Sounds like you would be interested in SponsorBlock and uBlock Origin, which would block both the ads and the annoying sponsorships. Additionally, you can configure SponsorBlock to block the annoying outros as well.
In Geogebra, put this in to the right hand side: 12y^2 * (y/3 + 9x/y^2) = 4y^3 - 72 after clicking enter it should show up as eq1 then put in a new equation y = 0 it should show up as f Now put A = intersect(eq1, f) it should say undefined
Edit: Forgot to add parenthesis
It's a perfectly safe and trusted site so if you have doubts, don't worry. I literally have it on my phone and it's a game and life-changer. After having downloaded, you should have what's called "Vanced Manager". Go click that and do the authentication part. It'll just asked you if you agree with the terms and condition blah blah blah, and then! After that, install "VANCED MIRCROG". And now you can download both YouTube Vanced and YouTube Music. They're both adless. At least the YouTube Vanced is. I haven't downloaded YouTube Music. But now you won't have the annoying stupid ads between movements! Enjoy :D
MuseScore, Noteflight, flat.io, are all free. The latter two are online. LilyPond is another program, but I haven't tried it and have no opinions about it.
The standards if you're paying are Finale and Sibelius. Dorico is comparatively new, but I've heard good things about it.
Here’s a link in case you want to check it out! Waltz No. 1
Saxophone? 😂 I knew a girl in middle school who had one of those weird-colored instruments and hers was purple. Context: purple Sax Amazon
I'm bad at tech stuff, but I tried to see if I could connect to twosetapparel via Nord VPN as if I was in Iran (to see if I got the same message as you), but I couldn't, because there were no servers there. All in all, I don't think it's twoset website blocking people that try to connect to it in Iran. I deffinately don't think it has to do anything with your IP. I think it might be some security issues, like for example, the website thinks your device and/or connection is suspicious. But like I said I'm just guessing. Maybe send a message to twoset support? Or copy-paste the message you got on screen into google and see if someone else had the same message. Also, if you just want to get to the website, NordVPN has 7 day free trial, and that should work 👍
That makes me think of this image.
Here is the link:
posted this a while back but 0.0185% of people responding is not reliable nor accurate data
I wish I had the ability to cover those amazing vocals, but this is all I could come up with.
Can you tell me the meaning of re mamma re? I read the story that the song tells and I found it incredibly sweet.
working on writing it down because i have way too much time on my hands here
heres my chaotic tchaik-sibelius mash up duet hope yall enjoy also all feedbacks are welcomed :p
Thanks for your feedback. Humidity affects atmospheric pressure which would add to our pressure. The link bellow suggests more humidity is less pressure, so the grip formula would be: Grip = P / (C + S + H) Where H is humidity. Does that works? https://socratic.org/questions/does-air-pressure-change-with-humidity
I've seen things called stand wings or something. But they are these two seperate peices of plastic that go on each end of the stand. And so you slide the peices out to make your stand longer. Basically this thing: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00H5XQH20/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glc_fabc_27GF6WFV9H9K4S23F80J
Nobody does it? Look what they sell on Amazon, and I've seen many self-taught violinists on Youtube use those for the first half year/year or so...
https://www.amazon.com/Fretless-Finger-Guide-Full-Violin/dp/B00E9EC2K4
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When I started, my teacher gave me a little dot where the thumb goes, and that was it. After 2 months of practice, the dot fell off and then she was like "well, use your ear now..."
This is why I hate sheet music. Unless you are an epic sight reader, it is really hard to see what the composer is doing here. Sometimes, it is easier to understand something like this by actually watching it being played rather than by reading the music. It is a shame great music gets locked up in this archaic form of communication. The piano is hard enough as it is. This is why I moved away from classical sheet music and into learning jazz. It is easier to play through difficult stuff like this, when you have an understanding of the harmonic context and the underlying progressions involved. I use an app to learn the shapes of the chords and scales that form melodic figures away from sheet music. If I relied on having to read music like this, I just get nowhere fast....
