So, which of these bad habits do you find yourself doing? 0:00 5 Bad Habits to Avoid 0:32 Habit 5 2:01 Habit 4 2:55 Habit 3 4:03 Habit 2 5:05 Habit 1
@Imwarrior_3 жыл бұрын
Hello bro i love your content and can you do a full musique on piano pls just for see how well you play i love listent musique from you❤
@jigneshbhai64913 жыл бұрын
Habit no. 3 & 4 really i found this my habits🙏
@arthurgamerpro65593 жыл бұрын
Thankfully, when I had my teacher she told me most of these, now self-teaching myself with a little harder pieces I like I find those techniques more useful. I will describe myself as a memorizer, but lately I found out that combining both work the best, since with harder pieces short silences, are difficult to memorize and reading where those are is very useful to help myself. Thanks again, great video.
@lapindespices28063 жыл бұрын
I clearly rely to much on memorisation. I don't fall that much in other traps since I've learned the actual efficiency of praticing that at slow pace a few amount of thing in isolation. Putting hands together is actually the hardest time, maybe it's 1+1=7 in my case.
@politereminder62843 жыл бұрын
FIVE BAD HABITS 5. . Always practicing hands together. (One plus one equals 5 ) 4. Always practicing with the pedal. 3. Not practicing daily. ( Allow your sleep to transfer memories of whatever little you've learned instead of trying to cram too much into long rare practices) 2. Working too much by memory or by reading. Develop both skills. 1. Practicing too fast. Always go back to slow practice so you can be conscious about the notes and play cleanly
@expatannie69583 жыл бұрын
Another bad habit, according to my teacher, is what he calls "biting off more than you can chew", in other words, wanting to play through the whole piece all at once, instead of starting off with a few bars and not going on to the next few until those have been mastered. It can be slow going -- and a little frustrating when you are chomping at the bit to move forward -- but I think the approach does ultimately obtains the best results.
@mimicotom3 жыл бұрын
When learning a new song, I learn two lines a day. Master those and move on. I did start out wanting to play the whole song, but then frustration set in. My teacher and your teacher are right. Learn slow to grow.
@mrskye083 жыл бұрын
I agree. :) I stopped playing for a decade and now im back to square one. Im trying to read clementi sonatinas and it's a pain to learn the entire movement at once. I'm learning patience more than playing piano tbh... Also biting more than can chew also mean another thing: when a pianist wants to learn a piece that's not up to his/her level. I'm a victim of that a decade before. I got too fast in learning harder and harder pieces and realized my hands can no longer do it. I got frustrated and ultimately stopped playing thinking at was at my talent's end. I didn't even give myself a chance to breathe. I was learning sonatas and i didn't even know hanon :(
@tomwanders60223 жыл бұрын
I am the opposite of that, I am often staying with the parts i learned, which then holds my progress back.
@heyyy70893 жыл бұрын
@@tomwanders6022 bro sameeee
@lina.loverboy64543 жыл бұрын
yes you should do this with any instruments
@spartan4562 жыл бұрын
Something very important to note about sleep: your brain actually solves problems while you're sleeping, too. I have noticed that if I practice a small chunk of something difficult (very slowly) before going to sleep, I almost always end up having the ability to play it perfectly after I wake up. Compared to just practicing one time at some point in the evening, I have noticed significantly better results when I practice a bit first thing in the morning, and then save whatever is causing me trouble for just before I go to bed. _Morning_ practice is incredibly effective, and it pairs perfectly with the whole sleeping thing. Often times the first thing I do when I wake up is start tickling the keys just to see if I can finally play whatever thing I was trying to practice the night before. I don't go through a whole practice routine when I wake up, but I do at least try to run through whatever small part I was working on the night before. Practice every single day for sure, but if you can manage it, save whatever is giving you the most trouble for right before you to go bed. Try to work it out, then go to sleep. And the first chance you get when you wake up, try to play it. You just might surprise yourself!
@EmoryBlake4Music3 жыл бұрын
Jazer, I came into this very curious about what bad habits you were going to address, and I was astonished to find out that these are all things that I say to my students already. BUT, it's very refreshing to know that I am already telling my students the same things that a pro pianist at YOUR level would also say. I guess I'm a better teacher than I thought . . .thank you for the encouragement! Subscribed!
@spectralavatar35503 жыл бұрын
:D thank you for teaching such a beautiful instrument
@EmoryBlake4Music3 жыл бұрын
@@spectralavatar3550 you bet! I teach nearly 60 private lessons a week, mostly kids, and it's the biggest pleasure I could ask for. If we don't have music teachers to teach music to today's youth then there will be no musicians in the future. (set aside the likelihood of virtual teachers, bots, dna editing and music that is 100% electronic). So not only is it enjoyable, it is a necessity for our kids and the most rewarding career I could ask for.
@SloshyString1643 жыл бұрын
I feel like I've seen you in real life.
@EmoryBlake4Music3 жыл бұрын
@@SloshyString164 nah that was some other guy
@ironicjason2572 жыл бұрын
Sir Emory it's me Joe
@SmellyBones2 жыл бұрын
Here's a teacher generous enough to make teaching videos for free, and gracious enough to call people "self taught" while teaching us. Thank you Jazer Lee!
@sx99cornell3 жыл бұрын
3:08 that is true to me! For me, hours of practicing even just a few notes will NOT translate into a smooth piece of melody until the next day. And magic just happens the next day after I woke up, it's like my brain and my hands kept on practicing while I was in bed. But the key for me is to practice right before I go to bed.
