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The Reading Habit That Hacks Your Day!
#books #personaldevelopment #selfimprovement
How can reading books help us navigate successfully through the day? Discover one exceptional reading habit that will transform your day! 🚀
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Komentáře

  • @startreker8591
    @startreker8591 Před 3 dny

    Many quality hours she practices since she was six years old y now the joy y pressures of her passion. I just exposed my little Japanese grandson to keyboards ukulele, guitars, harps, Korg keyboard,percussion tools y singing,drawing on iPad y listening to cool jazz y classical music…y nature walk❤…I mainly play by ear but started piano y organ in the 60’s🎉

  • @samueltaylor9935
    @samueltaylor9935 Před 5 dny

    Nah they BSing. A lot of the top pianist are practicing 6+ hours a day.

  • @MichaelHelms-lf6nu
    @MichaelHelms-lf6nu Před 8 dny

    ❤❤❤

  • @MichaelHelms-lf6nu
    @MichaelHelms-lf6nu Před 8 dny

    I love your Videos, please Do more😊😊😊

  • @gabriele6596
    @gabriele6596 Před 9 dny

    Pollini passed, rip

  • @gabriele6596
    @gabriele6596 Před 9 dny

    10 hours a day is a whole day 😢like, wake up and go bed on piano

  • @gjoseph1628
    @gjoseph1628 Před 10 dny

    I have been thinking about this for at least ten years. "How much does a 'great musician' really practice?" This is the wrong question. I more helpful question is, "How do you stop him?" To count how much time one needs to practice is the wrong emphasis.

  • @hlopkloiop
    @hlopkloiop Před 12 dny

    Focus>mindless practice

  • @pixxeltwitch
    @pixxeltwitch Před 14 dny

    your enthusiasm is infectious, thank you for your videos!

  • @Dichweed
    @Dichweed Před 18 dny

    You just practice.

  • @DihelsonMendonca
    @DihelsonMendonca Před 27 dny

    💥 But there's a difference between practicing the pieces and practicing exercises, scales, arpeggios, etc. Many pianists dedicate part of their practice to that and some, don't. Horowitz was "allergic" to study scales and technique. He said that he didn't study scales or arpeggios, but he studied the music that he was learning. His technique came naturally. But other pianists, when do not practice scales and arpeggios, lose their technical power. So, it depends on how the person practices. Liszt said that he used to play his scales on the afternoon, but he was joking with a woman who insisted him to play anything, even some scales, and he didn't want, because it was a party at a house of a rich person, and his invitation was a trap that the woman made for him to play for her guests ( for free, of course ). There are several interesting books about the routine of the great pianists. I use to collect all of them. It's wonderful to know the great composer's lives with more intimacy. 🎉❤

  • @garyreid6165
    @garyreid6165 Před měsícem

    My favorite classical pianist is Philippe Entremont. His performance of Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini, works by Chopin and Rachmaninov really touch my soul. It is as if he was playing at the direction of those composers. I play tenor saxophone. My instructor said I should practice at least 10 minutes a day to warm up. When I am more comfortable extend the time. My saxophone instructor in junior college told me that he started out practicing at least 8 hours a day. He started young and unlike today, didn’t have many distractions. I have tried to learn the piano, but I was at a disadvantage because I didn’t have a piano where I lived. Just my saxophone. I practiced more on that. Great information about these pianists. Great video. Have a great day 🎷😎👍

  • @democolor42
    @democolor42 Před měsícem

    This woman is on nuts, how can be mentioned lang lang or yoja wung besides these great musicians! Some say chinese polluted air, water the most, nope!!! They polluted EUROPEAN classical music the most!!! that horrible exotic woman yoja vunge, f i l t h nightmare of European classical music!!! And in west there are no audiences there are public bathroom mobs and crowds in the halls and here on youtube comments sections!!! The problem is not nightmares sitting on stage, but in these ubiquitously existing t r a s h quality crowds in the west!!!

  • @guillermosantamaria5212
    @guillermosantamaria5212 Před měsícem

    Very interesting!

  • @DariusSarrafi
    @DariusSarrafi Před měsícem

    You're assuming they are telling you the truth. Performing aritsts lie about their number of hours practiced as they do about their age!

  • @IRosamelia
    @IRosamelia Před měsícem

    I'm three hours away from finishing The Silk Roads audiobook and couldn't recommend it more. It should be mandatory in any World History course. ❤

  • @azundaowiriwa2674
    @azundaowiriwa2674 Před měsícem

    Great video, you just earned a fan and a ❤

  • @davidferrara1105
    @davidferrara1105 Před měsícem

    Medical science has yet to prove that a "photographic" memory is real. Google it.

  • @goranvuletic8873
    @goranvuletic8873 Před 2 měsíci

    The real question is how much they practiced until they reached the ultra high level. Once you're there you can relax a bit because you are a different beast, with millions of miles behind you.