By lute, do you mean something like this I found on Amazon? https://www.amazon.com/BESTOYARD-Simulation-Traditional-Stringed-Instrument/dp/B0987JP9XC/ref=mp_s_a_1_13?crid=3066C54K4G5K1&keywords=lute&qid=1669922575&sprefix=lute%2Caps%2C190&sr=8-13
I wonder if it's easy to learn though, I can't imagine there being a lot of tutorials on this since it's pretty niche.
by manually i mean creating the actual .lrc file yourself, not in the music app. you can create a blank file on something like notepad, follow the format described here, and then save the file with the .lrc extension. alternatively, you can use an app like this, which should help make the files for you. once you have the .lrc file, you can import it into mi music.
A young Bach, in his first job, was in charge of a student orchestra. He drew a knife on a bassoon student, during an altercation with said bassoonist.
Mozart's scatological humor is preserved in his letters to his mom, his cousin, his sister.
I think it's required for musicians to be a bit "off," tbh. Same with artists, same with engineers.
People don't change. We will always be what we are, no matter which century is being discussed.
The trouble is, modern people look at those stiff, posed portraits of the past (when you had to sit for a painting, or wear a neck brace for a photograph because the exposure times were so long) and believe that static image is the truth about the subject.
You imagine having hi-performance cameras back in Mozart's day, what that party animal must've been like in his element? He'd be all over IG and FB and what not, and probably have a rabid band of simpers after him -- and also a lot of haters against him. I imagine it'd be like seeing an IG feed of some metal rocker or something.
They were all troublemakers. Some hid it better than others.. and some just didn't care to hide it.
I didn't do that drawing. It comes from a wonderful amazon book
Not super common but I wouldn't consider them rare. I think I got mine from amazon...not 100% sure tho
Link (this isn't the same one that I have, I couldn't find it, but its the same idea):
Because amazon
LOL Here you go! If you look up “Chopin Liszt notepad” a few of these should come up. I’m buying one from Amazon https://www.amazon.com/JSI-Chopin-Liszt-Pad/dp/B000ZU2IQY/ref=sr_1_1?crid=A4K0ERZ917OJ&keywords=chopin+liszt+notepad&qid=1652283610&sprefix=Chopin+liszt%2Caps%2C114&sr=8-1
I've got one and it's completely awesome. Wire tabs to hold the music down and it also came with a stubby base so you could set the stand up on a table. It was $34 and came with a travel bag, a music clip, collapsible stand, and the table top attachment. I love this thing as there's enough room to also carry a few thin music books in the bag too. I've had it for two years now.
This is the one I got and it's fantastic.
lol I have the same ones. You can buy them online (these aren't the same exact ones but they're similar: https://www.amazon.com/Treble-Clef-Music-Paper-Clips/dp/B003UNHF5M)
So I have not bought the letters ‘cause my dad had them already, so I don’t have any PDF links, BUT you can buy them on Amazon here https://www.amazon.it/Chopins-Letters-Dover-Books-English-ebook/dp/B00COGXUNM
There is a special mute for trombone that allows you to play with headphones! For outstanders it is still audible but a lot more quiet, and for the person who plays it sounds normal in the headphones. Hope this helps :D
https://www.amazon.com/Yamaha-SB5XC-Silent-System-Trombone/dp/B00I141EKC
Maybe the courses by Robert Greenberg are available at your library? They're pretty good. Here's one of his on the fundamentals of music theory: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/understanding-the-fundamentals-of-music
And one on the history of European music: https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/how-to-listen-to-and-understand-great-music-3rd-edition
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I recited that from memory… 😑
Hello all, I am trying to collect some more information on twosetters, including what country they're from.
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IF YOU HAVE ALREADY DONE BOTH PARTS OF THE r/LINGLING40HRS SURVEY, YOU DO NOT NEED TO DO IT AGAIN.
