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From: TIKTAK190
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  • how can she not be asian...?

  • @holtertube because she has a soul

  • @holtertube how IS she asian? noone i know can play as well, and im in singapore!

  • @MsLiew1901 She is actually built by Honda with white features. She has the ability to reproduce midi files.

  • @MsLiew1901 She is too chubby for an asian.

  • @holtertube As I said she is built by Honda and she is a top secret robot called Asimo 2.

  • She learned this by heart. Every single note. That is not a genius. That is a new honda robot. Her writing skills are just ok : )

  • @mikakrstic Not true, check her arrangement of Silent Night, all her little additions and counter melodies though easy enough for a decent pianist are just right. She makes that tired old Christmas carol into something special. Very few who can do that.

  • @WJE37FCSM not impressed. since when did "decent: become "amazing"? "New Mozart"! Every other youtube kid is proclaimed a "genius" by their mediocre families, c'mon...

  • @WJE37FCSM PS, then you obviously only heard just a "few" performing Christmas carols.

  • NO ONE MOVE I LOST MY JAW!

  • @125Kills you did?? how are you talking then?? hahahha!!!

  • this girl is a piano prodigy, thats what the wgn.com says it, look at their internview to the parents, the girl actually could play th epiano since 2years and 1 month old, which was discovered by her grandmother who is a piano teacher especailly for gifted kids (and actually her granddaughter is one) ... it looks like she is just playing arond with her toy) :-)... amazing :-)

  • @rumbayanti So you say wgn.com says something?? OMG is that the website no one ever heard of? Oh I see. Ok, wait! You say in the interview her parents say she is a genius?? OMG! Her grandma is a special type of superhuman pianist, but nobody ever heard of her? hmmm.

  • i do her uncles hair!!!!

  • @daniellaswears Which hair?

  • ERES GRANDE

  • @ghostrepublic65 I agree to a certain extent. There are artists that came from poor, poor families and became famous musicians, actors, producers, directors, etc. The way that Emily plays shows great maturity and some of which cannot be taught...believe me.

  • @olivembs28 did Mozart ever showed maturity? Not even when he was dying. Maturity doesn't mean a thing, in fact, most genius musicians remained totally immature. Get some history books will you? And than you say, "believe you"? Why? you don't seem like you have any knowledge in music.

  • The thing is if she had not any talent. what would her parents wealth do any good?

  • @pianiforte Quite the opposite, her parents wealth wouldn't be needed if she was a genius. There is an old saying, good products don't need such desperate advertising. If she was amazing she would've showed up on the street one day with a little keyboard and become a super star.

  • @pianiforte I have seen numerous cases like emily's. Her grandma knows that If they don't push her now she won't mean a thing when she is 15 and plays the same. Also her grandma couldn't brag how great she was and how she created emily. No one ever heard about emily grandma.

  • @mikakrstic She is ENCOURAGED by her grandmother; not pushed. In a recent interview, Emily's parents clearly say that if she wants to stop, they will let Emily do what she feels she needs to do.

  • @EmilyBearfan

    Exactly, she plays the piano because SHE wants to! :)

  • @claups88 No one said SHE does not want to play. Pay attention ok? She is pushed to medias and DON'T tell me she uploaded her videos and recorded them herself! That would be very pathetic if you did.

  • @EmilyBearfan Hmm let's see, and you are? Emilybearfan? Lol, her dad I suppose?

    Do you really think your game is invisible? : )))))

  • @mikakrstic Game? I don't understand what you mean by "game." I am simply saying that her family encourages her, but they don't force her to do anything. I am not her dad. I am just a fan of hers. :)

  • @EmilyBearfan oh ok I see, I believe you...I almost do. Being a fan doesn't mean you actually know what is going on inside her family since you're not her family. You can only assume, and your assumption is rather naive. Everything in this world is business buddy. So is emily bear.

  • @mikakrstic No need to be so rude! :) I have a picture of myself up on my channel, along with videos of myself playing her pieces. ANd it's true. Just like I don't know for sure that she's not being forced, YOU don't know for sure that she IS being forced.

  • @EmilyBearfan Lol! Rude? wow, someone got upset? : ) I had no idea your situation is this serious with emilybear. You have a picture, you play her music and you actually post it on youtube? wow. I am speechless. I guess you finally found a purpose in life. I won't bother you anymore I promise. I will simply block you, cool? Sorry if I hurt your feelings sweetheart.

