear them to lower the song without chords written on page. I’ve spent two entire days in front of the piano trying to hear chords through the melody of the song hadn’t even crossed my mind to try listening to the bass!!!!! Obviously the bass is where I read the chord on the hymn books!!! Maybe just maybe with a little more practice as you have laid out maybe I can play by ear and be able to play without drawing so much attention to myself needing chords written out and such!
Great stuff!! That cheat sheet is going to help a lot of people. I myself have always used a few famous pop songs to "test" what interval is currently being sung/played in a piece of music. Like, if I suspect it might be the sixth note of the scale, I'll sing (to myself) the very tail end of 'She Loves You' by the Beatles, since that final extended "...yeeeaaahh" is a sixth above the root. Similarly, I'll often use ABBA's 'I Have a Dream' to test a note that I suspect is a fourth, since the word "dream" is a fourth above the root, etc.
So yeah, if a person can just gather a few "go to" songs that work for them, they can then figure out intervals really easily at any given moment. 👍🏼
Hello Warren! When I play a song for the first time, I can never remember on the spot which chord progressions to play with a given song. And as I listen to a song in my head, I often have difficulty and am unable to make out the bass notes to identify the chord progressions. So I and I suspect many of us (consciously or subconsciously) use the following musical forms/patterns to extemporaneously reconstruct and play the chord progressions on the fly while walking through a song melody in our head:
1. The last root note of the basic chord (not inverted chords) of a song is almost always the same note (+1 or more octaves below) as the final note of the song/melody (or final note of the opening stanza/verse).
2. Otherwise, the root note of the basic chord is either 1, 3, or 5 note intervals BELOW the melodic notes played on the main down beats (or immediately after the main down beat when encountering passing melodic notes). Try playing some traditional Christmas carols on piano in the key of C to easily confirm this simple correspondence between melodic and root notes.
3. Form the chords by playing the root note and the notes at 5, 8, and 10 note intervals above the root note. Add intervals 7 and 9 to jazz it up.
I’ve been able to use just these three simple patterns to identify the chords to play any given song melody (if you’re playing the piano) by simply and literally watching and visually identifying the melodic notes I am playing with my right hand on the main down beats - a process I’ve come to call “playing by sight” as opposed to “playing be ear” - a process that requires no abstract music theory and little or no mental effort.
If you’re not playing the melody and just playing the chords, you’ll need to “play by ear” and use your ear to identify the melodic notes as you sing the melody in your head using the solfege (do-re-me) method and apply the steps above to identify the root notes and chords.
This cool bro, some of it was too abstract to follow, but if it works for you I say go ahead bro 😊👍🏽
You're an EXCELLENT piano /music teacher!
I appreciate what you're doing.
Thanks.I'm not yet a piano player, but as of today, I've been playing guitar over five years.But I'm frustrated that my musical ear is still not good.That's why I decided to check this out. After all, I learned basic music theory using a piano keyboard. In the future I can hopefully get to the point of transcribing piano songs to guitar, and I expect this video to help along the way achieve that ,as well as master my musical ear.
Ato Cox thanks for watching man 😊👍🏾
Yeah, piano is great for that. I also do drums.
Thank you very much. I am a piano beginner and currently struggling with interval training. This is literally a video tutorial that I have been looking for!😳🤩
Thank you sir , I'm finding it difficult to identify the chord, but with this I will improve
Warren, I find your channel is amazing and your way of explaining things is really authentic.
Now, I need you please to advise me on how to use your playlists in order so I can watch them without skipping a drop. I am that type of guys who is very detailed. Also, I am an intermediate keyboard player but I keep watching beginner level lessons over and over again to help enforcing stuff and it works.
Thanks
My playlists are grouped my categories such as “chords, scales, songs, theory and concepts.” So you can video them based on those grouping
I thought so.
Thx bro :)
Wow!!! I can't believe this you're a superb teacher now I can find keys when playing songs with ur method u just explained using the sound Da da da.. God reachly bless you Sir
You’re welcome 😉
Thank you for this video!But you should do a full video for the cover you're were playing at the beginning😭😭😭It's so amazing!
David Rotimi awww thanks man, next time 😊
what's the song again.....first song???
Warren is a great teacher
Thank you Warren for your kind heart, you are brilliant, I like all your tutorials. I bought your beginning's guide to learning the piano and intermediate's guide to learning the piano, you are explained all in details, slow and easy to understand, I enjoy them. Thank you Warren again.
sam bui thank you for your purchase and thank you for following my channel.