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If you haven't attempted the second part of the survey, here is the link:
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Thank you for participating! I will post the results on the subreddit when I have enough contributers.
This survey is a few simple, optional questions so we can the demographics and any IntERestING music data on the twoset community
I posted this survey about a week ago on a different account although it wasn't seen and only about 50 people filled it in, which I am very grateful for, although need more people to have accurate data.
If you have done the survey you don't have to do it a second time. Hopefully this time more people will see it and we can get some more data which I can post in the future onto this subreddit.
Thanks for participating!
This survey is a few simple, optional questions so we can the demographics and any IntERestING music data on the twoset community
I posted this survey about a week ago on a different account although it wasn't seen and only about 50 people filled it in, which I am very grateful for, although need more people to have accurate data.
If you have done the survey you don't have to do it a second time. Hopefully this time more people will see it and we can get some more data which I can post in the future onto this subreddit.
Thanks for participating!
The survey is simply to get some statistics on the demographics and some interesting music data on the population of this subreddit so I can post the results later on.
I posted this link last week (on another account) and I am thankful for the 50-odd people who participated, you don't have to do the form a second time.
Thank you for participating and making sure enough people see this so we can get some accurate data!
Try this: http://www.musipedia.org/melodic_contour.html
You can search for songs based on what direction the melody goes and it works really well actually (as long as you remember the tune right). U is up and d is down so for like claire de lune you type in uddud and so on
Btw I'm gonna do another video if this vid reaches 100 sharps!
The next video I'm gonna use is related to Flat. Flat is a platform that use can make music. This is my account I've been using for 1 year: https://flat.io/hao\_hoe\_chin
hello there, i submitted a mash-up duet of sibelius and tchaikovsky violin concertos in the sense that it would be cool to celebrate twoset probably reaching 2.5m subs by the time they had posted their video. i had no experience in actually composing anything until now and the piece turned out to be kind of trippy and chaotic than i thought it would, but i hope anyone who listens to it enjoys it and obviously all kinds of feedback is welcome :))heres the duet
https://flat.io/score/5ebd7e67718ebd0ce251179d/edit
If anyone wants to learn a difficult recorder piece, here it is! Composed by HungryNet.
(Share this with Sarah Jeffery / Team Recorder or Lucie Horsch)
As I explained in the title I am totally self-taugh on piano (even if i play a lot since i was a kid) and music theory, so if you guys have any feedback or correction on the way it is written, let me know because I certainly made a lot of mistakes as I have no real musical background. You can find the melodies I am composing on musescore and falt.io . Tell me what you think about it (and if you think I am wasting my time instead of PRACTICING) it would help me a lot :)
Many thanks from France
Here's the link to the score: https://flat.io/score/5c34da0cabd5f00f66447bfc-beethoven-6-arrangement?sharingKey=149ae477d5853064c49ff592c3c6d5e37e9099a76cfb72b1942e5c0100c5fbb743c93b6663b83ee4dceb61179f6c87fb0dc4d1c9bb2ab9c13e123513bbc6969b
We only did the first few measures though, off of a piano transcription of the symphony.
@evatheEstring and I did this together for a project. XD
- the extra 8th note in the 2nd treble clef measure wasn't there
- the half notes in the 3rd treble clef measure were changed to quarter notes to match 3/4
- the last note in the 3rd bass clef measure wasn't there
- we assume it's a B minor with the two sharps
You can find everything here in this handbook, but I will give it to you right away!
Handbook for MuseScore 3 | MuseScore
P.S. Can you tell me about the "swing" because I don't know that...
>I believe a keyboard and a good note editing program would help a lot. I will reply again if I ever write something non shitty
in the post below I recommend musescore.org . It's amazing - you can learn to use it really quickly, and there's almost no limit to what you can do with it. What's more there's execllent forums and online support for it
>Steve with the SWIM (Sequential Wave Imprinting Machine) that he invented in his childhood in the 1970s. Here it us used to visualize sound waves from a violin.
