Isn't she lovely Isn't she wonderful Isn't she precious Less than one minute old I never thought through love we'd be Making one as lovely as she But isn't she lovely made from love Isn't she pretty Truly the angel's best Boy, I'm so happy We have been heaven blessed I can't believe what God has done Through us he's given life to one But isn't she lovely made from love Isn't she lovely Life and love are the same Life is Aisha The meaning of her name Londie, it could have not been done Without you who conceived the one That's so very lovely made from love
Great song! This is by far the best one I've heard. I'm looking to learn this, but do it just by visuals, is there a way you could do one where the keys light up as you press them, instead of having to take ages seeing where your middle and 4th finger are each chord change? There are others out there, but this version is too darn smooth! Thanks for your help in advance!
I’m in the middle of the 1st verse after about slowly learning during my free time (3 weeks) it’s so much fun playing it. I haven’t played piano for about 3 years and I was terrible at it. So happy to come back to a an upgraded skill I never practiced 😂
@@gustavoantunes8430 I’m too shy 🙈 but I play it all the time now. It’s so much fun. I bought a $300 chromatica harmonica to play that bit 😂 that’s a whole different lesson!
Thank you! I think I didn't use the pedal a lot here - basically, I would recommend to only use it for the longer bass notes, but always release it when a different bass note is played. Hope this helps!
@@Montechait Thanks for the reply! I know I have to lift it when I change bass notes cause it gets really muddy. I'm just more used to holding pedal for the whole chord so it's kinda tricky for me to get this bassline right and press at the right time but it's a great song to practice and develop my piano playing though.
Yes, if you hold it too long, it will get muddy very quickly. I think this piece could even be played without any sustain pedal at all. Less is certainly more here. Hope you enjoy practising it! :)
Great cover! I also did a cover with similar chords. I can't seem to figure out how to transfer my audio file to synthesia as a MIDI without all the extra notes that make it sound terrible. Thus, I have to settle for the free play recording without the falling notes LOL. If you have any advice for that it would b greatly appreciated! Subbed :)
@@Montechait Thanks for the reply. For my process, I record my piano playing on my digital keyboard and then use Audacity to get an mp3 file of that recording. I convert that mp3 file to a MIDI file so it's compatible with synthesia. However, when I play back the recording on synthesia, there are a bunch of extra notes that were not originally from my recording. I think this is because synthesia is trying to pick up every pitch and sound frequency it hears. Haven't figured out how to solve this yet!
Here is an example of what I'm talking about. Skip to 1:55 in the video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zS7xoBRp3EI.html&ab_channel=RandomVideos
Interesting, actually I never heard of the possibility to convert an audio file to MIDI. As you mentioned yourself, it's obviously not a very precise process, I assume the MIDI file will always have errors in it. If you want to keep doing it this way, one solution could be to just use any MIDI editing software (there should be lots of freeware that does the job) to manually remove the wrong notes before importing it to synthesia. However, I think the much better way to do it would be to directly record the MIDI signal from your keyboard, instead of recording an audio file. Most digital keyboards allow you to do this if you connect them to your computer via USB. This way, you get an accurate MIDI file of what you actually played, and you can use various software to turn MIDI into audio (even synthesia itself, I believe).