It comes easier to some, but the coordination takes time for most. You can start with more basic song, and learning parts separately for each hand, then work on putting them together. Don't let it discourage you.
@@NaniteKnight Yeah this is what can lead to good improvisation naturally, another good sign is if you can just play with your eyes closed without it getting harder. Sometimes I will close my eyes because it helps, kind of weird. I only really need to use my eyes for large jumps if that makes sense.
This comment totally took me back to my piano playing childhood days at school with my drummer buddy when we blasted Painted Black in the practice rooms.
As a former winner of the Special Olympics, I can confirm just how special these friends must be. Lol sounds like the first song someone learns at 7 years old.
@@lollyface1000nah the best is Aminor, Gmajor as a passing chord, then Fmajor, Eminor as a passing chord, Dminor, D# as a passing tone, then resolve on Emajor.
In my restless dreams, I see that town... Silent Hill. You'd promised you'd take me there again someday, but you never did. Well... I'm alone there now, in our special place, waiting for you... I got a letter, the name on the envelope said, Mary... Couldn't possibly be true, Mary died of that damned disease 3 years ago... So then, why am I looking for her? what could she mean, our special place? does she mean the park on the lake? We spent the whole day there, just the two of us, staring at the water. that's all I can remember from the intro to Silent hill 2. HAHA
I remembered in high school when I had a day that I had three periods free I went to the grand piano, and I played like no tomorrow, just throwing out tunes that just felt right, and it was my first time too, and strangely enough it relaxed me and the melody was calming and altogether soft in nature... wished I could have done it again though
It's been a whole lot of years since I've played. My wife bought me a really nice keyboard a few years ago, but I've barely touched it because I'm having trouble getting my hands to work independently again. There have been a few injuries in the span between. This seems like it might make a good exercise to try and bring it back together. Thanks!
It's way more complicated than most people think. You have to use three different limbs at once with all of them at their own pace, and also be an audio engineer at the same time because certain rooms need less/more sustain or else it sounds like garbage
I’d say it’s one of the .. if not the easiest instruments to understand. Maybe not to master like at a professional classical level. But the piano pattern is used frequently to teach music theory since it’s a very intuitive pattern whoever came up with it. It’s also easy to make a sound out of it. Unlike a violin. I tried a violin once and it sounded like a cat dying
@@PeaceNinja007correct. I'd argue piano is the easiest instrument to learn and THE hardest to master. Saying you've mastered the piano is becoming an increasingly elusive term, but I'd imagine it lies somewhere amidst the late romantic piano concertos, which equally require profound musical knowledge, immaculate technical skill and an insanely good interpretative overview of the piece.
I learned by playing similar movements with both hands, then changing up a note or two in my left hand. The intro to “Golden Hour” is pretty good practice, similar movements but slightly different. It took me about a year of practicing very inconsistently to get some decent independence between my hands.
@@theraven749 I hardly ever practiced, just randomly played when I wanted to. After a year of playing the hardest songs I could play were 'runaway' by kanye west and 'see you again' by tyler the creator. I learned Golden Hour's intro in a few days.
See I could hear the next part of this in my head so i had a play but I took it from A, down to F in the left hand. Then to G in the left and the lower note in the right hand to D and then back to the original. Give it a go.
I swear, playing piano is so much easier than guitar! I'd like to see you transcribe this onto guitar and as easy as you demonstrated here, please do show how to play this on guitar!
@@cesmeenI’ve been playing both for more than 20 years. Guitar is harder to learn and comprehend at first, but has a lower skill ceiling. In terms of complexity, think of it this way: the most notes you can play at once on guitar is 6. On Piano you could play more than 10. Playing piano is sort of equivalent to playing guitar and bass at the same time. All in all, they each have their strengths and weaknesses and mastering either of them takes decades. If all you wanted to do was bang out a couple chords, then guitar is slightly harder.
Glad someone explained this bc I was about to have to type out a whole essay about how guitar is significantly easier to master than piano; you just have to get past the initial year of pain.
Well yea playing piano parts on guitar is hard because don't play 2 seperate things on each hand. There are guitar parts that would be tough on piano too.
@Nobddy i've always thought of the more notes at a time i love the piano, and was thinking about how the guitar can hit the in betweens with bending the strings. But then again, we have the pitch knob on synths and glide midi on piano rolls. Music is truly something magical. I wish I could play guitar better.
I see a red door And I want it painted black No colors anymore I want them to turn black I see the girls walk by Dressed in their summer clothes I have to turn my head Until my darkness goes