  • @user-ji9eq8yr3k
    @user-ji9eq8yr3k Před 2 měsíci

    If Chopin practices two hours a day for his own piano competition, he won’t even be able to finish his own compositions 😂 If you practice 8 hours a day for two years, you can just finish the assigned repertoire of Van Cliburn competition. If you practice 4 hours day, with today’s competitiveness, you can still get the chance to enjoy an amateur piano competition. If you want to be as virtuous as Ling Ling, you need to practice at least 40 hours a day😂

  • @matthewegeler
    @matthewegeler Před 2 měsíci

    Dont let Seymour Bernstein hear this

    • @knuggems
      @knuggems Před měsícem

      HA, bro!!😂❤️

  • @josephdrew7216
    @josephdrew7216 Před 2 měsíci

    What a tremendous guide to productive, good living. Thank you for this informative presentation. Hope -- and planning.

  • @gdmoore
    @gdmoore Před 2 měsíci

    What people don't realize is that most of the great pianist are borderline autistic. Including possessing a photographic memory.

  • @djmocok
    @djmocok Před 2 měsíci

    I never quite like Lang Lang for some reason, something is off about him

  • @ericeengies
    @ericeengies Před 2 měsíci

    Bach+Gould=God

  • @djmocok
    @djmocok Před 2 měsíci

    Mitsuko Uchida practice 40 hours a day

  • @patinho5589
    @patinho5589 Před 2 měsíci

    Hours can be spent learning the pieces.. but actually practicing technique.. is different. I never practiced any technique…

  • @ewhyte8059
    @ewhyte8059 Před 3 měsíci

    If you are not playing with passion. Stop. Take a break and do something totally unrelated. Go for a half hour walk or so. Do not become housebound or bench bound.Have a gentle exercise routine that causes you to perspire away from the piano. Drink lots of water throughout the day for clarity of mind with the benefit of stopping fairly regularly to go to the toilet which enhances blood circulation as you practice.Occasionally play for hours on end so that you develop an enduring approach. Ultimately morning and evening are the best times for energetic and relaxed playing respectively. A focused 45 minutes is better than an aimless 4 to5 hours.Play scales melodically not mechanically. Enjoy making mistakes and you will make lots of discoveries. Humility is not cultivated in the presence of others but in solitude. Keep pushing boundaries with close attention to correct technique and fluid finger placement in the most relaxed attitude possible.Find three tempi to play pieces or sections that you find challenging. Deliberately slow, moderately fast and as fast as possible. Spend a little time composing two or three pieces of your own over the course of a year. When you begin and maintain constructing your own pieces you enter the realm of those who have gone before and paved the way for others to do the same by 1° or another. Imagine being a virtuoso pianist and not even having a couple short pieces tucked in your top pocket as an aural autograph from yourself to the aisles of history? Even simple compositions trifling as they may be in comparison get your brain into a creative mode at any level of ability which is key in understanding the composer through their music. Have a second instrument like a classical guitar for example and escape from the piano from time to time. When you come back to the piano you will doubly appreciate it in all its glory.Listen very carefully to the overall construction of a piece as it progresses as played by a handful of your favourite pianists. Sometimes play for 10 to 15 minutes a very challenging section and then leave it for a couple hours before coming back to it again. From time to time play the left-hand only of a section then take a short break and come back and do the same with the right hand. then take another short break and return to make thoughtful union of the two.It has been said countless times in a myriad of numberless human settings “ One hand doesn’t know what the other hand is doing! “ Always remain open to learning. Always play as though it will be the last time you will get to play and you will regularly have a great 15 minutes spell with things just coming together.

  • @nakual6367
    @nakual6367 Před 3 měsíci

    I on day 5 piano practice. Spend consistently 4-6 hours a day on the piano practicing reading sheet music and 20 mins of finger independant exercise a day. And spend most of my time practicing a piece. First piece i choose to learn is canon in c since its all white keys and its pretty easy.(Slighly easier version. Just chords and melody) I learnt alot and my finger become so much more independant. I learnt 90% of the song. Well yes 4-7 hours practice is too much but i really have nothing else to do after i finished up my work. And im pretty obbsessed with piano after i got it lol. I used to play guitar 5 hours a day when i was a kid because im bored.

  • @dorfmanjones
    @dorfmanjones Před 3 měsíci

    There were many great pianists who did not have an extramusical 'aura.' Just off the top of my head, Serkin, Solomon, Loesser, Levy, Petri all looked like accountants. No attitude, no aura, no wardrobe, no hair, no looking at the ceiling, no throwing their hands around.They let the music and their playing do the job.

