3:15 aiiiYa 4:36 A I Y a a . . 5:09 aUoiYa 5:15 A I Y A ! ! ! ! 5:47 aiyaa! 8:32 ...aiyaa... - Eddy Chen 2020 Hope Brett is feeling better if you guys see this!
"Eddy is HAYDN" "today we have 6 SACRILEGIOUS violin gadgets" "we will decide if they're iNtEReStIng or laMeNtABle" Dude new viewers will not survive the first 30 seconds
@@thedottinator4383 I'm still relatively new, but off of the top of my head, here's everything I know: aMAzing iNtErEsTiNg Lamentable If you can play it slowly, you can play it quickly Geniuses are born, not created sAcRiLigIoUs PRACTICE Ling Ling 40 Hours (and its variations lol) Simp Sibelius Violaaaaa
I would like to make an announcement : As of today I've officially joined the cello gang! I've been playing piano for about 4 years and I've always wanted to try the cello, and today my dreams came true! I had my first lesson and loved it so much 😍 Have a nice day 😊
I'm also part of the piano gang. I once was asked to play the church organ, because people know I could play with a form of keyboard. And wow, it was something so different.
"And now, class, we've come to 2:08: Primitive Man. Watch as they struggle to give light to their world, as they wander around in the darkness of sacrilegious creatures."
Box violins are actually a great way to start really, really little ones. I still have mine from Shar that was a Christmas present when I was two. It totally depends on the student, and the teacher to keep lessons fun and interesting while only learning posture. It's common to start practicing the bow hold on something else like a pen or marker too, so those little dowel bows are great because at least they have some semblance to a frog but without all the extra weight of the bow that can be cumbersome for really young students. And I actually have used the little mouse with a couple of my 3-5yo students lol-- it's more just having something there that is cute and bright brings their attention to their wrist. I'm in total agreement with them about the other things though. I LOATHE the "fret" stickers and the bow stoppers are just useless.
I am currently learning piano. Been playing for around the last year or so and recently got a teacher to help hammer out bad habits and solidify the basics more. One of the first things I asked is whether it's worth buying stickers for the keys and immediately got "No, avoid them at all costs" lol.
As a suzuki teacher, I'm dying at their confusion of the box violin. Personally, I have had great success with starting the students off with real baby violins and sharing the respect for it. But I see the value in the box violins. For straight bowing and learning a confident bow stroke without worrying about bad sound.
Yes, as a former suzuki student I remember these very well. Both my younger sisters were given box violins when they were like 1 so they would leave my real violin alone. Then when they were old enough to start lessons at around 3 they already had a good stance and bow grip, and hadn't destroyed any actual instruments with their clumsy baby handling.
@@mikaelbauer3818 when dealing with very small kids it's usually easier for the toddler to focus on one thing at a time, you want to get the fundamentals before moving on to multitasking. And for a 2-3 year old that means practicing bow hold, violin hold, how to stand, standing still etc, separately first. I would start a lesson W a box violin player by practicing "rest" and "play" posture, with focus on keeping the child put in one spot, then practice holding the bow and waving it around in the air while keeping the grip correct, then put away the stick bow and practicing holding the box violin, and only at the very end practicing "playing" a couple rhythms. Pretty quickly, like after a couple months at most, the child would upgrade to doing all the same things but on a real instrument, and already being able of producing proper sound, making it more motivating to keep playing when it sounds more "correct" from the start.
Hey fellow Suzuki teacher! I totally agree. For some very young students, having an actual instrument is too much to focus on immediately. It’s all about climbing up a set of stairs, one at a time, and building upon one new skill after another.
how to tell if your violin is out of tune: tip 1: if you can play a perfect g minor chord by playing open strings you should probably return it to a luthier before the pegs start flying or the bridge tilts
I got a don’t “fret sticker” for my new violinist daughter 🤦♀️. Snapped 2 strings putting it on. I’ve learned a lot in the last couple of weeks. And I’ve got a lot yet to learn!
I know this is very not important but I just want to tell you guys that I'm really looking forward for the Sibelius drop, so I made my own countdown by noted the date everytime your subscribers plus 10k 28 sept (2,8) 1 oct (2,81) 4 oct (2,82) 8 oct (2,83) 11 oct (2,84) 15 oct (2,85) 18 oct (2,86) 21 oct (2,87) I'm very happy that your subscribers increase 100k every three or four days, so hopefully you guys will reach 3 mil subs in 39-52 days later and that means in this December! Can't wait!
TwoSet: We're gonna use this 150 USD violin for experiments! Me: (hugging my 100 euro violin) it's ok baby, its ok. (it was actually around 110 euros for a violin, bow, rosin, case AND shoulder-rest :P)
My teacher once make me put a plastic frog on my bow, it forced me to develop really bad position. I now have a new teacher and am spending all my time trying to fix my bad positioning.
The one teaching aid I’ve ever used on my violin was a pinkie corrector that I put on the end on my bow to teach me proper holding technique. It actually worked and now I have a pink, sparkly fish hanging out in my case 😅
It feels like Brett and Eddy were playing with toys like they are the kids LOL Cuteness overload in this video Btw welcome a new violin member (?) to TSV's instrument club! (A new victim😂)
Ad right before video: Eddy? Eddy? *ambulance noises* *presses skip ad Brett at the beginning of the video: Where's Eddy? Idk where he is. Where is he Haydn?