You anticipated my next question 😄 I haven't installed Musescore yet (I know! Pathetic for a budding musician 😂) so I was wondering if you copied it directly from the pdf or put in the hard work. Sounds like there is no quick shortcut!

I'm still hoping I can stamp the lesson into my memory instead. I guess that once we go into full improvisation, it doesn't matter either way, but for now I feel I should follow the lesson closely.

Skipping the easy warm-up drill is no option, because that's the one I have firmly wedged into my active memory by now 🤠

Whoops, cross posted with my fellow 🦕 I mean 😴🦉🤣

    About warm-up licks: I would not skip it for learning the lesson. But often after you mastered the later licks, you often recognize, the warm-up is a subset in any way. Either it had a long pause and the follow-up lick filled this with notes. Or a follow-up lick adds a 2nd voice to the 1-finger melody. In this cases I assume it is safe to replace the warm-up lick by the next one.

    Sophia I was wondering if you copied it directly from the pdf or put in the hard work.

    This I do, too. Often I copy entire staffs from many pages to fewer pages and be careful about bad page breaks. Guess I can join the dinosaur club, haha

    So what's the difference between a lick and a riff? Christian mentioned something about "some licks can repeat like riffs" but he didn't quite explain anything further. And of course the Big Question is: does it actually matter?

      A riff is usually a repeated phrase. It's often used as an important theme in a song, possibly the main melody theme or some other signature melody phrase that identifies the song.

      Licks are shorter phrases, mainly used in the context of solos.


      Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

      Aaah thank you! Short but to the point! Makes sense... this lesson is entirely different with, as you said, a phrase that repeats every two bars and a lick that changes each time. It's strangely satisfying to play too, considering that and the left hand are so repetitive. 😄

      • TC3 likes this.

      Sophia It is a very good question, because they seem similar.
      AFAIK, a riff is a repeating section inside a song, so repeating that it basically can define the song. A lick happens to be in a song occasionally.

      E.g. "Smoke on the water" has this very famous riff, repeating all over the song. Actually, this is the essence of the song itself.

      "What'd I Say" from Ray Charles has a lick at 0:26 sec, (Youtube). It belongs to the song but does not define the song in a way like the famous "Smoke on the water" riff does.

      Oops - cross post with TC3.

      • TC3 likes this.

      Thanks WieWaldi. Yours was longer but just as much to the point. All clear now 😃

      Pfew, lesson 12 is super long! I finally managed to get the licks and riffs of the first part into my active memory. Including the two-octave blues scale with the new riff. Now I'm halfway the lesson, and he is continuing to introduce new patterns and variations! TC I am not sure if I will include one of your lovely endings in this lesson just yet because it's sooo long, but I fully plan on going back to it during a less daunting lesson 😄

      At least I'm enjoying this lesson, so it's not a huge strain to play the Dum-dum, dum-dum, dum-dum for 5 solid minutes just to get through the first part. And still as much to add! 😬

        Sophia At least I'm enjoying this lesson, so it's not a huge strain to play the Dum-dum, dum-dum, dum-dum for 5 solid minutes

        😃 That's the part I like -- it's way easier for me!


        Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

        Sophia your current lesson is the last bloody beginner one. After that, your LH is going for chord progressions. It is then more of a slow blues, easy because it is slow. Not easy, because you probably cannot play LH blind in autopilot that easy.

        Anyway, I found your current jamming lesson ultra enjoying. It was the first one, I created my own licks because LH is so soothing and repetitive, that my brain got free capacity to invent something by my own.

        Haha true! It's so easy to go into full improvisation mode with such a basic left hand. In fact that's what I do sometimes with my keyboard: set some rhythm with auto left hand patterns. Then all I need to do is one finger on CCCCFFCCGFCC and my right hand is free to explore whatever my ears enjoy!

        However for this particular lesson I need full brain capacity (all 3 cells) just to remember the licks and riffs and variations... so I'm not deviating from the lesson right now 😅

          Sophia CCCCFFCCFGCC

          Ahhhhhh

          OMG... you are so right. This is a mistake I shouldn't have made since bloody beginner lesson 1...

          Corrected! You're too bloody alert!! WieWaldi: 🤠 Sophia: 🫏

            Sophia Haha, true. I believe it was lesson 1 where Christian said something about we beginners think with our beginners brains we are right, but are actually screwing up something in the 12-bar scheme. He said, he knows us.

            Ah. But YOU saw it. That means you may need to rethink your levels. Add one especially for you:

            bloody beginner
            lovely beginner <-- I am here
            total beginner <-- you just left from here
            absolute beginner <-- you almost made it here
            early beginner
            true beginner
            pure beginner
            real beginner
            late beginner
            prolonged beginner
            extended beginner
            eternal beginner
            12-bar-specialist <-- your new rank, well deserved

            How is your lesson going?

              Sophia No no no. Easy Blues piano has 19 lesson in total and I am at the beginning of lesson 7. This means, there is a long way to absolute beginnerTM.

              And I am really in the beginning of lesson 7, not mid, and three times not close to the end. Currently I daddle around with the walking bass line and waste time. And I learn a beginner-friendly blues-piece with the lovely name "Before You Accuse Me". Maybe it get it ready for November recital, then I can post different pieces in both forums. 🧑🏻‍🎓

                Sophia 12-bar-specialist <-- your new rank, well deserved

                WieWaldi Maybe it get it ready for November recital, then I can post different pieces in both forums. 🧑🏻‍🎓

                Nice! I already have my November piece recorded, but I'd love to submit a blues lesson too one day... such as one of the earlier lessons with a TC ending 😁

                I think the recital after that will a very difficult choice! I'm still enjoying learning so much from both Alfred and this course. When I first started in January, I wasn't sure in what direction my playing was going to lean. I wasn't even sure if I would stick with it (though my promises to MOYD and PACT helped a lot, as well as these regular fun blues banters).

                I love classical, blues, boogie, ragtime, swing... but the further I get, the more inclined I am to say that I enjoy the relaxed style playing of these "Christian type lessons" above all (so far).

                Luckily we are not required to choose one style, so we can learn/do it all 🤩

                  Sophia but I'd love to submit a blues lesson too one day...

                  Lesson 14. St. Louis Blues! You know it 😉
                  And I'd recommend to the Easy Blues Collection from Christian as soon you start with the Easy course as a total beginnerTM. The 1st one is about the level of the St. Louis Blues, maybe even slightly easier. And you have a lot Blues pieces for the recitals, haha