Man you're a hero! Thank you so much 💕
Ali Art 😊👍🏾🙏🏾
Thank you for coming back to youtube with all of your videos I really appreciate your teaching. I understand the way you teach and I get everything. Keep going Warren because you do have followers.
Jovan Ashton thanks for the motivation chief, always appreciate the positive feedbacks 🙏🏾👊🏾
Thank you, sir. I love this tutorial. really want to be in your level.
Great video again Mr. Warren. Really appreciate your videos.
Just Mr. O thanks bro 😊👍🏾
Really liked it. Piano is beautiful. :)
Thanks 😊
This lesson is awesome. I have learned a lot, thanks.
Great lesson, if you can sing it you can probably play it. this lesson is invaluable. thanks so much.
Perfect explanation ! Great work !
Thanks for watching 😊👍🏽🙏🏾
Man, this lesson is mere gold, thank you! And your playing is sensational... keep it up!
ArgoBeats thanks man 👍🏾😊
Great lesson Warren, thanks for sharing!
Do you recommend using solfege for interval practicing?
Absolutely 👍🏽
Hey warren nice vid💯 I was wondering should I practice transcribe melodies (without chords) by ear. And if I do should I think of it in terms of intervals or from a scale point of view.
You should practice transcribing both chords and melodies. When transcribing chords, using the number system, and for melodies use both intervals and sulfege
Piano Lesson with Warren another question, when I’m practicing and breaking up a 30 min period into 10 minutes, should I consider the transcription as chord practice, or songs/repertoire
ProdByNari ! No I would practice transcription separately as it takes time. I’ve spent easily 2 hours transcribing 1 minute of music.
Thank you Warren ! Pleasure to watch a real PROFESSIONAL
Nikolay Ryzhikov awwwww 😊🙏🏾
Thank you I learned something today. I still hv alot ahead of me.
i just switched from keyboard to piano, tryin to get used to tapping to keys 😅 and hope i will train my ear with this video thank you!😇😇
Some great tools and tips you provided here. Thanks Warren!
You’re welcome 😉
Thanks. What is the best way to learn the chords as a beginner till advanced please? How do you create harmonies improvise?
These are large topics that can’t be fully explained through a message reply. However, in short, you have to practice chords in a strategic way to learn and memorize them. In my program over at pianolessonwithwarren.com you learn all this stuff in step by step road map.
@@PianoLessonwithWarren thank you. I really enjoyed you tube is inspiring and motivating. All the best :)
@@jessicapsalmist8205 thank you 🙏🏾
Warren, when you transcribe a melody, do you ear scale degrees (relative to the key center), chord tones (relative to the current chord) or intervals (relative to the previous note) ?
All the the above - I use all those techniques when transcribing 😊
@@PianoLessonwithWarren Ok. Well I guess there is no shortcut ! I have to train way more !
David no short cuts buddy, it takes time, effort, patience, and consistency. But it’s sooooo worth it man 😊👍🏽🙏🏾
@@PianoLessonwithWarren Do you have any good exercice to pratice identifying scale degrees in a melody ?
David I have a course coming out in 7-14 days on my website - it will be one of the best ear training courses for beginners and intermediates, so be on the look for that
Wow this is one of the best videos I've watched so far ❤️
You are a very good teacher ..think this is one of your best lessons ..Dave
d16lev awww 🙏🏾
I never though that a 1,2,3,4 chord had to do with intervals (by the way why do they use these fancy names in music like intervals ? if your a beginer it makes it sound harder then it is, makes me think of gymanstics or something.) so its like an A chords to a C is the song ``mad world`` and then I know the distance for that key, so I only have to remeber the notes like if I play the note G the 3d interval is a B?sry if its a dumb question, I think the ability to see the practical with the theory and also why are we learning etc has to be one of the first things people should learn, I wish I knew about this lessons sooner, instead of learning these ``bits`` of theory here and there, great lesson and its good that it covers all those aspects like the practical part with using your ears and theory and also some musicality which I like most with music
Thank you Warren for this great lesson.
Bo Song 😊🙏🏾
Powerful lesson. Thank you.
Wow this is an amazing approach to training your ear!!!!! Thank you Warren!! I’m a bass player btw!
Fran C. Thanks for watching bro, and all instrumentalists are welcome
Thank you for the lesson
linda nassanga you're welcome :)
I want that interval cheat sheet
Thank you soo much Warren Sir. Its an amazing video. Very very helpful. Lots of love from India. God bless
Durga Lakshmi Subramanian thank yuh bro 😊👍🏽🙏🏾
sounds like you feel it comin' 😁
You got it 😊🙏🏾👍🏽
What I have been looking for. God bless you plenty.👏👏👏
I enjoyed you lesson! Here is my question for musicians like me who can not sing at all, how will do we match the intervals like the the fourth in amazing grace?