@reeganl982 жыл бұрын
Oh my god this has been me the past few days cuz I just started and then I play in the morning and I’m a whole new person somehow. Soooo much better the next day after I wake up!!
@kimieti2 жыл бұрын
yesss me too i’ve made note of this a while ago! if anything once I start playing for too long at once it’s like I can almost get worse. I have to give my brain time to marinate the song lmao and when I wake up the next day I can play whatever I was struggling with the day before instantly
@paulldunbar03282 жыл бұрын
very true, this is the case with me. my fingers stumble upon eachother a lot, just like a flock of sheep, but after sleeping, they are almost dancing butterflies on the keyboard
@jurisbirznieks77812 жыл бұрын
How are the neighbours feeling about that?
@black_hammer27892 жыл бұрын
@@jurisbirznieks7781 get a pair of head phones if you are playing on the keys
@keithporter98222 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for posting this! I've been playing for ~40 years, and I've slipped into multiple bad habits, my playing got stale and my motivation dropped. By getting back to these important foundations you've refreshed my perspective, and my playing has found a new lease of life! I am so grateful :)
@danielburton50622 жыл бұрын
I’ve been self learning for about 2months now and I’m glad I came across your videos even before I started playing. Every video I’ve watched makes me conscious of what my potential bad habits are, so I’m trying my best to correct them as I’m learning. Keep the amazing vids coming!!
@peterpike3 жыл бұрын
1) I'm a memorizer and definitely need to work more on my sight reading. 2) I was about to object to the point about emphasizing practicing both hands separately, but then remembered you said this was for "Beginners." I definitely agree that it's critical for beginners to do that, so don't take this as a criticism--I think what you said was perfect. For me, however, with more than 30 years of playing music, my brain *wants* the different hands doing different things. It's hard to describe, but the closest I can get is if you're playing polyrhythms on drums, where one hand is in 4/4 and the other is in 5/4, or something similar. For me, it's actually more difficult to separate them out and NOT play simultaneously, because my hands begin to play off each other, like a dance. My right hand "knows" when to move to the next note because it's following my left hand's direction, and vice versa, so when I try to only play one hand, that hand gets confused because it's lacking a director. I still do play one-hand at a time through super complex portions while slow-playing to learn it (which is super important, as you stated). But when I do that, I have to focus on counting to such an extent that it's basically the same mental work needed to just play with the other hand keeping beat (in fact, sometimes I'm tapping with the other hand anyway, just because the kinesthetics help me keep my rhythms better). But even saying all that, I know that 1) I am weird so this could be just me, and 2) it took decades of playing various instruments that forced both hands to do different tasks simultaneously for my brain to get to that place, so definitely not for beginners.
@BlindfoldedFox3 жыл бұрын
You’re other hand is helping the other but that clearly tells that you don’t have as much hand dependency as sight reading as you could..even at high piano levels, you should practice hands separate to do independent phrasing and all in order to correct this mistake that is playing so much according to the other hand. It’s like in a band that one guy that doesn’t know how to count but he guides himself so much by other elements that he gets by. And being a memorizer (at the piano iam too) it’s so much easier to memorize the patterns between two hands, than just read hands independently according to the beat.
@GUNSHAFTER3 жыл бұрын
Same
@5awdust2 жыл бұрын
Not a pianist, but a violinist, I still think some of these are good tips, especially the practicing ones. I very much prefer memorizing pieces than reading, but I know how important both are! Also, some pieces sound cool when you change the tempo, sometimes the general vibe of it completely changes, so it’s fun to play both fast and slow!
@arhamhasan39582 жыл бұрын
as another violinist, the "practice with just one hand" tip worked really well.
@cainancapko41493 жыл бұрын
I'm definitely more of a memorization person, so I need to work more on my reading. I also never really considered going back to slow practice after learning songs, so that's something I'll have to start doing more. Always appreciate your videos, Jazer!
@ducky60222 жыл бұрын
Same same
@karenasawa4332 жыл бұрын
Can relate to all of them, particularly the last one where you get “trapped” in bad muscle memory when having practised a piece for a few weeks and everything sounds muddled and uncontrolled. It’s so very irritating. You just can’t be bothered going back to playing slowly but you know you really should…
@rajkovin34433 жыл бұрын
Memorizer. Even after memorizing a piece, I can’t follow the sheet while playing. I can relate to all of these. Thanks for the reminder.
@sophiethehuman96952 жыл бұрын
I’m definitely a memoriser- that thing you said about your skill feeling capped is actually exactly what I’m going through right now, if you have any tips for how I could improve my sight reading it would be much appreciated (or if there are any videos you can link)
@darkalligraph3 жыл бұрын
I am self taught for 1 year and 8 months.. good to know I haven't fallen into these bad habits. I've practiced daily since I started in April 2020, and found on my own that practicing each hand seperately before putting them together helps, and all the other tips you gave. My main issue, is I have no idea how to sight read. I am 100% the second group. Although everyone's goals are different. For me, my dad taught me how to play by ear, and I mostly do that now. (obviously not for classical pieces though) It's a very different way of learning to sheet music. But for me, it is useful to be able to play anything on the spot without anything written down, transpose to any key to match a singer's vocal range, etc. It's also just cool to understand chord progressions and why things sound the way they are, and it keeps me interested. So yeah, learning sheet music will certainly be useful and I probably will one day, but right now it's probably okay.
