Ilia, you are a professional soloist, have been principal cello in a brilliant orchestra and you are still able to give absolutely clear, detailed and illustrated lessons for others, breaking down tricky things into simpler elements. These are all individual skills, each one of which you perfect. Your videos are extremely helpful. Thank you. Any tips/exercises/demos of vibrato, please?
I've been playing low brass instruments in orchestras and bands for 50 years. Scales are a major part of our daily practice. I find it odd that string players don't play scales. I've been playing the cello for 6 months and follow you quite closely. I have a new found respect for string players. I can't tell you how many times brass players sat in the back of the orchestra rolling their eyes as the conductor would rehearse the strings endlessly.
This is "basic" stuff but honestly having your list laid out so clearly is super helpful for me. I just started an elementary school string orchestra teaching gig and I'm having to relearn how I can both find time to spend with my instrument outside of "work music" time and how to enjoy that time. This is gonna be a great starting reference point.
im 29 and just over one month into playing the cello. scales are one of my favorite warm ups to help me practice intonation and sound production before practicing my pieces and cant wait to ad arpeggios to my list of warm ups
Thank you so much for this video, I've been struggling because of these issues you have mentioned, but somehow couldn't deal with them all at the same time..
Awesome tips man, thanks for this! I go to South Carolina Governors School for Arts for cello so I’ll be sure to use this every day in my practice sessions!
Yes, scales and arpeggios are great, don’t like it when I was sitting for exams with all the dogmatic practices, now that I’m playing more pieces, found that these are great for smooth finger changes and understanding the “geography” of the notes😊 Thumb position is really an unique “poise” for cellist😊 Great video, maestro👏👏 Greetings from Malaysia
Hi Ilya, great channel! I have played cello for a long while when I was younger and stopped for several years. I am looking to get back into it. Do you ever record your practice lessons, then listen to it? Do you know if that is helpful for our progress? Florian
Hi Florain, thank you so much! Me personally, I never record. It’s like recording myself talking, and then listening to my own voice (why I am doing TH-cam???). Jokes aside, I do highly recommend to record and track your playing as you will listen to it as third person view. Because when we play, sometimes we do not hear the small little details. Hope that helps. Have a great day and enjoy coming back to the cello! Greetings!
@@IliaLaporevcellist Thanks! I got the idea from amateur tennis, where many of us also record ourselves - how we think we are playing vs. how we are actually playing is often very different.
I think my problem (as a self taught+ TH-cam) is that I play all arpeggios in the 1st position, except on the A string... because i don't know the best way to play each key... Also, sight reading has been the absolute best thing that improved my playing and confidence. Then I circle the things i couldn't sight read and exercise those phrases separately.
It‘s possible to play all Bach Cello Suites without thump position (which was unknown at his time), even if you need a 5-string instrument for the 6th. And Bach‘s Cello Suites aren’t the same level as „twinkle, twinkle, little star“…
Klengel's the answer to good technique. Mix it up and play in different ways in. Broken thirds, parallel octaves, etc. Also various tempos. Great results! You give great lessons. Love it!
🎻 BOOK YOUR ONLINE CELLO LESSON WITH ME!
www.laporevilia.com/online-cello-lessons
Ilia, you are a professional soloist, have been principal cello in a brilliant orchestra and you are still able to give absolutely clear, detailed and illustrated lessons for others, breaking down tricky things into simpler elements. These are all individual skills, each one of which you perfect. Your videos are extremely helpful. Thank you. Any tips/exercises/demos of vibrato, please?
As a beginner on cello your advice are invaluable. Merci !!
I've been playing low brass instruments in orchestras and bands for 50 years. Scales are a major part of our daily practice. I find it odd that string players don't play scales. I've been playing the cello for 6 months and follow you quite closely. I have a new found respect for string players. I can't tell you how many times brass players sat in the back of the orchestra rolling their eyes as the conductor would rehearse the strings endlessly.
This is a quality tutorial.
Thank you for your generosity! 🙏🏻
This is "basic" stuff but honestly having your list laid out so clearly is super helpful for me. I just started an elementary school string orchestra teaching gig and I'm having to relearn how I can both find time to spend with my instrument outside of "work music" time and how to enjoy that time. This is gonna be a great starting reference point.