  • @mikakrstic Whoa, whoa! I didn't mean to make you angry! I'm just trying to make it clear that I am by no means related in any way to Emily (although I sometimes wish).

  • @EmilyBearfan hey, you don't have to yell so loud little girl : ) you wish to be chubby and dorky? lol

  • @mikakrstic you know what? i think youre freaking JEALOUS of @EmilyBearfan.. shes freaking AMAZING. and you know what? I AM SPEECHLESS that God gave her the talent that she has!!! block her? jeez.. people... if everyone doesn't agree with you then there must be something wrong with them... guess your purpose in life is to attack people online : ) sorry if i hurt your feelings sweetheart

  • @BachLoverFTW Are you the freak that stalks on young girls on yourube?! OMG I've seen a police report on yahoo news!!! You are a scary man in your 40's and you live with your mother don't you you little wimp?

  • @EmilyBearfan You are a talented girl. Actually I don't like to see you are fighting with brainless people. It's useless, isn't it?

  • @prasaranga You have a very good point there! :) I tend to argue with people if I have a point to make regardless of the IQ of the other person...but I wouldn't say that mikakrstic was brainless...

  • You cant learn someone how to write music like she does... ant deffinitly not at her age. You can practise all you want and play the piano so well, but composing is an whole other level of talent. I know I am talented. I can write something, but she is soooooo much better.

  • @esthergeurts Well, I guess she is better than you then, right? lol! Does that mean she is great?? : )))))

  • I disagree with the above two comments. Her family may be wealthy, and good teachers are an advantage, but no teacher can teach anybody to play like that - this child has a gift. I'm a piano teacher and one of my students is a very talented 5-year-old, but her talent goes way beyond anybody's ability to teach.

  • i dont think you can teach what she has, your just born with it. maybe it was in her genes ands shes genetically predisposed to have some talent. i know people with pretty normal backgrounds who are really determined and seek out their dreams. my parents had me me privately tutored as a kid but i still failed in school, i think i got most of my genes from my dad who is a lazy bum just like me. i really cant fathom what its like to have determination, i've literally never been determined.

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  • Why is it that a white little girl who is able to play so well is not labelled as child abuse while an asian girl who is also able to play well is labelled as child abuse, life wasted, robot, authoritative parents? WTF is wrong with the western minds?

  • @MrJonslife You can tell that she's not being forced to play. She actually plays musically.

  • She sure has talent even minus her family's wealth and influence. To be discovered by her grandma at 2, that 's potential. She's amazing.

  • Cant you all take the talent for what it is. Seriously? Asian? Wealthy? Get over it!

  • Taught or not, she is talented at what she does. She has to like what she does to play so well. When the child is forced, they produce sound. Emily likes what she does and plays music! Bravo to all that helped her achieve such talent!

  • @chocoluver777 Actually, I think it's more because she composes her own music. Yes, Asians can play the piano (I myself am Asian; and I'm not forced to play). But compose the way she can? Not so much.

  • WAOUH. It's absolutly AMAZING! Like a miracle.... :O

  • Well so what if her family could afford her lesson she is one talented little lady ... Just watch she will go so far in the game of life and people on you tube are just wasting there time Criticizing her for her talents .. What wrong with this world seriously

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  • @richardmumolo no, it's by duke Ellington

  • Does anyone know what version this is? Trying to find the sheet music but everything I've come across is way different...

  • @flip4gym13 "I believe", this an Emily Bear original composition. She has a website, where you can get both her sheet music in book form, & cd's.

  • .,-

    amazing ! . . .

  • Sometimes the Thumbs Down button doesn't mean we dislike the playing...it just means we dislike the video... What means that I can thumbs down for the bad quality of the sound... PS: I really like her, she is so amazing and talented.

  • I dislike this one. And I won't thumb up because she's a child.

  • She's sooooooo talented with this piano!

  • she got the souls of jazz... that's very rare..

  • she just hew the piano keys, that is not what you can understand under music.. when every child was rich then could they play piano,too.. it depends on the parents, if they are rich there children can play piano, but if they aren't rich, and they look for some food, so it is really normal that some lukely children can play piano, do you understand what i mean? so my english is not so good :D

  • @erdbeer8I i think the human brain is an amazing tool, during earlier years of children, children learn quiet a lot through observation. Raising a child such as emily is i think possible if there is a right environment (her whole family were musicains). For example, my sister and i, inspite of what many said black people are uneducated in australia, we were raised in an academic environment and now i will enter law school at a prestigious university and my sis is a doctor.