@thepriceisright9353 жыл бұрын
Yeah that’s me as well
@JoBot__3 жыл бұрын
Same, although I taught myself Rondo Alla Turca by ear.
@pianoforte59643 жыл бұрын
Even I have the same case
@mariashamoun29093 жыл бұрын
So cool that you can play by just hearing the song! I wish i could do that.
@rogueywougey75453 жыл бұрын
My tip is learn middle c, d, and e, learn where they are on the piano (treble clef) for bass clef, learn middle c, b, and a. Thats how i started, reading sheet music can take a little time tbh, but its an important skill to learn for sure
@judymartin21952 жыл бұрын
I started learning to play when I was 70! I am in book three of Alfred's Adult lessons. I can relate to ask of these but most esp wanting to always play with two hands! Thank you!
@Francinestube3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jazer for all these lessons. I love your way of teaching and the setting. My husband, who plays the bagpipe, never uses sheet music once he's learnt the song; me, on the other hand, rely heavily on the sheet if I'm playing a wind instrument. If I'm playing the piano I prefer relying on my memory once I've mastered the song. I am guilty of playing too fast and have been working on it.
@pariagharibi99832 жыл бұрын
I’ve bee playing the piano for over two years now and I have couple of these bad habits. Practicing with both hands most often, I automatically memorize and my reading is not great, sometimes I practice fast, 😣 Thank you for this video. It helped me to become aware of my bad habits and I will change them.
@BK-si1ut3 жыл бұрын
Sight reader here. I have done all of these. Not practicing daily is my week has been my weekness. One other advantage of not playing with the pedal to much is that it forces you to learn to play legato better. The pedal also hides mistakes (sort of) that should be addressed and not covered up. It becomes easier to play cleaner without the pedal.
@eliasasuming-brempong96912 жыл бұрын
Spot on
@rubenarredondo14852 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@jazerleepiano2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I truly appreciate your support, Ruben!
@deborahseddon93013 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your brilliant, thorough, and thoughtful teaching! I've learnt so much from you and every video is really helpful. I've been trying to learn both reading and memorizing. So glad to hear you recommend this.
@nobsmusic93582 жыл бұрын
Jazer, it's apparent you not only are a talented musician in your own right, but a wise a highly skilled teacher as well. I've never played piano and have still yet to start my first physical lessons but I can tell you've already helped me step up my game. I've subbed so look forward to more of your videos!
@jazerleepiano2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@paulinemckelvey90012 жыл бұрын
I agree with you that Jazer is a gifted teacher. think it's fantastic that you haven't even started to play piano yet and you are taking this opportunity to learn and to prepare. I hope you will have much joy in the future as a player .
@andrewwatts26953 жыл бұрын
I only work from memory and ear due to my visual disability. Slow and steady with feel I do prefer, but at times with speed 🎹😎
@GDPlayer1432Ай бұрын
This mans goated
@eleangthang8555 Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@jazerleepiano Жыл бұрын
You are awesome! Thanks!
@annhelenbechtel64393 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I am definitely a sight reader! I also recognize myself in some of the bad habits. I love the pedal, but recently I've been noticing that I use it to hide small mistakes and to be less precise in my playing. And the practicing too fast is also a weakness of mine, I get very inspired and instead of working out all the little mistakes and taking time to polish the piece, and then it doesn't sound neat.Thank you for these great videos. Really enjoying them.
@orlaithmcdonald2 жыл бұрын
i have been playing for like 7 years now and i still practice these bad habits thank you so much for the call out
@musicalmystery19933 жыл бұрын
Awesome core truths about the principal fundamentals of learning and how they apply to piano! Only way this could have been better is if you would have talked a little bit about why relying on ONLY sight-reading sheet music is also bad. I feel that TOO much reliance on the logical and "thinking" about a piece ties up all of your brain's processing power, then you have nothing left to focus on the "big picture" as well - like making sure that your playing is dynamic, and conveying emotion and an overall feel - being able to manage larger dynamic ranges where appropriate, your louds and softs, etc. You need to be able to go beyond more than just note letters and timing. A great analogy to this is typing while reading. You should be able to read and "stream" the typing - you shouldn't be thinking about where each letter key is. It just all comes together and flows!
@joethompson5619 Жыл бұрын
Just started watching your videos Jazer and I want to just thank for your time and your effort in doing these videos, I’m an older student but you inspire me to play my piano!
@jd86543 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jazer. Could you please make a video on chords inversions? The best way to practice them. Thanks
@peterdalton82352 жыл бұрын
Excellent advice - thank you! I started playing the piano when I was very small, 3 or 4. My older sister could read music and played very well, and I loved listening to her, and when she was done with the piano I would try and recreate the music she'd been playing, just by ear. I soon found I could play most of her pieces this way, and when I was given piano lessons myself at age 7 or 8, I was already able to play boogie woogie pretty well, as well as some Bach (Jacques Loussier style), and some simple trad jazz and pop songs, as well as hymns I'd sung at school, so the lessons were tedious and boring, and I cheated by asking my teacher to play it through, and then I played it, pretending to read the sheet music. The result is I'm 64 and only started to try and read music 10 years ago - with very limited success! I taught myself to read Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, but then found I couldn't play it without the music - how frustrating! Same with Minute by Minute (McDonald). It's a curious phenomenon isn't it? If you learn a piece by repeatedly listening to it, and aching to find that right chord, you never forget it, but reading it constrains you to needing to have the sheet music. What do you think?