Indeed! Very basic stuff, but oh so important. Good luck for your teaching gig! Thanks for stopping by!
im 29 and just over one month into playing the cello. scales are one of my favorite warm ups to help me practice intonation and sound production before practicing my pieces and cant wait to ad arpeggios to my list of warm ups
Always thumbs up !!!👋👋👋
I love scales. My teacher is always telling me to spend less time on scales. However progress still sucks and its incredibly frustrating.
Thank you so much for this video, I've been struggling because of these issues you have mentioned, but somehow couldn't deal with them all at the same time..
Great video! Very motivational and useful! Thanks a lot!
Thank you for stopping by and to comment. Much appreciated! Happy that it is very motivational for you! Have a great weekend!
Know my exercise routine now. Thanks Ilia. Hopefully someday I can have a lesson with you.
Awesome! Yes, please reach me out whenever you want!
Very helpful
Glad you found it helpful, thank you for watching!
This video was very helpful thank you so much!
Happy you found it helpful! You are welcome!
Scales, arpeggios, 7th chords in 1,2,3,4,8,12,16ths every day; the best
Absolutely! 💯
So much music with scales as the foundation. Thanks.
Absolutely! Arpeggios also by the way 😁
When practicing trills between second and fourth fingers, should third finger also be used to help the fourth finger?
Awesome tips man, thanks for this! I go to South Carolina Governors School for Arts for cello so I’ll be sure to use this every day in my practice sessions!
Thanks! Awesome! Good luck and have fun at the Governor’s School for Arts!
Yes, scales and arpeggios are great, don’t like it when I was sitting for exams with all the dogmatic practices, now that I’m playing more pieces, found that these are great for smooth finger changes and understanding the “geography” of the notes😊
Thumb position is really an unique “poise” for cellist😊
Great video, maestro👏👏
Greetings from Malaysia
You are a great teacher🎉
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it and watched!
I enjoy too enjoy arpeggios more than scales.
Hi Ilya, great channel! I have played cello for a long while when I was younger and stopped for several years. I am looking to get back into it. Do you ever record your practice lessons, then listen to it? Do you know if that is helpful for our progress? Florian
Hi Florain, thank you so much! Me personally, I never record. It’s like recording myself talking, and then listening to my own voice (why I am doing TH-cam???). Jokes aside, I do highly recommend to record and track your playing as you will listen to it as third person view. Because when we play, sometimes we do not hear the small little details. Hope that helps. Have a great day and enjoy coming back to the cello! Greetings!
@@IliaLaporevcellist Thanks! I got the idea from amateur tennis, where many of us also record ourselves - how we think we are playing vs. how we are actually playing is often very different.
I think my problem (as a self taught+ TH-cam) is that I play all arpeggios in the 1st position, except on the A string... because i don't know the best way to play each key...
Also, sight reading has been the absolute best thing that improved my playing and confidence. Then I circle the things i couldn't sight read and exercise those phrases separately.
❤ 6:52
Yes! Long bow strokes! 😃
Scales are like opening a path in a dense forest: when you clear a walkway, you have to keep walking through it constantly to keep the path open.
Love the storytelling Ricardo!
It‘s possible to play all Bach Cello Suites without thump position (which was unknown at his time), even if you need a 5-string instrument for the 6th.
And Bach‘s Cello Suites aren’t the same level as „twinkle, twinkle, little star“…
I though #1 would be an exercise to improve vibrato.
It actually depends, if it’s an beginner, then not really. Vibrato is something pretty advanced.
I hate scales
😂😂😂
Klengel's the answer to good technique. Mix it up and play in different ways in. Broken thirds, parallel octaves, etc. Also various tempos. Great results! You give great lessons. Love it!
@stevegebhart8388 Ah! Our dear old friend Klengel! He always reminds us to stay humble 😄 Thank you for watching and happy you loved it!
Только вот гаммы , Арпеджио играют в 4 октавы , а не в 3 .
Вообще да, обязательно надо играть с 4 октавы. Ну как видео для начинающих, поэтому 3 октавы.