  • i was a prodigy too :D i learned how to love when i was i think a year old... then i learned how to dream when i was 2 :)

  • As true as it is that every child has the potential to play as masterfully as her, her composing skills are baffling.

  • So BEAUTIFUL!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Wonderfull and beautiful this is amazing

  • yes, i agree that a lot of her technique comes from the training that she received, but for someone to be able to compose pieces, it has to come from somewhere else (especially jazz...you have to you feel jazz, not think it... if you know what i mean). also, mozart and beethoven studied under great musicians too (Bach and Haydn respectfully), but we never push them off and say they were just taught to be great.

  • yes, i agree that a lot of her technique comes from the training that she received, but for someone to be able to compose pieces, it has to come from somewhere else (especially jazz...you have to you feel jazz, not think it... if you know what i mean). also, mozart and beethoven studied under great musicians too (Bach and Haydn respectfully), but we never push them off and say they were just taught to be great. every child is special in their own way... emily is no different :)

  • hello everybody

    I say i thing:so this music what comes from the little Emily finger and's from her heart,it's............amazing.­..........

    This cannot be learn..........

    Soas follows along in future...:)

    Peter(jazzpianist)

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  • no megustaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

  • es orrivleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee­eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee­eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

  • Thousands children here in Brazil play with the same level of peformance or better, nevertheless we dont regard them genius, just good musicians who had the fortune of being born into a musical home!

    Why show off this on youtube?Why they try prove?

    It is a normal event.

    Emily Bear is being manufactured in laboratory by media, she is not a genius like as i have demonstrated, but just another girl prepared and pushed forward by the ambitious and unscrupulous parents, sorry!

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  • She's very good, though I like her Solfeggieto better. . .

  • She doesn't just recite, she understands - you can hear it in her playing; she has the potential to grow into a very talented composer

  • She is great?

  • The best part is that she's not Asian!

  • @kayshkorn lmaoo right?

  • I just have to say that Emily Bear is an amazing young child. She HAS been playing for 7 years (or more now). So, I think it's only normal for her little fingers to be capable of playing difficult songs. I have been playing for only one year and I am learning this song now. However, my fingers were already matured at the point I started and I already played several other instruments. Her will to play and her understanding of music is amazing, I admit. However, if someone else with that same desi

  • Incredible! You go girl!

  • not to be rude...but its too sophisticated and boring... i /watch?v=-i_xPiiOLEI better... soory :|

  • Dear utubuser - point taken! There are those truly amazing geniuses who do rise above their circumstances! But there is a theory from a man called Maslow that says human beings have to first survive before they can accomplish higher levels .

  • I agree there are many children with great gifts that are not realized because of lack of food, money, loving parents, housing, encouragement, and also of course lack of musical instruments, teachers and relatives who strongly lead a child where they want that child to go. Hard to be a Mozart if you are hungry and your parents have no food for you.

  • @sharoneoceanlane try telling that to mozart...he was raised in the days when muscians were considered little more than servants. mozart was never privileged in the terrestrial sense. he was buried in a pauper's grave.

  • platéia que não cala a boca ¬¬

  • you can bet she doesn't get out of the house much :-/

  • She is playing at a Ph.D. level. 

  • The song doesn't really sound that good :/

  • She's a music genius. Amazing.

  • I have been playing piano more than she has been alive and she is still better than me! jealousy

  • I know how she feels... though, I'd love to be a piano or art prodigy instead of a writing prodigy... That girl is amazing :) She'll be even better when she's older.

  • Compared to other prodigies I've seen, this girl has more spirit and feeling put into her performance. She will really be something when she gets older. I bet people who disliked this are either in denial, quit piano, or are jealous they are more talented.

  • Guys, sure she is talented. But to be truly honest, every child has the potential to become great not just at piano but at anything. Just give them a chance. Emily Bear's grandmother was a pianist, Emily was trained by some super prestigious dude her family could afford it. She has had every opportunity and look, she's amazing. Why not give every child the opportunity she's had, imagine how many more prodigies would exist.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA So true, and then, if there were so many, they wouldn't be prodigies. They'd just be talented.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA I gotta agree. Her family is well to do and owned not 1, but 2 Steinway pianos (a Steinway costs way more than a car). At age 2-3 they paid to have her trained by some of the finest piano teachers available. Not your average neighborhood piano teachers, but real piano masters. Take ANY 3 year old kid, hire the best piano players/instructors in the world to teach him/her how to play, give him/her a Steinway to practice and play on, and he/she too will be just as good as Emily.