@antonetteroseismula35312 жыл бұрын
I took piano class last year, and I'm glad how ut turns out. My teacher always gives me so much time to practice, the scales, the chords and a lot of advises. I also agree with you in no. 5. I always practice with my right hand first since I'm left handed. My left hand can cope up with my right hand easily that's why I always worked with my left hand first. I also agree with you to practice slowly and practicing everyday. Additional: At first I memorize the chords and notes of the songs but now I realized that I don't need to do it since it was easier to look at the sheet of the song
@deborahmcmindes68127 ай бұрын
I’m a reader (70 years old, playing since I was 6) and that’s it! I’m completely handicapped when it comes to memorizing 🤣 BTW, like someone already commented, these are things I’ve always taught my students! Nice to hear you emphasize these important learning techniques! They work!
@tortiecat64593 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is great and exactly what I needed to hear. I related to many of the bad habits, mainly not practicing daily. I get sidetracked too easily. Thank you for your many lesson tutorials. I have learned so much from you and look forward to many more. You help make learning piano for adults fun and inspiring.
@salam_al3 жыл бұрын
Love the fact that I watched this only 1 month in. I realized many of these mistakes while playing although I always thought it needed a teacher to show you how to fix it. KZbin does the job!
@gogotrololo3 жыл бұрын
Jazer, every video of yours I watch assures me that I'm doing practice in a constructive way, and always offers me at least one thing to think about or to improve on! My bad habits i watched this with: 4: foot has always been on the pedal for exactly the reasons you said. Starting now, I will not practice with it! Makes sense I'm a memorizer, but I always use sheet music in practice to take me beyond where my memorization starts to fail (building new memorization) so i dont think i'm bad here :P I do both, i know i wont be able to memorize everything... just the really important songs
@Antony_Oscar Жыл бұрын
Super helpful video! I played piano in elementary school for a couple of years (and the cello for 6-7 years around the same time) but quit as a teenager. Now at 29 I'm getting back to it, just waiting for my digital piano to arrive. I was always in the second group of learners and would just easily memorize most pieces, and therefore my sight reading never developed much. 😅 I'm deternined to learn to sight read properly this time, because I want to get into songwriting ~
@SunilKumar-pv2il2 жыл бұрын
I have four of the bad habits you mentioned and the worst habit of mine is that I don't practice everyday. I have an electronic piano which doesn't have a pedal otherwise maybe I would have had all the five bad habits. For me the most valuable tip in this video is to isolate two for practice.
@eyfrvolunteer2 жыл бұрын
I got a piano a few days ago for my birthday and I'm loving it SO much, it's second nature to me just like the first time I picked up the guitar! In terms of what kind of student, I don't memorize any particular notes because I recognize them easily just by listening to it! I did eventually memorize a few basic things like the notes and some chords, I just need to start improving on it! Some tips here in particular helped me clear up some things, I think I know what to do next study session!
@mudswallow50743 жыл бұрын
I struggle with all of these LOL! I want to play the piece so much that I have to resist rushing in without practicing properly first. I'm definitely a play-by-the-dots person but lately I'm learning to connect theory with playing which helps a lot with memorizing. I would love to see a tutorial on how to practice pedaling - lifting after one chord and pressing right at the next makes my music choppy, but if I don't I get a muddy sound. Also, I'm not always sure when to pedal and when to leave the pedal alone. Thank you!
@marshwetland38088 ай бұрын
I appreciate the summary screen you have at the end of some of your other videos, too.
@iancaldeian2 жыл бұрын
These tips were extremely helpful. In fact it reminds me of the things that my piano teacher taught me forty years ago. I'm just staring to learn again after 40 years so this was very helpful. Thanks for sharing.
@staples67 ай бұрын
This is super helpful. You are a great teacher and I’m glad I found you early on in the process
@musicwithdale3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Jazer. Your videos are absolutely the most helpful out there for an intermediate pianist like myself. I recently began practicing "slow" as you recommend, and it does help. I also find it helpful, when playing to slow, to play all the notes loudly and emphatically. That seems to (1) require more accuracy, and (2) embed the movements into memory a little more. What do you think about that? I also found your comments about daily practice and memory very interesting. I sometimes (not always) find the first time I play a piece in a day is somehow better than all the subsequent attempts.
@the.shoreland27032 жыл бұрын
so happy to have found you. ! well, i tend to memorize almost all the times and yes i do play in fast motion too, to not mention the other habits too. i m just so glad to know this channel from now ON
@SuperNK913 жыл бұрын
Great content. Would like to see you talk about arm movement and hand position on the keys to generate different sound qualities. For example contrasting the different techniques required to play Bach vs Rachmaninoff to create the sound.
@Lalenamagic2 жыл бұрын
I started learning playing the piano last year as a 48 yo. Glad to see that practising one hand at a time is not silly. And the tip about reading vs memorising is solid. I first start reading, and when I get to difficult parts I memorise so I can look at the keyboard more. But when I have memorised, I usually don't go back to reading. Started Musette by Bach last week where the big leaps are a challenge for me.
@calz14103 жыл бұрын
Hi Jazer. I would love to be a part of the second group (memorisers), but my memory is not strong enough, so I am forced to stick to reading music from my sheets. Great videos, BTW! Thanks for sharing.
