Professional Pianist Learns Rush E On The Spot 🔥

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Published 2023-09-01
Do you think any pianist could play "Rush E"? This song is known to be literally impossible to play! Watch this video of Sangah Noona, a professional pianist, trying to figure it out. She shares with us some of her techniques on how to learn to play a song by ear.

Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:44 Rush E
2:42 Song Analysis
4:32 “Rush E” Performance
6:23 “Rush E” but JAZZY
7:16 Final Thoughts


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All Comments (21)
  • @SheetMusicBoss
    Amazing! Having those top tier aural skills is so useful for transcribing and composing - and I love Sangah's take on it :D
  • @SangahNoona
    This was so much fun! It’s always great to be in the Pianote studio! 😉👍🏻
  • @Furiora
    Honestly, the thing I love the most about this is how Sangah was clearly enjoying how utterly barmy the song is. She's already got a huge grin on her face as we head into the second B section and then just breaks as the "DUN! DUN! DUN! DUN!" keyboard slams happen, then she sees this wall of notes coming at her when the key changes and she just starts laughing even harder and even mimics the "EEEEEEEEE!" at the end.
  • @toonce101
    The jazz version has so much character and uniqueness. This was absolutely incredible!
  • @luigi3964
    It's mind boggling how Sangah could dissect that song so quickly. Then play it through and make it even better with her own special flair. What an incredible artist we are all blessed to watch.❤
  • @caseyrebel9947
    If you didn’t already love Sangah, this would make you love her now. She’s an absolutely brilliant musician….and she’s fun, too.
  • @saberruntv
    what I like about rush E is. even at the end where everything seems random. you can still hear the harmonics. this is pure talent to make a song with so much caccophony yet still being enjoyable
  • @pirate_hat_Ben
    Wow… Sangah’s Rush E performance (including the jazzy variation) blew me away 🎹🔥
  • @lokiofdohmend996
    It is absolutely impressive and entertaining watching a professional perform Rush E. And it looked like she was having a blast. Great stuff!
  • @Krmpfpks
    That was fun. I love how she really doesn’t judge the song but takes it for what it is - a meme. Her process of recreating it was so fun to watch. I loved her rendition at the end when she stopped restricting herself to the simple chords of the original and just improvised.❤
  • @mshumai
    Love her attitude and message! Despite being an expert and master of her craft, she approaches it as a learning opportunity and is so humble. We're never too good/too big/too wise to learn something new.
  • @zoltanpolacsek
    That jazz e version is really great, thanks for it! ☺
  • @ansonlee147
    Her notes had fewer than 5 bars and she played a whole composed song with an improvised piece at the end. Exceptional!
  • The thing that's interesting about Rush E is how it is not a piano piece, but a MIDI piece. It uses the full power of MIDI as a format to compose percussion within the boundaries of the piano synthesizer as a MIDI output.
  • @WoodyGamesUK
    Sangah is not just any professional pianist, she's totally unique, I have never seen anyone play the piano like she does.
  • @robertthomas6127
    If your head is spining watching this as a non-musician ...don't feel ashamed ...you are NOT alone. 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
  • @RyanBentz
    I love seeing professional and classically trained pianists attempt this piece. I learned this from the synthesia tutorial alone, so it is nice to watch. It's interesting to see her own rendition of the song. Thanks for sharing! 🎹❤️🇪
  • @Bobbias
    It's really cool to see how she uses dynamics to mirror the overall structure of the original. Where the original as layers of notes, she plays the notes louder. Two different ways to accomplish the same end goal: adding intensity.