da wiki tchai 1 mastahclazz

wikihow.com/Learn-How-to-Pla … o-Concerto

:whale:

entertaining yet mediocre.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Conc … ikovsky%29

WTF!?! Wuzn’t u banned :frowning:

slightly

“Notice that in the third movement it is important for the grace notes to be heard in the right hand. Again, hands separately. It will be important to practice your scales and thirds in both hands while preparing to play the third movement since there are a few pages of continuous runs in both hands. It is extremely important to practice these very slowly until you can play them absolutely perfectly. Practicing the runs with both hands simultaneously may be beneficial here.”

no-one plays these grace notes right on the beat. The orchestra plays it perfectly, and the execution of the piano must match that of the orchestra. I have never heard it done right.

wikihow.com/Play-Piano-in-Less-Than-One-Hour

Must-read before the Tchaikovsky wiki.

each how-to gets more ridiculous. What will be next - how to become a genius in quantum physics?

wikihow.com/Play-Jazz-Piano

I found tiz actually mildly helpful

and da awesome warning in da end:

" Warnings

During your search through Jazz piano history, you’ll eventually come across Art Tatum. There’s a dilemma here because, if you come to him too early, you won’t appreciate his music, which would be a loss, but if you come after you’ve gained some musical understanding, you’ll quit the piano the next day. This is a serious warning - Oscar Peterson nearly quit after hearing Tatum, and so did many others."

hahaha tiz :rock: :rock: :rock: :rock: :rock:

I quit da Strad after hearing Heifetz his majesty

I quit for a year after seeing Weissenberg play Rach 3. But then I was 9, so wtf did I know?

wow, you hear him live? What year was this - 1938?

Sure HP, I heard him in 38, in Bulgaria. Who’ve you heard live- Lang Lang?