@unclemick-synths3 жыл бұрын
It's important to recognize these are two different skills so although you are an experienced reader, you're a rookie memorizer. That means to develop the skill you need to start by memorizing very simple pieces. Ear training helps a lot too because memorizing is predominantly playing by ear supported by a structural understanding of the piece e.g. first time through the melody does this but the second time it does that. I would recommend learning simple tunes by listening to recordings and copying them. That way you don't even have the dots so you can't cheat 😀
@TBoneWinters3 жыл бұрын
Memorizing is extremely difficult for me. Playing by ear is a never mind.
@TBoneWinters3 жыл бұрын
Same here.
@will3music Жыл бұрын
Definitely a memorizer, currently working on my sight reading skills and boy is it tough, but hopefully will be worth it in the long run. Guilty of Habit #1 as well - it used to be that I could play something fast relying on muscle memory, but as soon as I tried to slow it down I would realise I didn’t actually know what I was playing! Again, working on this one big time at the moment - knowing the piece slowly and intimately is key to being able to perform it properly, as you’ve demonstrated
@StarWasti3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you so much! I am more of a person who memorizes music that I want to learn, I hear it and memorize it, then play it sometimes a bit every day. But your definitely right about the pedal, I use it all the time! 😅 I need to learn to prioritize when I need to use it. Thank you so much! This was really helpful! 🤩
@octo37512 жыл бұрын
I can relate the memorising one I always memorise the notes and then play it my reading of sheet music is not so good so I would have to work on that now. It is stressful a little bit to memorise it
@MichealHolt2 жыл бұрын
I've been playing piano for 18 years, and I can definitely agree with these points. However, some songs have really strange rhythms and I find it best to practice both hands together instead of mastering them individually. For example, I recently learned the Champion Cynthia Battle Theme. In areas where I tried to master both hands separately, I found my rhythm was horrid. In other areas, I never played the hands separately, opting instead to play both hands very slowly, and I found those parts were significantly more accurate. Of course, this isn't always the case, and it's a bad habit more often than it's a good one. As for Habit 2 (reading/memorizing), I find I memorize a lot of my pieces subconsciously. I don't try to memorize them, but I play them enough times that my muscle memory will let me almost effortlessly play it. Even pieces I hadn't played in years (Eye of the Tiger, Avengers Theme, Bohemian Rhapsody, for example), I'll sit down and play really well without the sheet music, only because my muscle memory hadn't forgotten it. I've also finally been practicing learning by ear-following the advice from a family friend-so I don't even have the sheet music to refer to anymore half the time.
@IdOnThAvEaUsE692 жыл бұрын
Cynthia from Pokémon platinum?
@MichealHolt2 жыл бұрын
@@IdOnThAvEaUsE69 Yeah! I'm still working on it, but it's definitely been a fun challenge.
@IdOnThAvEaUsE692 жыл бұрын
@@MichealHolt G' luck lol, and happy learning
@marshwetland38088 ай бұрын
I'll try your little bit a day suggestion. I tend to have way too many different things I want to do, and even though I was a teacher and self taught in a lot of things, so I know starting anew is an important part of learning because you're practising jumping into the skill at a moment's notice, I hadn't heard about the difference in memory consolidation. So I will have to get organized with these little bits of things. I tend to have a long list and just jump into whatever I'm in the mood for. Not disciplined, but fun. The one area in my life where I haven't compulsively organized and streamlined what I'm doing in order to get through it efficiently.
@Shasari3 жыл бұрын
I have the Hanon - virtuoso pianist book, having been introduced to Hanon many years ago by a piano teacher I was taking lessons with until I had to move to a new place. I’ve been off and on with the piano most of my life, having recently returned to it as an older adult, to take it as far as I can, and I feel I’m making steady, slow progress. Can you recommend any other types of finger exercises I can use to build strength, finger independence and dexterity for those times when I’m not in front of the piano? Since I play by ear fairly well, I often find that I just memorize what I read on the page of sheet music without reallly trying so that, albeit with simpler beginner pieces, I don’t have to refer to the sheet music after a couple of run throughs, but I realize that doesn’t help reinforce my sight reading ability, and I have to force myself to follow the music with my eyes as my hands already know what to do. Any tips to encourage myself to follow the sheet music even if the motions/sound of the music is committed to memory?
@unclemick-synths3 жыл бұрын
Same thing here. The thing that has most helped me is unfamiliar pieces. It's hard to keep a stream of novel pieces so I've also dug out my old bass guitar and saxophone books. I also go back to older pieces that I no longer play and have forgotten sufficiently that they're new again.
@NinesOB3 жыл бұрын
I also belong to this category and it is a problem because the ear soon takes over the sight so the sight doesn't progress as it should. In order to practice sigh reading I use a couple of apps and they really help.
@rockydarknight29803 жыл бұрын
I taught piano at church n you brought great points. Bad habits are hard to get rid, good habits take time but build a strong foundation.
@hadyanfakhri59673 жыл бұрын
2:58 If you practice 5 hours and 42 minutes a day, at the end of the week you have practiced 40 hours. So GO PRACTICE !
@kokod27363 жыл бұрын
LOL, twosetters forever!
@gogotrololo3 жыл бұрын
I am easily hitting 25 hours each week since i started 3 weeks ago.... do people seriously practice 40 hours a week?
@kokod27363 жыл бұрын
@@gogotrololo No one I know does that. It is an inside joke for those who like the You Tube channel TwoSet Violin. Check out some of their fun videos.
