Thanks Christian for a great lesson presented with your own unique style and wit. A double thanks for explaining the you tube short cuts - very helpful.
J adore vous écouter pour l intelligence de votre pédagogie et de votre humour, je n aime pas le frisbee, j attends jusqu a la fin pour entendre vos remontrances😂
Wonderful, fantastic... Always appreciate learning different turnaround and transitions. Music young students should play when their classical piano teachers and mothers are not around - Fun = more piano playing = A gift for a lifetime. Cheers from Seattle
Oh thanks for telling.Forgot the erase the link. Since it's now available as part of a volume, no one will be interested in the single lesson on sheets.
Guten Tag oder Gruss Gott. It's an unusual key - in my experience only really done when guitarists or singers insist. 90% of the time you ask for F or Eb instead. The rest of the band will be more at home, they'll sound better and that'll make the guitarist/singer sound better. In particular, saxists really don't like playing in E, A and B. Of course we should all be totally key fluent but realistically... Actually when singers call E the band usually just look at each other and play in Eb. Always go down from E, A and B because adrenaline can give a singer an extra note on top but nothing can give them an extra note on the bottom.
What you say has some truth in jazz. If on a blues session someone calls out Eb, the others will know he is a jazz musician even before he played, shake his hand and say: It was great to have you. I think your bus is due in a minute!" 🙂
Thanks, Christian. Your good humor alone is worth watching. But, the lesson is, as always,...outstanding!
While everybody these days does stand-up comedy, I disrupt the field with sit-down comedy.
Awesome, gorgeous sounds! Keep these tutorials and accompanying sheets going! Danke wieder, und wieder, und wieder, und . . .
Excellent job. Thank you from California.
Thanks Christian for a great lesson presented with your own unique style and wit.
A double thanks for explaining the you tube short cuts - very helpful.
Thanks Wayne! :-)
Awesome & Practical
Good one! Thanks Christian 👏👏👏🎹🎹🦊
Man. That was a great lesson...haha...and the humor...haha...awesome!
Hallo Christian,
vielen lieben Dank für das geniale Video. Besser hätte man es nicht erklären können. Weiter so 🎹💪🏼
J adore vous écouter pour l intelligence de votre pédagogie et de votre humour, je n aime pas le frisbee, j attends jusqu a la fin pour entendre vos remontrances😂
J'essay en français: Merci, je suis trois chiens! Correct?
Wonderful, fantastic... Always appreciate learning different turnaround and transitions. Music young students should play when their classical piano teachers and mothers are not around - Fun = more piano playing = A gift for a lifetime. Cheers from Seattle
Great sound again, go ahead.
Thank you for this!
OMG that’s fantastic! Shall we connect?
That's great! Vielen Dank!
This video is fantastic! Just bought the music and have high hopes for my playing now! Love it 😊
Great!!! Thanks a lot, Christian!! 😀🎹😀🎶👍🎶
Needed this. Took up piano because you make such fun of bass players!
:-) Not the ideal motivation to learn piano. But I started piano to drive my brother crazy. And now I dine with kings and queens.
Thanks!
Hey Christian, könntest du mal ein tutorial für Dr. johns version von "There must be a better world somewhere" machen? würde mich sehr freuen 😉😉
Christian, just a heads up that the link to the sheet music says "Page Not Found".
Oh thanks for telling.Forgot the erase the link. Since it's now available as part of a volume, no one will be interested in the single lesson on sheets.
Hi Christian, another YOUPEE one, if I may condense my thoughts. Thanks / Bernard
You may do anything on my channel, Bernard!
Thanks, but watch out, I might take you up on that, someday... / Bernard@@ChristianFuchsBlues
🎉💯🎶👌🍺😎👍👍👍👍
Guten Tag oder Gruss Gott. It's an unusual key - in my experience only really done when guitarists or singers insist. 90% of the time you ask for F or Eb instead. The rest of the band will be more at home, they'll sound better and that'll make the guitarist/singer sound better. In particular, saxists really don't like playing in E, A and B. Of course we should all be totally key fluent but realistically... Actually when singers call E the band usually just look at each other and play in Eb. Always go down from E, A and B because adrenaline can give a singer an extra note on top but nothing can give them an extra note on the bottom.
What you say has some truth in jazz. If on a blues session someone calls out Eb, the others will know he is a jazz musician even before he played, shake his hand and say: It was great to have you. I think your bus is due in a minute!" 🙂