Sophia Hmm, I see that too. I'll have to go back to the video and see if Christian said anything about it. Otherwise it could be he meant to show a couple of different endings and didn't notate it clearly.


Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

Thanks! I watched the video too but he isn't very clear on it... he seems to enjoy teaching in smaller segments. I would imagine that at some point he'll put the whole thing together for us 😃

    Sophia OK, I think bars 11 & 12 are just a transcript of what he plays at 10:20 ff. There should probably be an end repeat after that on the sheet music. I think the bars that look like measures 13 & 14 are just meant to be a separate thing, a new turnaround you could use over bars 11 & 12. Does that make sense?


    Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

      Ok, I'll bite. I don't have the sheet music, but a 12 bar blues is a 12 bar blues. A turnaround is a way to keep the song going, like reintroducing the tune, usually so another player can solo. Anyway, on a 12 bar blues, using this for an example, C7 C7 C7 C7 F7 F7 C7 C7 G7 F7 C7 C7, a standard turnaround would take the place of the last bar of C7. So, still a 12 bar blues. Sometimes, the last 2 bars act as a turnaround, with maybe something like a chord change every 2 beats - C7 Am7 Dm7 G7, then back to the beginning. Or, you might have: C7 Eb7 Ab7 G7. Or, C7 Eb7 Dm7 Db7, then back to the beginning. There are lots of ways to make your way back to the head (that's jazz-speak for the start ;-), or to break up the progression, keep it going, or to offer a path to more tonal variety, which you hear in lots of jazz type blues tunes. Hope this helps.

        Sophia Sorry - I didn't buy his 1st patch of sheet music. From lesson 4-7 I made them up by my own (but bought the consecutive ones, because I was too lazy after this).

        Let me share it for you: (Don't get confused by 12/4 time signature, the swing is baked in)

        Sophia should it be played instead of bar 11 and 12, or after?

        Instead of bar 11 and 12 - exactly as in my sheet music. The page is one complete 12-bar sequence.

        btw: you are really fast in learning this! chapeau 😏

        PianoMonk Hope this helps.

        Always, thank you! You too, WieWaldi. This is what his sheet music shows:

        It starts with bar 10, 11 and 12 (the rest is on the previous page):

        And after that it shows the turn around.

        TC3 I think the bars that look like measures 13 & 14 are just meant to be a separate thing, a new turnaround you could use over bars 11 & 12. Does that make sense?

        Yes, I think he just forgot the double bar just before that 🙂

          Sophia Your sheet music starts with bar 8. (9+10 on same line.)
          bar 11+12 (bottom line) is the turnaround.
          Edit - this is wrong

          • TC3 replied to this.

            WieWaldi
            No, you just can't see the previous bars. I have the full thing, what she's showing is bars 10, 11, and 12 at the top. Again, it's a "typo," Christian should have put a repeat sign at the end of the first line.


            Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

              Forget what I said in the last post. Doesn't make any sense now.
              I am confused with his sheet music. Let's call his version:

              • top line = bar 8 + 9 + 10
              • bottom line = bar 11 + 12

              Then bar 9+10 are C7 (makes no sense as 9+10 are normally G7+F7)
              And bar 8 is F7, but played lower than C7. (in his tutorial, C7 is the lowest chord, while F/G7 are a few key higher).

              Nah - do yourself a favor and stick to my version. It works and it sounds, believe me.
              Another thing - you will find in my sheet music more notes than in his one. I didn't invent them. Just looked at his fingers.

              TC3 May be. I must admit, his videos are better than his sheet music is. Nevertheless, I will continue to buy them as they are still helpful, and I want to contribute some money to him.

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              Haha yeah I guess we'll just go by what @PianoMonk said - in words even I can understand. A 12 bar blues is a 12 bar blues. Not 14. Can't argue that 😃

                Btw: my sheet music is exactly what you hear from 2:00 to 2:36 in this old video:

                Sophia Just wait until you discover 8-bar blues, 16-bar blues, and even 13&1/2-bar blues. (Not I'm not joking!)


                Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

                  Just when I thought I was close to a pro beginner, you reduced me to bloody beginner again. Not fair!

                    Sophia "Reduced to a bloody beginner OVER AND OVER again" sounds like the perfect description of progress to me! 😃


                    Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

                    TC3 Just wait until you discover 8-bar blues, 16-bar blues, and even 13&1/2-bar blues. (Not I'm not joking!)

                    8-bar blues: video 7

                    Curious abut 16-bar and 131/2 bar

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                      WieWaldi

                      13&1/2 isn't as weird as it sounds. If you think of the 12-bar blues as three groups of 4 measures, it's just adding two beats to each of those three. For example, a song might treat each of those groups of 4 as two bars singing and two bars of instrumental response, but add add two beats to the vocal line of the first two bars.

                      For an example of 16-bar blues, Herbie Hancock's "Watermelon Man" comes to mind (though that's on the jazzier side).


                      Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.

                      TC3 Btw, Theophilus, in my video starting 2:36 you told me to stay staccato with left hand (1 year ago in the other forum). You are right. But it cost me a lot of time to get this into my hands. LH: staccato, RH: legato. And then the other way around. It drives me crazy. This is why I stuck in the 1st easy blues lesson right now. The only thing helping me out is a metronome 🛎️ 🥁🥁🥁, forcing me to keep slow tempo.

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                        WieWaldi Yeah, staccato one hand and legato the other is difficult for me too, in either combination. And of course, you can play the LH parts either way, even switch back and forth -- as long as it's on purpose! 😃


                        Enthusiastic but mediocre amateur.