Get your own Otamatone Here: hamee.com/collections/otamato... Otamatone Tuner: bonebar.jp/otama-tuner/ In this video I'll show you how to find the notes on the otamatone for any song you want to play! moshibass.com
Tons of great advice layered within an elaborate rick roll. Kudos! Ive played cello for 5 years now and I still have my "hey this is where the note would be" Stickers on it. 😂
@@moshibass Oh trust me your music educator-ness comes through at the front end. 😄 I can't wait till you start implementing a theremin into your stylophone otamatone band 😄
Just ordered this today. I used to play guitar and read tab, but i was a teenager and now in my mid 50s. I hear these are very hard to play, so we'll see
That's was beautiful explanations. I bought one myself, a small one though, but just have it sitting in my room collecting dust since I don't know how to play any music.
Of course it is this one. OF COURSE it is a rick roll. I am not surprised, but i should have expected it. It may be a meme song, but it is pretty simple too.😂
Wish the slider had notches and marks preinstalled on the stem like a keyboard? I dunno seems kind of silly that you have to do this yourself? Doesn't seem like the instrument designers are taking it very seriously.
@@moshibass Haha, that's really cute. Think I've seen you use one. :) Maybe keeping it notch/note free is a way to make it less intimidating and approachable. Thanks for introducing it to us.
Musical people be like: If you have no skilll at all, just sing the first note of the song and match it on your instrument. Non-Musical people: Uhhh, what? How? Why? What?
As a music teacher, I know it's easier said than done :/ If you're trying to learn a song on your own and matching pitch to your voice isn't working, then hopefully using the tuning app method is somewhat helpful. It's hard learning music on your own!
This is a great and effective method if you're a musician. But he says "No skill needed", "no musical experience", and "totally foolproof", which are just blatantly false - the first thing he tells you to do is accurately sing the notes in the song, then match it with the pitch you hear from the Otamatone, and even "ultimately, you're going to use your ear to get it perfectly in tune". Don't be fooled.