Wow, was it ever humbling for me to slow the piece I was learning down and use the metronome so I could play that piece evenly. I'm glad that I have headphones so no one else has to listen to me! Regardless of my ego bruise, thank you again for the practice tip and I'll keep trying. Another good video worth watching.
Sometimes my stopping stems from me trying to match sure that my hands are in the right positions and I am able to play right notes and chords. I end up looking at my hands to confirm they are where I want them to be. How can you learn to trust and train your hands to do what they need to without eye confirmation so you can focus on the sheet music?
Hi Justin! Thanks for the comment. This is a skill all in itself. Developing that spatial awareness comes with time. I would recommend practicing for 15 min a day sight reading through easier pieces, using the black notes as landmarks, and taking it very slow. If you do this continually, you should see major progress.
When you practice slow, how do you make sure your choice of fingering or technique is correct so it translates to a faster tempo? Maybe this isn’t a problem on piano? Aren’t there a number of ways to play a passage slowly but some don’t scale to a faster tempo?
Thanks so much for the question! The choice of fingering usually lies within the preparation stage of learning a new piece. This video is focused more towards the stage where you are working towards mastery and memorization through drills, etc. Your point on technique is an interesting one because it’s one I’ve encountered before when studying faster chopin etudes. I realized when I wanted to do slow practice I would not play it legato because I knew that when I played it fast, it would be wiser for me to play staccato since legato playing impedes speed. There are so many things to talk about though! This video kept it pretty basic 😁
What are some mistakes that you sometimes make in your practice? COMMENT BELOW 😁⬇️
Wow, was it ever humbling for me to slow the piece I was learning down and use the metronome so I could play that piece evenly. I'm glad that I have headphones so no one else has to listen to me! Regardless of my ego bruise, thank you again for the practice tip and I'll keep trying. Another good video worth watching.
@@jamescoates6612 Haha! Yeah that metronome is something else. Thanks for the comment!
Yep we are all guilty of this. I always have to remind myself to slow down. One of the easiest things you can do to improve your piano playing.
💯 It’s the little things that make the biggest difference!
I really enjoy your lesson and I get a lot out of them, thank you for doing this, 🎉🎉
Yesss! Glad you liked it Salman!
Sometimes my stopping stems from me trying to match sure that my hands are in the right positions and I am able to play right notes and chords. I end up looking at my hands to confirm they are where I want them to be.
How can you learn to trust and train your hands to do what they need to without eye confirmation so you can focus on the sheet music?
Hi Justin! Thanks for the comment. This is a skill all in itself. Developing that spatial awareness comes with time. I would recommend practicing for 15 min a day sight reading through easier pieces, using the black notes as landmarks, and taking it very slow. If you do this continually, you should see major progress.
When you practice slow, how do you make sure your choice of fingering or technique is correct so it translates to a faster tempo? Maybe this isn’t a problem on piano? Aren’t there a number of ways to play a passage slowly but some don’t scale to a faster tempo?
Thanks so much for the question! The choice of fingering usually lies within the preparation stage of learning a new piece. This video is focused more towards the stage where you are working towards mastery and memorization through drills, etc. Your point on technique is an interesting one because it’s one I’ve encountered before when studying faster chopin etudes. I realized when I wanted to do slow practice I would not play it legato because I knew that when I played it fast, it would be wiser for me to play staccato since legato playing impedes speed. There are so many things to talk about though! This video kept it pretty basic 😁