@@ChristianFuchsBlues mein Deutsch is nicht sehr gut. I would like to get on your patron site so I could jam with you but I have no idea how to proceed. Please respond in English.
I love the way you handle the improvisation over this progression which I recognize as a variation of the beautiful 1736. The b chord is the diatonic 7 of the progression. I thought you should mention this sometime. Your humble student of 5 years, revG St Paul MN USA
I discovered your channel just a week or two ago, I wish I had a piano teacher like you back then, your video lessons have a really fun mood and entertaining. I wish you good luck with your channel!
Also, if you don't mind, may I ask you what sound are you using here? I heard the pianotech sound in one of your videos, but this one sounds a little bit different. Is it a different piano model, or a totally different sound? Thank you!
Beautiful Christian! I just started playing at church a year ago when our pianist left. It’s been a huge challenge / opportunity for me. ❤ ur channel!!!
You are very skilled for sure, but I was trying to copy the basic color chords on a blank chord chart along with the video, and all the variations makes it almost impossible to follow for a beg-intermediate student like myself.
With regard to coffee! Your dislike of coffee has been worrying me for sometime. You say you find it bitter. Good, proper coffee should not be bitter. What have you been drinking? Germany is infamous for ersatz coffee. From WW 1 (whatever that was). I was told it was made from acorns. But then, you didn't have access to real coffee when we were not friends. Lavazza coffee is a cracking coffee. Vienna started the coffee story in Europe. You are dead right about the Americans and their talent for sugar addiction. They add the marshmellows, chocolate and other health giving extras. Frankie and Bennys has bacon and maple syrup for breakfast, nuff said.
I really had to google to find out that Coffee does not taste bitter, cause I remembered it like that. ( I was thirteen when I last tried, so maybe the overwhelming intensity of the aroma I perceived as "bitter". I was always a tea drinker. I know, it's bitter, but life is full of paradoxes....Yes, Ersatzkaffe was made from all sorts of stuff, mostly grain. I think WW 1 was not even called WW1 originally, as long as there was no WW2.