PLAY VIDEO: Top 10 Most Difficult Piano Pieces

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=9&v=l15PDRSTn7s&feature=emb_logo


Top 10 Most Difficult Piano Pieces Click the bell to always be notified on new uploads! •Follow Rousseau on socials: ♫ Instagram: http://bit.ly/rousseauig ♫ Twitter: http://bit.ly/rousseautw ♫ Listen on Spotify: http://spoti.fi/2LdpqK7 ♫ Sheet music: https://patreon.com/rousseau ♫ MIDI: https://patreon.com/rousseau ♫ Facebook: http://bit.ly/rousseaufb ♫ Buy me a coffee: http://buymeacoff.ee/rousseau ♫ Join me on discord: http://bit.ly/RousseauDiscord Check the pinned comment for a list of piano pieces which are many times more difficult than the ones shown in this video. Hello, I'm Rousseau, I make piano covers of classical and pop songs with a reactive visualizer. New videos every Monday and Thursday!
 

FaithfulSkeptic

Carrying the mantle of doubt
Meh. All muscle memory. No skill involved. COUGH. COUGH!! Those are amazing. Some looked downright painful!!
Definitely muscle memory involved. I used to play the piano a bit, but 1) had poor muscle memory in my left hand, and 2) have very limited control of my ring and pinky on both hands. Could only take it so far.
 

Signwatcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
She done good! I played violin from 5th grade to my Junior year. Had an issue with the orchestra teacher and quit. I would have been concert mistress in my senior year. Had a private lesson teacher that tried to force me to go pro. Her forceful ways turned me off. Between her and the orchestra teacher, I left the violin behind. Every thing is as it should be. That life path wasn't where I should have gone.

My favorite composer was Vivaldi. Baroque music was my favorite style. Found out later in life that Baroque soothes ADHD and ADD sufferers, of which I am one.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
From the film Crossroads. It’s about 6 ½ minutes long. The “fun part” (hard tune) starts at 3:35. Naturally it’s not Macchio playing it, but someone (Steve Vai) is a guitar master.

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqdL36VKbMQ
Steve Vai, looking like a young, pretty Alice Cooper - Haha! How he managed NOT to break strings with that last bend....

Here's a little ground breaking he's been working on lately. God, I can't believe he turned 60:



Steve Vai debuts innovative "joint shifting" technique with new song Candle Power

By Richard Bienstock 10 days ago
Steve Vai debuts innovative "joint shifting" technique with new song Candle Power

The ever-inventive virtuoso showcases a whole new bending approach to celebrate his 60th birthday
(3:42)
View: http://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=30&v=4fO954zQ3Us&feature=emb_logo



Steve Vai may have just turned 60, but the man who was labeled a “stunt” guitar player by Frank Zappa some four decades ago clearly isn’t done pushing himself on the instrument.
In celebration of his birthday, Vai has just released a new electric guitar instrumental, Candle Power, which demonstrates a new technique he’s been developing that he calls "joint shifting".

As he explains in the caption accompanying the new clip, “This is where you bend a note while fretting another, but I wanted to do this technique with a combination of double and triple stop single note bends while fretting other notes and releasing bends.

“After considerable experimenting, I discovered it created a unique sounding passage. You can hear this technique on a few sections of the song. I certainly hope other ambitious guitar player see the potential in this technique and take it to the moon!”

In addition to the joint shifting technique, Vai also challenges himself in other ways on Candle Power, outlining some strict playing parameters:
“I told myself I would use a Strat style guitar (tougher for me to play then a Jem), use a very clean tone (not conventional for me). no whammy bar (that’s like losing a body part for me) and no pick, just fingers (way out of my comfort zone),” he writes.

Vai spoke about joint shifting – calling it “freaky shit” – in an interview with MusicRadar last year. At the time, he hinted at the song Candle Power, and that it would be featured on his next studio effort, the follow up to 2016’s Modern Primitive.

“I’m working on it right now,” Vai said of the new record. “It’s different, sounding very stripped-down and trio-based.

“For the past two years, in my mind’s eye, I’ve found the best way to improve is to imagine myself doing something beyond my capabilities. That’s how everything has been coming out, like this joint shifting. I just imagine something I can’t do and then I work on it. I’ve found it keeps things fresh and interesting.”

He continued, “I’ve started having visions about playing in new ways… it’s not like they’re fast. I’m 59; keeping up those chops isn’t as interesting to me. It’s all about the bizarre and quirky ways to phrase, moving all around the neck.

“It takes months and months to develop through undisturbed and focused time. And then you have this new vantage point… that’s what makes it so rewarding.
 

FireDance

TB Fanatic
Steve Vai, looking like a young, pretty Alice Cooper - Haha! How he managed NOT to break strings with that last bend....

Here's a little ground breaking he's been working on lately. God, I can't believe he turned 60:



Steve Vai debuts innovative "joint shifting" technique with new song Candle Power

By Richard Bienstock 10 days ago
Steve Vai debuts innovative "joint shifting" technique with new song Candle Power

The ever-inventive virtuoso showcases a whole new bending approach to celebrate his 60th birthday
(3:42)
View: http://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=30&v=4fO954zQ3Us&feature=emb_logo



Steve Vai may have just turned 60, but the man who was labeled a “stunt” guitar player by Frank Zappa some four decades ago clearly isn’t done pushing himself on the instrument.
In celebration of his birthday, Vai has just released a new electric guitar instrumental, Candle Power, which demonstrates a new technique he’s been developing that he calls "joint shifting".

As he explains in the caption accompanying the new clip, “This is where you bend a note while fretting another, but I wanted to do this technique with a combination of double and triple stop single note bends while fretting other notes and releasing bends.

“After considerable experimenting, I discovered it created a unique sounding passage. You can hear this technique on a few sections of the song. I certainly hope other ambitious guitar player see the potential in this technique and take it to the moon!”

In addition to the joint shifting technique, Vai also challenges himself in other ways on Candle Power, outlining some strict playing parameters:
“I told myself I would use a Strat style guitar (tougher for me to play then a Jem), use a very clean tone (not conventional for me). no whammy bar (that’s like losing a body part for me) and no pick, just fingers (way out of my comfort zone),” he writes.

Vai spoke about joint shifting – calling it “freaky shit” – in an interview with MusicRadar last year. At the time, he hinted at the song Candle Power, and that it would be featured on his next studio effort, the follow up to 2016’s Modern Primitive.

“I’m working on it right now,” Vai said of the new record. “It’s different, sounding very stripped-down and trio-based.

“For the past two years, in my mind’s eye, I’ve found the best way to improve is to imagine myself doing something beyond my capabilities. That’s how everything has been coming out, like this joint shifting. I just imagine something I can’t do and then I work on it. I’ve found it keeps things fresh and interesting.”

He continued, “I’ve started having visions about playing in new ways… it’s not like they’re fast. I’m 59; keeping up those chops isn’t as interesting to me. It’s all about the bizarre and quirky ways to phrase, moving all around the neck.

“It takes months and months to develop through undisturbed and focused time. And then you have this new vantage point… that’s what makes it so rewarding.
Way cool!
 
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