@leun883 жыл бұрын
5:05 if you can play it slowly you can play it quickly
@gogotrololo3 жыл бұрын
@@kokod2736 *phew* thats a load off lol
@johnyoutube66882 жыл бұрын
Absolutely correct 💯 Thanks alot for your advice. Slowly and steadily always wins the race.
@winfriedg.hallerbach62492 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experiences ! I’m afraid i’m a memorizer so my score reading is below par, unfortunately. Regarding playing slow : it is said that before a concert Horowitz played through his programme so slow that people could barely recognize the pieces. Related to your advise to practice both hands first separetely, I want to share the “trick” to start practicing at the end of the piece. In that way you know you can finish the piece, compared to building up anxiety because you approach the point from where you do no longer know how to play the piece. ;-)
@mae8922 жыл бұрын
i began practicing piano since 2020 and does all the bad way to master it, i scroll down through youtube and see this video, i watched it till the end and realize me doing all that habit. Thanks to you i finally know what to do
@kdude28213 жыл бұрын
3:10 - 3:30 so basically I’m hitting a save point when I sleep, if I don’t sleep am I speedrunning…
@peterennoldson2 жыл бұрын
Thanks. Practice small bits seven times and using different fingers when moving up the keyboard seems the most important to me.
@SeaDrive3003 жыл бұрын
Hey Jazer, thanks; another great lesson video! I'm an older (than dirt) beginner. I've always had a good memory, so when I play exercises and simple pieces from my method book, I consciously avoid memorizing the notes, so as to force myself to better my reading skills. I mean, I'm not even at the point where I automatically know all the notes on the scales and where those keys are on the piano, so it seems to me that I should keep on "reading only", at least to the point where I can automagically connect a note on the sheet to a note on the piano. Whaddya think, Jazer?
@gogotrololo3 жыл бұрын
I'm a 35 year old beginner myself, and although i have no experience, i am also setting this same goal... to be able to look at a new song, as it is written, and instinctively know where my hands need to be. It doesnt need to be played fast for practice purposes (obviously) but i feel like you cant be a "reader" until you can translate the page instinctively to the hand. Jazer had a video on this where he asked viewers to read their sheets and play the notes, but to cover their keys and hands with a blanket so they couldn't use their eyes to guide their hand.. it was an exercise on instinct and reading, and i think it's one i'll be doing once i get a bit more familiar with the keys. Seems like an intermediate type exercise, not for someone in their third week practicing lol
@marianboudreau13373 жыл бұрын
@@gogotrololo Sometimes I practice with my eyes closed, just to try to embed in my mind the feeling of where my hands need to be with different intervals, it's amazing how much more aware you are of where your hands are. Try it!!
@gogotrololo3 жыл бұрын
@@marianboudreau1337 i've yet to practice piano with my eyes closed, but i totally get what you're saying if we were talking about ukulele or guitar! let your hands shape into the sound, and waste no effort trying to watch your finger placement.... you just trust your hands and get taken away on a musical adventure :D maybe tomorrow when i practice again, i'll try some jazzy improv with eyes closed, and see what happens
@CommunityOpenMic2 жыл бұрын
I'm a professional adult educator and teacher trainer (think "trade skills") and also a semi-pro musician (strings) who has come late to the piano. I absolutely love this video. The "5 mistakes" expose underlying "core principles" of adult learning. I think the 5 "principles" here are completely adaptable to any new complex skill that demands a novel "psycho-motor" technique. Bravo Jazer Lee! Love your work!
@scottvanhorn62193 жыл бұрын
I had to learn piano through books. The hardest mistake I made was to try reading individual notes. I found that by slowing things down and phasing I could accomplish so much more. The body has muscle memory, it is there forever. Speed comes with time, repetition, and correct fingering. I started out learning chords, then went to notes. I would listen to a piece and slow it down to get the notes, then slowly increase speed. I did all my lessons that way. I would practice one hand then the other till I achieved muscle memory. After I completed that, I could add fill to suit myself. I always played for myself so I didn't have the pressure others had. When I finally could afford lessons, the instructor could not believe how far I had advanced through self teaching. I am so thankful I had the proper books to teach me with phrasing by some of the greatest musicians. I personally found that memorizing phrases is loads easier than memorizing notes. I believe I am saying I got the right books that mimic your style of instruction. Bless you for being there. I can only say that instructors make things loads easier than books, and arpeggios come in every piece at one time or another. I am no Mozart, but I did manage to win the state level and the state talent competition imitating Liberace for fun. Keep up the great work, please. By the way, the instructor gave back my money, and I used it to buy more books and recordings to slow down.
@juniwatyhsd11572 жыл бұрын
Please inform me your guidance Book Title. tks
@scottvanhorn62192 жыл бұрын
@@juniwatyhsd1157 Which one of many would you be interested in, one book does not show everything. The best one I can think of is A Photograph Guide to Piano Chords, out of print. It showed every chord based on triads. The circle of fifths gives one the chord progression, though not always the best sounding. Please let me know what you want to learn, and I will see what I can do to help. Things are loads different now than back when I started.
