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

            WieWaldi Easy Blues Collection

            Is this the one?

            I just practised my current lesson on my keyboard with a groovy beat and synth sound. It sounds so interesting that way... I have a good mind to record it like that once I learn the entire lesson. Right now I'm still stuck at the 3 note turn around (right around the halfway mark). I'm not entirely sure how it fits into the piece, but usually these things have a tendency to suddenly make sense all by themselves 😊

              I got it done! Just like that... the second half of the video only took a fraction of the first. Ok, more if I had perfected it ^_^

              I absolutely loved everything about it... I could play that for hours on end. And who knew my little keyboard would be so much fun to play... all those voices! The drum beats! Sheer bliss! Of course I still need to learn when that blasted drum FINISHES once you push that button... lol. But this is only a lesson, not a performance. I declare it's "good" enough to move on 😁 Here it is, lesson 12!

                Sophia Well, you've certainly got to grips with your new toy, that sounded really funky! 😃 It sounded more like a band playing, rather than a solo performance. I love the fact that you uploaded the video, mistakes and all, and the little speech bubbles add charm to what is a very entertaining performance. Your confidence and sheer enjoyment shine through.

                I laughed out loud at the end... when it finally came... in its own good time! 😆 Thanks for brightening up my evening with your one woman band.

                "Don't let's ask for the moon, we have the stars." (Final line from Now,Voyager, 1942)

                Kraftwerk lives! 😃


                Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

                Haha yeah sorry TC, no C7 or C9 ending this round - but I watched your video again and WILL try it (some) next time 🙂

                Nightowl, yes I really love that little keyboard. For one thing the touch is ENTIRELY different from an "actual" (ok, digital, but, proper) piano. Well you probably can relate because you started on a Casio keyboard. I really love playing both but there is something really magical about adding a funky voice and groovy drumbeat. Lessons like these make learning piano worthwhile. I almost felt worthy of the craved fedora hat! 🤠

                • TC3 replied to this.
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                  Sophia No hurry on my account, it'll be there when you need it.


                  Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

                  Someone is really having fun! And I totally understand, I spent almost 2 months on this lesson. Didn't want to go away. Only thing you need to learn is how to press that spring-loaded keys, some notes were very silent, but others were at high volume and had this barking sound (Wurlitzer E piano?).

                  I am always thinking of getting a proper 2nd E-piano, a slab, something portable. Not so portable like my Casio, but a "real" piano. And after this, the Roland FP-E50 gained a lot of interest. This is maybe something I will treat on myself, when I become advanced.

                  btw, what happened at 2:21?

                  Haha yuppp, this lesson is so much fun! I will revisit it often... now with the lesson out of the way, I can try to come up with my own improvs. And yes, it's good to practise with spring-loaded keys! I did the barking sound on purpose (for the effect, though it was not ALWAYS intended) and you are absolutely correct that in other places, I played too soft. Sometimes the note even disappeared! I'm loving that keyboard though, best $199 ever spent 😍 The Roland sounds wonderful too, but a little too much $$$$$$ for me/us to spend right now, need some other stuffs first

                  What happened at 2:21: I cut out a glitch! You were not supposed to notice that! Told you you were too observant! I started the pweep! pweep! pweep! and then didn't move my hand fast enough to doodle-dee-dum. So I cut out the empty bar. It was the only cheat in this entire lesson and you caught me with my pants down! (if I had any pants)

                  I had a sneak peek at the next lesson: Nice! The first real song! (St. James Infirmary). I'm looking forward to that 🙂

                    Sophia St. James Infirmary lesson is not yet a real song, sorry. The St. Louis Blues is the first one in the list.

                    One thing: When cutting out something and you won't anyone know it: Change the camera angle! I do this all the time (I mean, changing the camera angle). Do a crop or a uncrop and nobody realizes that your hand jumped.

                    Another thing: The funny picture... What was in the barrels? And who drunk it?

                      WieWaldi Change the camera angle!

                      Ahhh, ok! But but but I don't know how to change camera angle. I must learn how, to hide my sneaky edits. Though I'm sure you'll still manage to find ways to notice...

                      WieWaldi What was in the barrels? And who drunk it?

                      Ah. Wouldn't you like to know...

                      Wait - you have two in a row, and I am still at the beginning of mine...

                      This feels like:

                      Lol! Have to keep you on your toes! But, let's face it: this was a very easy lesson. The left hand has only 2, 3 notes and no chords. The right hand is easy too if you can count a little.

                      The hard part was learning all the lines ☺️ I can't play anything from my Alfred book from memory, even after three weeks with the same piece I usually still need the sheet music.

                      It's one of those abilities I lost in the decades without a piano, because when I was Jerry size, my mom only had to play something for me once or twice and I could memorize it 🐘