Steve Mann invented a precursor to Google Glass in the 1990s—which he now uses almost 24/7. But “the father of wearable computing” has an ominous warning about where technology is taking us next.
[Life of a full time cyborg](https://getpocket.com/explore/item/secret-life-of-a-full-time-cyborg)
Well, im kinda a website person and i like to use google keep and google tasks, you can sign in using your gmail account, and for google keep there is a seperate website, keep.google.com and you can write reminders, schedule them if you want, and change the colors of the reminders to stick out, you can archive and delete them once you are done, but you see all the reminders at once in the mainscreen. for Google Tasks, its not really a website i think, i just go into gmail, and at the right side bar there is a icon with a pen and a circle, and if you click it you can see the tests menu, and you can create different lists for at home- and at class and add stuff to-do, and check them off when you are done! (i just found out that keep is right above tasks too)
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B081J9VG2K?ref=detail_main_image_block_ivx_share
get a digital piano, it’s affordable and not much different as a real one, mine is CASIO around usd$700, it’s been 6years, still work..and you can pug in headphone then you can practice 40 hours happily.
Awesome job! Couple things I noticed:
Your open strings seemed a bit flat to me, especially the A string, so make sure your strings are in tune before you practice. If you don’t have a tuner, here is a link to the one I got from Amazon. It’s $12 or so, comes with batteries, and you can just clip it to the pegs or the bridge. Despite the out of tune strings, your intonation was really good for a beginner. I’m at a piano in one of my college’s practice rooms at the moment so I played along with you and you sound much more in tune than when I started learning viola. You can also tune to your keyboard if you’re comfortable doing that.
I also noticed your bow hold seems a bit stiff so try to curve your fingers a bit more and relax your wrist as you bow. Try holding your bow in the middle with your left hand and loosely flopping your right hand into position. All of your fingers should be curved a bit (check your pinky too). YouTube has thousands of videos on bow holds (just make sure the person knows what they are talking about) and your teacher should be able to help you with it too.
Your left hand looks pretty solid, just make sure to loosen up and don’t squeeze too tight. It doesn’t take much to push down those strings and unnecessary tension can lead to long term injury.
Great hearing you play, keep up the good work!
Anything in the sonatina book. They’re fun and it’s good music.
I can definitely relate to #3, it took 3 or 4 lessons of blowing on a toy flute with a little windmill spinner before I could get even the tiniest sound out.
(Edit: found this online for a reference: https://www.amazon.com/Pneumo-Pro-Wind-Director-Practice/dp/B0058VGO24)
I feel like oboists get a lot of jokes directed towards them, at least in my band.
I find #7 a little funny though, since our band makes up for our volume in sheer numbers. We have over a dozen flautists, which means that we never have to worry about volume. That is, of course, unless someone is faking…
In relation to #5, because I practice waaay too little, I’ve become pretty good at sight reading, which helps with the horrible fast parts that we always seem to get. It makes band so much more fun (and satisfying as hell when you get it right), and my friend has just taken to lowering his flute and pointing at me during the fast runs. It’s absolutely hilarious.
Moral of the story: don’t practice.
