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?
When too perfect - lieber Gott bรถse.dear God angryNam June Paik
The Roland sounds wonderful too, but a little too much $$$$$$ for me/us to spend right now, need some other stuffs first


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.

I did look at the chords and the melody (very well known but I didn't know the name until now, quite depressing title really for such a lovely tune) and the blues scale that he has you play with those chords. But I haven't sat down yet and tried it. Hopefully from tomorrow onwards!


) 



You could always download one of those piano playing apps with pretty flashing colours over the notes - apparently they teach people to play Rachmaninoff in less than 10 minutes! 

Maybe that's what happens to teachers when they hear a student massacre Fur Elise for the millionth time?!? 