  • @ghostrepublic65 that seems so misguided; almost along the same lines as, "asian pianists are good because their parents force them to play." although i don't agree with how emily bear is being coddled and touted as 'next mozart' (talk about misguided!), her family's wealth has little or nothing to do with her innate talent. in fact it may even be a liability in emily realizing her full potential as a musician.

  • @utubuser10 Her family's wealth does have something to do with it in that it provided her with high quality teachers and high quality instruments to play and practice on. This is an advantage that most kids who would like to play dont have. Without those advantages, I kind of doubt she would have been just as good now if she was self taught or taught by bad, inferior teachers.

  • @ghostrepublic65 it's difficult to hold an argument with someone who keeps changing the argument. the basic premise of your argument was "Take any 3 year old kid, hire the best piano players/instructors in the world to teach him/her how to play, give him/her a Steinway to practice...and he/she too will be just as good as Emily." Now you're saying if she didn't have the advantages she has she wouldn't be as good as she is now. Her talent is innate; (continued)

  • @utubuser10 I dont understand. I fail to see how I changed the argument. Yes, I said take any 3 yr. old kid, give him quality teachers, quality instruments, he' can be as good as emily, etc". And yes I said that if Emily didnt have the advantages she has (well to do family, quality trainers, quality instruments), she wouldnt be as good as she is now. I honestly cant see what I changed.

  • @ghostrepublic65 obviously.

  • @ghostrepublic65 Yup! I'm interfering in this argument ^.^

    Of course Emily's family, teachers and instruments must have helped refine her talent, but she had talent to begin with; for example, her two older siblings were provided with the same advantages, and play musical instruments quite well, but will never match Emily's skills in composition and improvisation. So no, not ANY child could do the same.

  • @ghostrepublic65 (cont'd) that her family's wealth facilitates her achievement is undeniable. You tell me I don't give enough credit to "any kid who would have the luck to be born with 4 Steinways in their crib." Not sure where that's going but it seems you give to much credit to the existential matters that surround a child's upbringing to determine his/her level of accomplishment and not enough to a child's innate ability. I believe history has proven you wrong countless times.

  • @utubuser10 Well, someone born with 4 steinways in his/her crib is bound to be better than someone who was born with only 2 steinways in his/her crib. Not always, but alot of the time.

  • @ghostrepublic65 sounds like we should take up a collection to get Emily a couple more Steinways so she can get real good...

  • @ghostrepublic65 mozart had advantages too, and we still call me a prodigy. I agree with you, surroundings create who we are. mozart's father was well noted composer of his day, and was pushed to play music. Yet i also believe that the world needs not-so-bright kids too, other wise there would be no one with talent.

  • @ghostrepublic65 She didnt have any piano teachers before she could play an awesome piano piece -_- It wouldnt make any difference if you do not have talents.

  • @ChickenPOHC What awesome pieces could she play before she had piano teachers?

  • @ghostrepublic65 why are you undermining a child prodigy? keep your jealous antics to yourself

  • @ghostrepublic65 Give Emily a Casio keyboard and she could probably do things with it you couldn't imagine even if you had been born with 4 Steinways in your crib...

  • @utubuser10 No way. Had I or any other kid been born with 4 steinways in our crib (figuratively speaking obviously), we would have been just as good as or even better than Emily. You give Emily too much credit there, and not enough credit to any kid who would have the luck to be born with "4 steinways" in their crib. Emily was born with 2 steinways, practically, in her crib.

  • @ghostrepublic65 That's a good point and everything, If i'd had the best violin training from when i started 10 years ago at 5, i'd be as good as any top youth orchestra concertmaster violinist. But...what you cannot teach, what comes from the depth of one's soul in musical talent, is Emily's deep understanding and love of the music, and her ability to compose like it's the easiest thing in the world. I'm 15 and I can't do that. She's what, 6 or 7 and can compose a song in 10 minutes? Come on.

  • @ghostrepublic65 But they have to have a passion for it. Otherwise, they wil get bored!

