This is great stuff. So glad I "stumbled" onto it. Keeping and changing rhythm is so much easier than with western methods.
@alexshmalex4558 жыл бұрын
this technique is so much more useful than 1 n 2 n 2 n 3 n 2 etc. thank you man, i'm starting to understand the grooves what i feel and hear
@lumalumalab6 жыл бұрын
Deep gratitude for this kindness of sharing!
@joseagudo395210 жыл бұрын
Great Bernhard, Thank you for this. I love it!!!
@Taalismusic9 жыл бұрын
+Jose Agudo you are welcome.
@vic_torr2 жыл бұрын
when do dhi , thom and nam happen?
@chandi586 жыл бұрын
you are a great teacher -
@ztube2k4 жыл бұрын
Very well explained. Good video 👏
@lemat76034 жыл бұрын
thanks man! im starting to understand this !!
@sebastiankuhnert36399 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!!! Finally, I am going to learn that language. Are there already following sessions? I would like to get to know how you use your hands in indian music.
@Taalismusic9 жыл бұрын
+Sebastian Kühnert at the moment im not preparing any new lessons.i do teach on skype on a one to one basis. enjoy learning and stay tuned...there will be news sometime!bernhard
@Taalismusic8 жыл бұрын
+Sebastian Kühnert new lessons for you! kzbin.info/www/bejne/nnSwaH-XqdCrZs0
@saz123ful8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your informations and your time Bernhard for doing this, althought i have 2 questions to understand this better because i'm a little comfused..!!! 1) you said that, a quarter(1 beat) is Ta, two eights(1 beat) is Ta-Ka, 1 triplet(1 beat) is Ta-Ki-Te, 4 sixteenths(1 beat) is Ta-Ka-Di-Mi, if i'm right... In your exercises you clap your hand (1 beat) and you say TaKa(2)+TaKa(2) = 4 eights = 2 beats,not 1!!!What is going on? 2) what about rests? how do the Indies spell them?? if you have a dotted eight with a sixteenth? or you have sixteenth rests between a Ta-Ka-Di-Mi? or if you have ties?
@jg-reis7 жыл бұрын
I guess (!!!) the syllables are for groups of notes, not really for beats etc. If you have a group of two notes and the first one is accented, you say 'ta ka'. I think that using this system, if there are rests you just say nothing and go back to 'ta' afterwards. So with sixteenth rests between 'ta ka di mi', you'd say 'ta - ta - ta - ta -'… I don't know!
@tunetime88575 жыл бұрын
looking at it as if they are accents (rather than notes with a set duration), more like drums than piano or guitar, by switching them around, you wouldn't be changing the timing just what accent gets the first beat. so in 4/4 it would be TA ka ti mi | TA ka ti mi | TA ka ti mi | TA ka ti mi | TA. If you switch one of the 4s for two (2s) it changes what gets 'note' gets the accent. (TA ka) ta ka | TI mi ta ka | TI mi (ta ka) | TA ka ti me | TA. But they are also used like notes as in they can tell the duration a pitch is played if you use them that way. Something like TA ka | TA ka ti mi | TA ka | TA ka ti mi | TA.
@RijuChatterjee4 жыл бұрын
"ta-ki-ta" means a group of 3, but 3 _of what_ can change. A quarter note triplet could be ta-ki-ta, but also 3 quarter notes or 3 eighth notes could be ta-ki-ta.
@RijuChatterjee4 жыл бұрын
when it's written, I believe additional symbols are added to denote the note values. When spoken, how fast you say it tells you what note value it is.