@dizzysdoings2 жыл бұрын
Glad to know I'm on the right track 😊. Took lessons as a kid, and there was so much she didn't teach that I got frustrated and quit. Thing is, I could play some fairly difficult pieces, but couldn't tell you what key they were in, or what the chords were. I used to play in a church, and the woman that played the organ played by ear. So I even got to where I could transpose since she didn't always play in the key the songs were written in. Started teaching myself a few years ago, and was doing all these. Then my husband was diagnosed with cancer. I eventually had to stop practicing because I just didn't have time. I lost him last month. So I'm starting to be able to practice again. Still working on getting a schedule since I still have so much to do. ETA: almost forgot to ask, what piece were you playing? I've played it before, but can't remember what it is.
@theodom18582 жыл бұрын
I tend to heavily read the sheet music while learning a piece until I’m starting to “master” it then I’ll kinda switch to playing from memory but then often when I play one note wrong I’ll get totally stuck cause I have no idea where I am 😂
@johussion71912 жыл бұрын
This happens to me exactly like that!
@vj-xc4qc Жыл бұрын
All good points for beginners Jazer. When playing slow, watching notes and making conversation points, should one watch his/her hands on the keys or complete this task by touch. Thanks…
@kittitoth94793 жыл бұрын
I always memorize the sheet music, because I can't read it while I have to pay attention to my fingers and the pedal
@BUGLEBOB2 жыл бұрын
First I've been playing for the last year and a half by synthesia knowing It's hurting me long term. so even though it's a little deflating, I started to look up videos to learn music theory, cords, and anything to help with sight reading. and finger placement. after going through a number of videos that either drag on or just does not clearly explain what I'm there for....wondering if it's me?? I came across one of yours and WOW! and another and another...first and only one I subscribed to. you are clear, precise and to the point. I'm never scratching my head or hitting the back button. I play to fast when I practice, been using the metronome more, I think my bad habits can be easily overcome with the right guidance....yours at present. as far as technique goes. I feel I need to work on finger placement the most. although I've been most conscious about this, I still don't know what is right or wrong....playing from memory I think I am using improper placement at times to set myself up for the next big (drastic) change in placement. if that makes any sense. "she's a rainbow" for example on the right hand. Anyhow, thanks again, glad I found you. I'm improving already.
@dave4251xxx3 жыл бұрын
I’m a reader but I think that practice by reading will eventually lead to memorizing. Thoroughly enjoy your videos, just don’t tell my teacher.
@EmoryBlake4Music3 жыл бұрын
Dave, my personal opinion on this is that just repeating something enough (correctly) is key for memorization. Muscle memory is something we all have and rely on it day in and day out without realizing it (like every time you take a step). Everything from tying our shoelaces to driving a car has become easy and second nature to us because of muscle memory. I find that just memorizing the sequences of pitches and chords by note name only, without the muscle memory to back it up means we are still thinking too much. . .though it is, of course, still necessary to read everything down first . . . but we become unstoppable when muscle memory takes over. I really believe it's one of nature's greatest gifts to musicians when it comes to playing our instruments.
@RangerB-165 ай бұрын
I love your piano lessons. This one is so important. Thank you from USA.
@anonymus36773 жыл бұрын
Found myself guilty of almost All habits😬
@pamcoyle85053 жыл бұрын
I was doing all the bad habits. It seemed to me that I learned better doing both hands at once, but now I'm going to follow your advice and do one hand at a time till I know them both well. Will I find a new learning curve when I put them together? I'm kind of balanced between reading and memorizing. I have great hopes for the exercises which work on coordinating hands together. I like your teaching style very much.
@goldenpro36843 жыл бұрын
Question: What should a beginner not learn? I don’t think you have covered that.
@helenchelmicka30282 жыл бұрын
Fantasie Impromptu 😋
@TJMusic20212 жыл бұрын
Yes 100% agree, the most important practice is slow practice. I like your way of teaching, very inspiring.
@politereminder62843 жыл бұрын
FIVE BAD HABITS 5. . Always practicing hands together. (One plus one equals 5 ) 4. Always practicing with the pedal. 3. Not practicing daily. ( Allow your sleep to transfer memories of whatever little you've learned instead of trying to cram too much into long rare practices) 2. Working too much by memory or by reading. Develop both skills. 1. Practicing too fast. Always go back to slow practice so you can be conscious about the notes and play cleanly
@peterwu811 Жыл бұрын
This is the video that made me subscribe. I've been training musically since I was 4, singing opera, then transitioned into piano when I turned hit puberty at the age of 12. Unfortunately, life slammed me in the face and I stopped playing when I turned 17, by then I achieved RCM level 8. Trying to pick it back up now 10 years later, and still have the muscle memory but missing lots of how I used to practice, this was a really good refresher video. I m now learning a quite difficult piece, harder than the ones I played when I was young, and I have near perfected the first two pages of ten using things from this video!
@RacistXeno2 жыл бұрын
We all know that the number habit you need avoid when playing the piano is using simply piano.
@larastevens2256 Жыл бұрын
I read music way more then memorise. I have watched 2 of your videos. Thank you! Great advise.
@pateytothefirst3 жыл бұрын
The worst habit is not practicing 40 hours a day
@TheBlaise912 жыл бұрын
you are right
@anshisalad2 жыл бұрын
TWOSET!!!
@nilsj13242 жыл бұрын
I remember one bad habit I had of keeping my farthest joint of the finger (he distal inter-phalangeal joint) straight instead of curving it. This is an important thing that I think you could have mentioned in this video. Maybe you have before, but I thought I'd mention it. Thanks for the video!
@Ambyycious2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou i am a memorizer and you made me realise it's important to focus on the other skill i.e reading instead of focusing on the one I'm already good at.