  • @ghostrepublic65 you cant say that lol if i tried teaching my brother piano he wouldnt learn. why dont you have a kid and try that smart ass

  • @ghostrepublic65 you're an idiot

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA I'm not disagreeing with you but I want to point something out. Her grandmother didn't teach her how to play. She found her playing and realized how amazing she was. THEN she looked for a "super prestigious dude" to help her. She started off very amazing.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA yes, but dont forget she was only two when she played a c-scale with only three fingers, and no one ever thought her how to do it. she IS a true talent, you gotta admit that

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA not everyone can afford it:\

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA She was discovered by her grandmother when she was 2 yrs old, playng piano with three fingers. She was born with talent, and het grandma just helped het blossom.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA dude shes amazing. and ya i totally agree with you dude. most people cant afford to give their children instruments. and a lot of people are just assholes to their kids so they dont get opportunitys

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA I have been teaching music professionally for 11 years. I disagree...some people just CANT be taught. They just don't have it in them. I do agree though that her family history, teachers, and opportunities, and practicing 4 hours a day are what helped her get here. She is exceptional in that most children don't practice 4 hours a day. I know I never did until I got into college. Music just comes to her and out of her with more ease than a typical musician.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA yep that is true :)

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA > I couldn't agree more... Most of the time, children's potential is waisted and put into the rigid and inflexible mold of school. Read "The Element" by Sir Ken Robinson.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA - you are so wrong its not even funny. She has two siblings without her talent. I am a guitarist of over two decades and agree with the music teacher- some people just cant be taught. Her talent is her own- she not only plays she COMPOSES. Get a clue.

  • @CrazyDaddy420 I never argued that she wasn't gifted. But the reason she so talented, is because of the environment of opportunity in which she was raised. Sure, some kids aren't gifted in music, but every human on the planet has a unique talent or ability. Emily Bear was fortunate enough to have it in front of her. So i think you kind of missed the point i was making. Prodigies aren't restricted to an ability to compose or play music. Maths, sports, arts. A child can be great at anything.

  • @CrazyDaddy420 you are retarded. every child is gifted they just need that boost by their parents to get that talent noticed. she was lucky to be able to have all these guides, teachers, and insane motivation so she got good. almost anyone could be as good as her. it is real talent when no one teaches you but yourself when you get on and immediately start playing.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA I wish more parents had the same midset that you do. Kids today have so much potential, yet that potential usually gets shot down because of either financial difficulties or lack of time for the parents. Sadly in the world we live in the Emily Bears are far and few between.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA - True every child has the ability to do amazing things.....but some things cannot be taught or cultivated. How do you explain her intrinsic ability to compose unique mind blowing musical pieces.....that could easily be compared to the level of experienced and highly skilled composers. I believe she highly gifted.......and very few if any child could be able to do this irrespectively of teaching of the best pianists in the world.

  • @PIECE2YOURMOTHA - Like the saying goes: "You can lead a horse to water but you cannot make (teach) it drink"

  • i LOVE this song :) We played for Jazz band and it was so much fun!

  • What I dont understand is how someone could claim to 'dislike' this. What the hell is there to dislike here?

  • @heraldfoundation I can dislike it if I want to. Don't try and tell me what to do.

  • 28 fans of Distorted music -_-

  • @consumers007 No actually I'm a fan of Duke Ellington and I don't like this version of Satin Doll.

  • do you think she could play the "Circus Galop"?? Which is so very hard to play with only two hands >.<

  • Mozart started when he was 6 years old writing his first piece of music. I hope she keeps it up and Julia Arts is letting her in early. Such a gift must be truly nurished.

  • @AngelikavonDeutschla Couldn't agree with you more :)

  • @AngelikavonDeutschla Julia Arts?? Don't you mean JULLIARD? Julia Arts if you are saying that then... Wow.

  • ladies and gentlemen: chuck norris's offspring

  • I'm Stunned, WOW She is just beginning, the more she plays the richer her music will become... Unless she get into soccer...... : D

  • emily bear is sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo­ooo gifted at her age i wish i could be like her

  • 26 people were so amazed by this performance they accidentally hit the thumbs down button

  • @AliceInWonderland224 Nope, those people disliked the video, and though you disagree with them, you should respect their opinion.

  • @edawg792 killjoy

  • my gosh. Im like ten and I can barely play old mcdonald had a farm O.o

  • I'm interested in her making soundtracks for movies later.

  • Emily Bear + Jackie Evancho = Something I'd like to hear.

  • She's been called "next mozart". Naturally Mozart was kin 39 (Storm 13) and she's kin 239 (Storm 5). 