Don’t have to be able to sing, but pitch recognition is necessary. It is not impossible to learn
Thank you for your expeditious response. I can recognize the pitches;I just can not sing them well! Thank you again,you are an outstanding teacher!@@PianoLessonwithWarren
Edward Danville just keep practicing them bro
This is really helpful. Thank you boss. You also get time to reply each comment. God bless you
DesmondOwusuWIFI lol thanks man, it's man passion, thanks for watching 👍🏾
The explanation of recognizing chords through emotion was very helpful. Great video!
Breakthrough video for me. Thanks so much!
Thanks for sharing this, Warren. I think I learned something new! I'm on my way to practice!
Dave Morgang you’re welcome 😉
Thanks for the explanation! It's intersting for me when did you start to train your own ears? Or it just has been coming with experience? What is your opinion about ear training not from childhood? I'm 19 yo and It seems like too late for training ear or composition for example.. Seeming like age may be a barrier, the brain isn't so fresh like in 10 for instance. Thank you if you reply!
Савельён I started to learn the piano from scratch at age 18, so my ear training started then. It’s never too late to start.
@@PianoLessonwithWarren Wowww what an insane progression!
Chords 5:50
I thought it will be helpful
Great video!! Thank you. Subscribed!
Big thank you for you for making this video. This is very helpful. I've been trying to find ways I can learn music learning by ears to teach myself to play piano quicker. I will try to do what you told in your video lesson. It's very interesting approach by the way. Do you think a person still can play the piano well by ears even though they have reached old age like 42? or our capability degenerate as we get old?. I consider myself late learners and do not learn music consistently because of my mood. Sometimes I take a break too long and then continue learning again. I don't know why but as I get old I am more and more in love with learning to play a song specially as I learn I play along with it and just explore and make mistakes and explore all the cords I can find. Yours associating cords with emotion is awesome approach. Hopefully this will ingrain in my memory quicker and become automatic like yours.
Lumadi Bawono thanks for watching. It’s never too old to start or get better. Just remember consistency is the key, so don’t take too long of a break
Warren I really enjoyed your video and I’m thinking of learning on a keyboard. Can you learn all you need on 61 keys or do I need 88
66 keys is tough. It’s better to get 88 keys.
God stuff Warren. I'm hooked, finally! Thank you, Dean from Seattle.
You’re welcome, thanks for watching 😊🙏🏾
Yes. The 70 year old here who had the requisite piano lessons from our chruch organist, all kinds of note reading, practiced to do that recital at the church, did well, but me that 10 year old did not have his heart and soul into it. Kinda pushed from Grandma. Well, here I am again and watch out. I'm bustin loose and the fingers are flying. I don't care, learning to fake it a bit and those arpeggios I contrive don't hurt at all too. Who's gonna know?
Thank You
Warren
Dean Jackson
Seattle
Dk J thanks awesome 😎🙏🏾
Very amazing piece of education here. Great work, great playing
Do you usually play one handed triad chords with four notes, not three, one doubled? If so, regardless of inversion? Like E G C E for C major first inversion?
I’m chord playing changes based on they style of song I’m playing.
Interval Cheat sheet, was mentioned. Im trying to find its link. This is great, simple and straightforward. Thanks
I can't find it as well
Similar ones can be found online, Google.
What a excellent explaination I'm big fan of you sir....
shivanand sakhare thanks 🙏🏾
Warren : Music is all about being able to hear
Beethoven : (^_^)
I hope I can keep subscribing to this channel
Answer?
clean reservation answer?
Actually the ascending melodic scale is my favourite so far...
you are great. God bless you and bless your family
Wow! This has really helped me a lot. Thanks Warren.
Yomi Omotehinwa 😊👍🏾
I liked your way of teaching, superb!
hey amazing video, it helped me a lot !! but i don't see the link of the song list based on intervals that you mention in the video.. can you share it please ?
Thank very much for this lesson, I love it.
*Keep teaching brother 👊*
Warren u are really good. God bless u
sam hagan 😊👍🏽
This was the best tutorial ever
Great lesson warren thx
A very good video! Got screwed on the base notes, very difficult those parts.
Yes, the bass can be tricky
thanks for the lesson... so big brother can maybe if u can make a video of how to play praise songs
This was an amazing video keep up the good work mr. Warren
Thank you so much for this! Excellent tutorial!