@notinla2 жыл бұрын
Excluding learning music from scratch, these are the best advices that i have got, even compared to the professional lessons i took; i have found out some of these by practicing alone, though i wish i knew them earlier so i could have progressed more easily.
@ZiCell2 жыл бұрын
I started learning piano just yesterday. A little bit of music theory, a little a bit of sheet reading, memorising and practicing Moonlight with both hands. It's messy, but I love music. I'll try to be more considerate tomorrow. Thank you!
@Bens9633 жыл бұрын
Beginner here, thanks for your tips. I felt like by going back to slow I would have been hindering my progress but glad to hear it's a suggested thing
@fadikronfli50872 жыл бұрын
Currently I am playing the sheet by firstly knowing it well, memorizing it and playing it without reading the sheet. I am still at the beginner's stage and I didn't yet master my techniques, this made me wait to be good at something in the first place before going to the second stage of enabling myself to immediately play the music while reading the sheet.
@pierre.faller2 жыл бұрын
Hello. I love to guitar soloing on gypsy jazz standards. For this, I have a realy good ear, I can write a chords grid just hearing a tune on first listen. But some years ago, I began to play sax in a wind band. Unfortunately, it's not possible to play without reading, parts are very précise, you can't change the flow even a little bit. I don't give up, and it's a real pleasure to learn to read quickly.
@Xaforn Жыл бұрын
I play by ear mostly, which my violin teacher pointed out was my fault as it made me so much of a perfectionist. I’ve been working a lot more on sight reading and forcing myself to slow down, I already know what sound I want to make but I need the reading to match so it can transfer to my fingers. And it’s working. Great video.
@tonyokeregbe67562 жыл бұрын
VERY ENLIGHTENING TUTORIAL. I do ALL five, and so I have never mastered the piano.
@leahcarh Жыл бұрын
Love your tips! I'm a visual person, so I depend heavily on the sheet music. Memorization is my biggest weakness.😢 I recently started a nice habit that helped me a lot. Before playing a piece, play a short round of scale in the same key signature. That helps my brain to "sync" with the key and reduce making mistake when I practice the piece. Don't know if that makes sense or not, but it works.😆
@tastibasti2 жыл бұрын
Everything you said I tell my pupils, too. Good man! You know your stuff! 😉 Let me tell one more: there is a circle between moving - listening - reading. If one of these things is not executed, you will look down on the keys and loosing the scores and context. This is a reflex from the body when you're helpless and overwhelmed. If you can't imagine the movement is needed you have to do, you aren't able to imagine the sound of the tone/accord and that goes also for the opposite. I require to my pupil that they are really always listening to Intervalls and bring them together with a precise movement from the hand. It always helps.
@nancywebb18452 жыл бұрын
I am definitely guilty of a few of these, mostly not practicing hand separate and playing too fast. Good reminders for me here.
@ultrad-rex13892 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I, unfortunately, do some of these bad habits, and a pianist teacher I had told me to not do them. For example, I keep playing hands together and expect to know at least a few measures, only to screw up at the second measure (if I'm lucky). I understand, thanks to you and my piano teacher, that I need to learn the top and bottom parts individually before playing together. I had to use this habit to figure out Chopin's "Minute Waltz." I'm becoming self-taught in playing piano pieces because I believe that learning it individually helps me substantially.
@sulynlam35622 жыл бұрын
These videos are so succinct, practical and really work! I love sight reading but think I rely on it too much and find it hard to memorise pieces. I actually find occasional pieces sound a lot more interesting and nuanced when played at a slower pace.
@edamann14816 ай бұрын
I'm just starting with piano but I've played guitar more than 50 years. I want to learn piano to help me with my writing as there's still no way to make a guitar talk to the computer with proper timing. Thank you for these lessons. This one applies to pretty much any instrument. I'm slowly working through the two hand exercises right now.
@IndraSchrage Жыл бұрын
I've always been more of a listener and thus ended up semi memorising the music. It really stifled my growth and because my sight reading could not keep up, I got really demotivated and basically stopped playing. Now, about 10 years later, I have the privilege of my childhood piano being moved into my home and I'm training my sight reading through an app every day. Just doing this for 5 days has significantly improved my sight reading. For fellow listeners I would highly recommend spending a few minutes a day sight reading. It's not as boring as it used to be when forced to read the same 8 lines of sheet music over and over again. It can be an enjoyable practice with an app thats slightly gamified!
@jamisgood37732 жыл бұрын
Hi thankyou so much for this video I just started playing a few months ago and these helpful pointers will go along way😁so thx for the help
@kimieti2 жыл бұрын
also thank you for playing that slowed rondo alla turca piece at the end bc i am literally learning that EXACT part right now 😂 and I needed to see it slowed down
@Annie59Oakley2 жыл бұрын
Great info. My problem is I played the organ for a couple of years when I was a kid. 50+years later I always READ the music and the lower graph is further from the organ chords. I am constantly correcting myself.
@Choddy_8 ай бұрын
The habit 5 would be the mostly common mistakes to every pianist or maybe they really want to finish the song fast enough but instead doing it make even harder than playing because you cannot get better without knowing how to play. I just noticed it after playing like 2 years of practice and now I feel better and learn faster than before! Thanks for the video❤
@DrGrandTheftAutoV3 жыл бұрын
Whenever I practice a new song I leave excited to magically nail that section after a good sleep. I practically require a nap before I can play something new hands together.