The Piano Guys are an American musical group consisting of Jon SchmidtSteven Sharp Nelson, Tel Stewart, Paul Anderson and Al van der Beek. They became famous through YouTube, where they posted videos of renditions and mashups of popular songs accompanied by professional-looking video shots and edited by Paul Anderson and Tel Stewart. In December 2011, they released their first album, titled Hits Volume 1. Their second album, The Piano Guys, reached number one on the Billboard New Age Albums and Classical Albums charts in 2012.[1]

History[edit]

Paul Anderson owned a piano shop in St. George, Utah. He met musician Jon Schmidt as the latter walked in to ask if he could practice there for an upcoming concert.[2] Months later, Paul Anderson and Tel Stewart (then just for fun) started making videos together of Jon Schmidt. It was not too long after that they did their first collaboration with Jon Schmidt, Steven Sharp Nelson, and Al van der Beek as the studio and music technician. After the five of them started collaborating the group really started to take off, producing a music video each week and posting it to YouTube.
The team also includes Tel Stewart (videography and editing) and Al van der Beek (production and recording).[2][3]

Success[edit]

Several of the group's YouTube videos have over 15 million views. As of 5 May 2013, The Piano Guys' YouTube channel has over 224 million total video views and over 1.6 million subscribers.[4]

Music[edit]

Jon plays the piano, and Steven plays the cello - both acoustic and electric.
In most songs, they record several audio tracks that are mixed together. Occasionally, they superimpose the videos of the previous audio tracks to give the impression that many identical instrumentalists are all playing at once.

Michael Meets Mozart[edit]

In this video,[5] Jon and Steven play an original hip hop/classical mash-up that is recognized by the variety of sound effects they produce. According to the description, all sounds effects were created by them using only the instruments shown in the video (piano, cello, mouth percussion and bass drum), with more than 100 recorded tracks. It was posted to YouTube on May 17, 2011. It was created as a tribute to Mozart and Michael Jackson.

The Cello Song[edit]

This video[6] is an original arrangement and adaptation of J.S. Bach's Unaccompanied Cello Suite No. 1: Prelude, by Steven Sharp Nelson. While the original prelude is for solo cello, Steven adapted it for 8 cellos, with the addition of original material. It was posted to YouTube on June 14, 2011. In the description, Steven explains he named it "The Cello Song" because it was what people actually called Bach's original piece since no one could remember its name.

Moonlight[edit]

This video[7] shows Steven Sharp Nelson playing Moonlight, a piece he composed for electric cello inspired by Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata and the melody from Beethoven's 7th Symphony, 2nd movement. It was posted to YouTube on July 14, 2011.

Rock meets Rachmaninoff[edit]

This video[8] shows Jon Schmidt playing a modern version of Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# minor. It was posted to YouTube on July 25, 2011. According to the description, Jon wrote this song when his son started his first band and researched music on YouTube. There are two versions of this song on YouTube; both feature Jon Schmidt and a band consisting of Chris Wormer, Joel Stevenett and Jake Bowen. In the original 'Rockmaninoff' version, the volume of all instruments is well-balanced. In the 'Rock meets Rachmaninoff' version, the piano sounds much louder than the other instruments. The video also shows the sheet music for this song. The sheet music lists the play volume as 'Pretty dang loud'.

Cello Wars[edit]

This video[9] is a spoof of the Star Wars soundtrack and films. It was posted to YouTube on December 2, 2011.
Steven plays both a Jedi Master and a Sith Lord who come together to do a musical fight on cellos. The Jedi and the Sith fight using more than just their cellos – they also use The Force andlightsabersDarth Vader (Al van der Beek) appears in the movie and after creating a force wind, he pulls out an accordion to play the tune from the cantina in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.Chewbacca also makes an appearance. In the end of the clip, Darth Vader and Chewbacca are seen dancing together.
The following John Williams Star Wars movie themes are used (in order of appearance):
  • "The Imperial March" (Empire Strikes Back theme)
  • "Duel of the Fates" (from Episode I)
  • "May the Force Be With You"
  • "Star Wars Main Theme"
  • "Cantina Band" (from Episode IV)

Peponi[edit]

After deciding to go for an African theme, Alex Boyé joined Steven and Jon for the recording of a cover of Coldplay's Paradise. The associated video clip mostly stands out because it was recorded on top of the local Red Stone mountain near St.George Utah. - requiring helicopters to transport piano and crew to the remote location.[10]

Beethoven's 5 Secrets[edit]

In 2012, the American Heritage Lyceum Philharmonic (Youth Orchestra) and its director, Kayson Brown, approached with the idea of a piece based on Beethoven's 5th symphony. The orchestra performed "Beethoven's Secrets" with The Piano Guys on YouTube which had received 2 million hits within 2 months of its release. It was OneRepublic's Secrets with parts from Beethoven's 5th symphony, a cello and orchestral cover.[11] The vocal version features YouTube star Tiffany Alvord.

YouTube's "Most Up and Coming Channel"[edit]

In June 2011, the YouTube channel for The Piano Guys won the "On the Rise" contest with two videos—"Pirates of the Caribbean" with Jarrod Radnich and "Michael Meets Mozart" with Jon Schmidt and Steven Sharp Nelson—which launched them into the YouTube spotlight. True to the outcome of the contest, the Pirates of the Caribbean video has been the most popular clip filmed by The Piano Guys. It featured their friend pianist and composer, Jarrod Radnich, showing his performance and compositional skills on piano.[12] The video when last posted by The Piano Guys had over 25 million views from independent viewers, the most of any video on the channel. (Recently The Piano Guys were asked by Sony to remove Jarrod's videos since Jarrod's video performances created confusion about The Piano Guys membership.) Since that time, Jarrod Radnich has uploaded the video and made it listed once again on his YouTube channel.
Pirates of the Caribbean was originally uploaded on June 20, 2010, and featured Radnich's original arrangement using a medley of themes from Klaus Badelt's Pirates of the Caribbean movie soundtrack. This is the same piece that plays at Disneyland's Dream Home of the Future exhibit in Tomorrowland with Radnich's performance replayed on a player piano (and his image on the screen) over 3,000 times a day. The Piano Guys filmed a second video with Radnich and uploaded it on on June 7, 2011, in order to include it on their channel in time for the YouTube contest. It is Radnich's virtuosic arrangement of John Williams' Hedwig's Theme from the Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone soundtrack. It has reached over 9 million views as of December 2012 before being delisted, but has been reuploaded on Jarrod Radnich's channel.

OriginSt. George, UtahUSA
GenresRockclassical musicJazz
Years active2011-present
Websitewww.thepianoguys.com
Members
  • Jon Schmidt (Piano Guy)
  • Steven Sharp Nelson (Cello Guy)
  • Tel Stewart (Videographer/Editor)
  • Paul Anderson (Producer/Videographer)
  • Al van der Beek (Music and Studio Guy)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Piano_Guys