  • @13MoonTzolkin

    What does kin 39 (Storm 13)/kin 239 (Storm 5) refer to? Is it like a measuring scale of musical intelligence?

  • don't like her dress,

    she looks like the child of barbie.

    but anyways... very talented girl, and beautiful playing

  • man i wish i was just like her then i wouldnt have any trouble with my left hand not matching my right so im stuck with recording on hand at a time :(

  • I'm a fan of this kid, but I'm more interested in what she perhaps one day does with classical music than any snazzy jazz tunes or new age contemporary works she's playing/composing. Get back to me when she's mastered the classics and is rocking the audience in the Concertgebouw, Lincoln Center, Gewandhaus, and other major venues.

  • @eleninamyers

    I love people who post and have done nil research. She has played at the White House by special invitation.

    She will be age 9 in 11 days. She has been composing since age 5. She has composed over 350 songs, some of which she has recorded with a full orchestra. I am SURE she will have played all the venues (multiple times) you have listed by the time she earns her drivers license.

    The "Snazzy Jazz" comment leaves me to believe you don't think much about Jazz.

  • @Prometheus1st

    I like jazz. I used to play jazz violin for fun and appreciate the genre especially the ensemble swing styles from the 30s and 40s.

    Being invited to the White House, writing a few 100 compositions, or being age 9 going on age 16 has nothing to do with becoming an elite classical performer. Getting to the top venues multiple times is a different world than the track she's on, if she wants to be taken seriously. Then again it's important for her to do what makes her happy.

  • @eleninamyers I see what you are saying. My apologies.

  • @eleninamyers well you'd hope she becomes a distinctive, original composer rather than a lowly classical musician, that would be a far greater contribution to mankind. I really don't think becoming an "elite classical musician" would be a problem if thats what she wished either, (she doesn't why would she?), its more a question of wether she can become an innovative composer as an adult.

  • @Interactivesystems While seeing what she can compose would be very interesting, I'd be more interested in hearing her interpretative abilities as a performer. Performers are far from 'lowly'. Top composers usually have a specific performer in mind when they work on a commissioned piece and they often collaborate closely the entire process. Without a skilled, hopefully well-known performer to showcase the work it will sound bad or no one will ever hear it much less enjoy it. Teamwork.

  • @Interactivesystems As far as her contributions to mankind; it really depends on what she's most comfortable/interested in. Some folks live to be on stage, others express themselves through composition. Both composers and great performers can make a positive lasting effect. And both paths are crapshoots in terms of finding success.

  • Seeing this child makes me wish my parents had forced me into music much earlier than fourth grade!

  • I dont like this song it does not sound nice but I reckon emily is AWESOME!

  • As amazing as this is, people are overrating her, comparing her to Mozart. She is not rythmically perfect yet, she has a lot to learn before becomign a professional pianist and if it wasn't for her age, that kind of playing would be seen as imperfect. As for her compositions, they are very cute, and again, very impressive for her age, but Mozart wrote music way beyond this. If you want a more-or-less modern Mozart, check out Andre Mathieu.

  • @sherifkarama85 Well whats wrong with praising a child? shes amazing! and of course she wouldnt be perfect. shes 6! Prodigies have talent but they still need to learn technique.

    and thats Mozart; THIS is Emily. Don't be comparing her to one of the gods of music.

    and could you play like that when you were 6? I dont think so. I sure couldnt. I was having trouble just putting my fingers on the keys correctly

  • she is amazing.......

  • wow...She's gifted with such talent..music comes from the heart, and thats exactly what Emily is doing.

  • Doesn't sound very much like a satin doll. Sounds more like a salon in New York.

  • @teakbridge101 Wow. So, what you're telling us is you obviously know nothing about one of the most popular jazz standards of all time? Interesting fact you chose to share with us...

  • @kpatrickb Oh boy, you don't read, do you? I know the Satin Doll, buddy! I am saying that it does not sound like a satin doll! And I am saying that because I know the song and have listened to it for a while! It, in my opinion, needs to have a different name! That is just a thought, pal. Nothing more.

  • Emily is incredibly gifted. I hope she just keeps playing and composing because she loves it, and ignores all the noise about it; she really seems humble about her abilities, and if she can keep that sensibility, there are no limits for her, IMO.

  • I cannot wait to see what she'll be like in a few more years. At 6, she blows away some of my extremely talented pianist friends who have been playing since her age.