Mendini Size 1/8 MV-Pink Solid Wood Violin with Tuner, Lesson Book, Shoulder Rest, Extra Strings, Bow and Case, Metallic Pink https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MRRYOGM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_fabc_KYJZFbKZ4NZCM?psc=1
Here m8:
BIGFUN Kids Keyboard Piano 37 Keys Portable Kids Electronic Musical Instrument for Kids Children Early Learning Educational (Black) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08CKCXL3B/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glc_fabc_Dy6YFbHP7HQTP?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
Try telling him about the Alfred books for learning piano. Thats what I've been using and I can read pretty well now
This one and the other 2 levels: https://www.amazon.com/Adult-All-One-Course-Lesson-Theory-Technic/dp/0882848186
It will also teach him proper technique and give him lots of tips to make his life easier, unlike simply piano
https://www.amazon.com/Elise-Other-Classical-Music-Children/dp/B001BIL2RA
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The bottom part of the album cover says "and other classical music". 😅
it's super normal, I've played for 8 years and always struggle with that, it just that your hand is tensed, try relaxing. You can also get one of these so you can use it when it aches. Splint link
Have you considered a roll-up piano keyboard? I've been thinking about getting this one from Amazon for myself: Portable Flexible Electronic 88-Key piano - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07TTLDYY1/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_oTfSDbJKFWN3B
I got if off of amazon for 70 bucks; I know it's not that much, but I'm a broke college kids, so sue me. It's in tune and makes the violin noise right most of the time, when it doesn't, I chalk that up to me haha. I'm a little past the age where taking in new information is easy, but I think my motivation to learn will make up the difference.
Link if anyone was wondering: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002026DR0/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
If you want to learn some theory, this is the perfect website for it:
http://musictheory.pugetsound.edu/mt21c/MusicTheory.html
It takes you from absolute basics up to some more modern craziness, and it even has little practice exercises at the end of each section. I would advise taking it slow, at least a week for each section, longer if it's something you're really struggling with. Wait until you're comfortable before moving on to the next section.
I would recommend getting a cheap keyboard so you can play things and really get a feel for them. Something like this is a good starting point if you can afford it. As a bonus, once you get through the first section of the website you'll be able to start reading music, so you can google sheet music of songs you like and start learning! I would advise finding an instructor if you can though, so you can get the proper technique down.
If you have any questions (about learning music or even just musical references in TwoSet videos), I'm a music teacher so let me know and I'll do my best. :)
If you're confident on the instrument you've picked out, next up are the strings. You can save up for this obviously if you need to. I recommend Ascente or Zyex; though a lot of people like Dominants--I never did, but that's personal taste. But if you need cheaper and fairly durable, Prelude are ~$20 a set and will play fine for a beginner. Also look at saving up for a shoulder rest, but you can start without one if you need to.
Look at Youtube for guides to tuning your instrument (watch a few of them to get different takes), and honestly I'd start with the Suzuki 1 book for easy pieces to play, and it comes with a CD and beginner's tips, too. Link.
Also: there are various free phone apps that you can use as a tuner to tell you if you're sharp/flat. Also also: when tuning via the pegs, if you're trying to make a flat string sharper, I highly recommend loosening the peg first to get it "unstuck," then tightening. Less likely to snap a string. ...And be really careful tightening the E.
Hope this helps; good luck!
Try amazon smile to donate to charity automatically at no cost to you!
https://smile.amazon.com/Drawing-Dynamic-Hands-Burne-Hogarth/dp/0823013685
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Sure, here it is: https://www.amazon.com/Famous-Pianists-Their-Technique-New/dp/0253348552 It's quite a long read, but it's both useful for understanding technique and interesting because you'll learn a lot about composers. I just looked up the Amazon link, but I don't know whether this is the best price
You'll need a warmer for it, because it's solid at room temperature! And be warned—it SMELLS. It's literally melted animal parts, and it smells like it.
ETA: We had this one at the shop where I was learning violin making, but it's pretty expensive to invest in on a whim. I've also read about people using crock pots; YMMV. You want to use a glue like this, not the weird shit that comes in a bottle pre-made. And seriously, it stinks. Don't do it in a room that you want to smell right ever again.
I don’t play the violin (the cello) but I do suggest that you check out Musescore.com to get free sheet music downloads, they have virtually anything. Most of my music comes from there. Try A Whole New World because who doesn’t love Disney music?
Also try looking for music books to get new scales, Etudes, and to learn new positions.
Edit again: found this book on Amazon you ought to try https://www.amazon.com/Scale-System-Exercises-Major-Minor/dp/1626540837