  • @dorfmanjones
    @dorfmanjones Před 3 měsíci

    There are so many variables. Different people (human organisms), different technical aptitudes, different repertoire, different performance schedules, different philosophies, different temperaments. And of course misleading questioners. I think it's fair to say that certain pianists didn't practice very much, like Gieseking. But if he dropped some notes here and there it didn't concern him. And his repertoire was all embracing. So was Richter's, who practiced like a demon. So did Kapell, who put together the Strauss Burlesque in a week, and played it but once. It was caught on tape and sounds clean as a whistle to my ears.There are few, if any, pianists who can maintain a thriving performing career today with a casual attitude towards practice. Perhaps Yuja can get away with it. But there are more interesting artists out there.

  • @clarkcioccolatino1701
    @clarkcioccolatino1701 Před 3 měsíci

    The mind needs recovery. Important things are sleep and minimum stress

  • @HistoryontheGoChannel
    @HistoryontheGoChannel Před 3 měsíci

    Great video! Getting the right morning routine is so important.

  • @HistoryontheGoChannel
    @HistoryontheGoChannel Před 3 měsíci

    Wow! great video! It provides a unique insight into Napoleon. Well done!

  • @andrewpeterson2865
    @andrewpeterson2865 Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent video. I knew that he worked long hours but this was a thorough analysis of his daily routine.

  • @arismei
    @arismei Před 3 měsíci

    Yuji loves swim suit gala

  • @ustundincmen6544
    @ustundincmen6544 Před 3 měsíci

    Great video!

  • @WalyB01
    @WalyB01 Před 3 měsíci

    Just get lost and oops 3hour past. Great to dive into a section analyse the themes, unfortunately doesn't pay the bills

  • @emaad2470
    @emaad2470 Před 3 měsíci

    Amazing video! Really helpful tip that I’ll try to incorporate into my daily routine. Thank you!

  • @kosterix123
    @kosterix123 Před 3 měsíci

    the point being whatever you do, practice with attention to it.

  • @mogodd
    @mogodd Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you! I love all your reading tips

  • @SabbathSOG
    @SabbathSOG Před 3 měsíci

    Thx

  • @mabdub
    @mabdub Před 4 měsíci

    Wanda Horowitz said that Vladimir lied about how much he practiced, he wanted people to think he worked really hard. She said he only practiced before concerts but otherwise he didn't have a regular regime of practice. She also said that many days he didn't even play the piano. Apparently he read a great deal and listened to a lot of opera. We have to remember that genuine virtuosos don't have to practice technical exercises, their main concern is interpretation, getting bookings and making albums. When Rachmaninoff lived in Russia one of his cousins who lived with the family said that Rachmaninoff started every day by playing what seemed to her to be never ending scales. The house was large but there was no escape from the sound of scales. I think that most concert artists only practice their current repertoire to keep it polished and if they play other pieces it's simply for their own pleasure. One of the greatest benefits about being a virtuoso from childhood on is that you don't have to spend a lot of time practicing. Of course, there are always exceptions to every rule.

  • @bibipelictalks
    @bibipelictalks Před 4 měsíci

    Napoleon 👉 czcams.com/video/MUuoRtU9rLc/video.html Benjamin Franklin 👉 czcams.com/video/v6sk8MaeWEw/video.html Beethoven 👉 czcams.com/video/jJTZblBGE8Q/video.html

  • @visionpiping1048
    @visionpiping1048 Před 4 měsíci

    Hope

  • @lufknuht5960
    @lufknuht5960 Před 4 měsíci

    IMHO, the biggest factor is simply TALENT, TALENT, TALENT -- not practice. There are persons who practiced very little, but hear a piece, then sit down & play it without reading music or repetitive practice. Somehow they can memorize all the notes & transfer that sonic memory into a muscular exercise routine. & they may be able to transfer that associated muscular exercise routine into a different routine (different key) which sounds much the same to those who don't have perfect pitch. Then there are drudges who practice a piece over & over & over, until they can play it -- but that one piece is all they can play. They may do that again, & then have one new piece which is all they can play -- I refer to significant pieces like a piano concerto, or some paradestück. & they may end up with tendonitis. Some people have a sense of position & could play blindfolded, others have to look at the keys. There is some kind of muscle/spacial/cerebellum/brain function which some people have & others lack. Playing the piano is not just a matter of musical appreciation, but it is largely a physical muscle control operation, with ability to memorize unconsciously an exercise, muscle-movement routine. Some can spontaneously transpose, others can not. It is like a miraculous gift. & I speak as a person who loves music, appreciates music, & has spent many hours practicing the piano. -- IMHO

  • @BananaMilkishake
    @BananaMilkishake Před 4 měsíci

    Sources?

  • @AJBTemplar
    @AJBTemplar Před 4 měsíci

    Just waffle.

  • @user-vj6hb5ls7x
    @user-vj6hb5ls7x Před 4 měsíci

    Wang Lang and many many others have a long way to go before you can call them great . Money makers for sure ,Great pianists, only time will tell .