One day I swear it’s gonna be a video like “How to trick ANYONE into believing that you are a PIANO PRO” and it is gonna be a 11 hour long video on the basis of music theory.
do not listen to this.blues scales will help you for about two weeks. You need to actually put in the work and learn how to improvise legitimately,if you're in seventh grade this can be helpful but if you want to be a genuinely good piano player take lessons and learn from a professional.
I mean, he basically just explained minor-pentatonic and blues scales in about a minute. Imagine how much theory he could pack into 11 hours of short-form content like this.
This is crazy. My dad taught me this back in the 80s. That’s how I came to love songs like summer time, curella deville , etc ended up having fun making up my own tunes .
Jazz Saxophonist here, the reason the right hand notes will sound good in any order is because they’re blues notes from a series of blue scales that are derived from major scales. It’s a lot of jazz theory but if you memorize all 12 major scales you can pull up a lot of other different sounds. They’ll all sound good no matter what order you play it, but remember to add some different rhythms to spice it up.
As someone who actually performed there (part of a chorus thing) it was a great venue but the waiting room was terrible. There was a funky smell and the entire hall is hard to navigate
for all the beginners here, it doesn't trick people into thinking you're better, it just simply make you better, it's called a scale and they are really useful for both improvising and writing edit : why is there like two people trying to type in morse code in the responses 💀💀💀 edit again : HELP I'VE ACCIDENTALLY SUMMONED THE ENTIRE MORSE CODE COMMUNITY
Yeah, might as well go online and just look up scales, and start messing with them. They will sound good together regardless. Ofc unless you have zero sense of rhythm or tempo😅
The reason why this works is because the melody is part of the pentatonic scale. The pentatonic scale notes don't clash with each other since no two neighboring notes are half a step apart.
Use your thumbs for the left hand notes and use your pinky 4 white keys to the left from your thumb each timeand rock between your pinky for a double time bass moment
@@randorando12tbh, just learn tricks, and someday you will realise you can really play piano. I'm being honest. Ofc it's only improvising and composing. To play existing songs, you should learn the notes.
This is generally how music works, I remember when I went from learning other people’s songs on guitar to actually learning theory. Finding a key and playing the scale of that key I was amazed. Especially with pentatonics, it’s so hard to make it sound bad. Obviously there are levels to it, you don’t want it to sound like you’re just playing a scale but that you’re in a state of flow and all these unique combinations of the notes in that scale just appear. It’s not a conscious thought, it just pours out. And the moment that music you’re creating touches someone’s soul…you’ve done it. An unconscious action from you has produced and unconscious emotion within someone else.
Wow, I'm so glad I read this! This sounds like my journey w/the guitar. As a kid, I played trumpet and violin, so I knew how to basically read music. Then, I taught myself guitar, which didn't seem too hard after those other instruments. When I got good at playing 'other people's' music, I took a classical guitar class at school (CC), and learned a tiny bit of theory. Anyway, I just hit a wall. I didn't have anyone to play with and just got sick of playing someone else's stuff and basically stopped playing. One big part of it was that I didn't want to 'sound like someone else', when everyone gets their inspiration from someone else?! Idk... I still play once in awhile, and still get into it while I'm playing, but no progression - nothing new.
As long as you have rhythm, you truly can freehand it, just play it by ear and introduce some variation. Its not magic, just music theory, or more accurately jazz theory.
i’m not a pianist, but for anyone who doesn’t know, this works in many scenarios. With those four notes, he established a key, and he played a scale along with that key. notes in a scale will always sound good, and the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes will just about always sound good to hang on.
I learned this when I asked a friend how to play jazz, he basically told me what you did although slightly diffrent, my SO was impressed, then I actually had to learn keys
He taught 100% of non jazz musicians, and 10% of (new) jazz musicians. Totalling about 50% of newer musicians. It's a very normal thing for a beginner to learn and that's where I started in jazz too
It usually works, but it does depend on how much musicality you have. I've done this a lot with people and most do fairly well, some excel, but some are 'music dyslexic' and just don't feel it at all. Btw, the guy doing the tutorial actually showed an unnecessarily more difficult way. If you jam on e-flat, instead of a, then you can you can simply just use all the black keys (and later add the blue note). I came up with that, because I actually didn't even play piano.
@@partisancord9643 yeah, but the black keys already are the pentatonic scale, aka the blues scale without the blue note, so you don't even have to look, which keys you need to hit while improvising. To then add the blue note (the 'a' key) is no problem. It's WAY easier than to memorize, which keys are allowed and which not. This way, there is both a physical as well as a visual difference between them.
“HIT THE ROAD JACK AND DON’T YOU CONE BACK NO MORE NO MORE NO MORE NO MORE” 🔥💯 Edit: OMG 145 LIKE ON MY COMMENT IS THE MOST I HAVE GOTTEN ON A COMMENT THX YOU AHHHHHHH
@@ben6993it absolutely does not. You’re just handicapping yourself by doing that. There’s no piano teacher in the world that would start people off like this
@@damienm.9677 it makes it easier to show though. like if you play with one finger like this you're not gonna fool anyone into thinking you know what you're doing XD
Coming from someone who regularly performs jazz and has studied it extensively, Jazz fits so many different subgenres, including blues (latin, prog, electric, big band, solo, list is extremely long)
I'm actually in a youth jazz band (8th grade, playing piano since 4th grade) as the pianist and i play mostly chords, but i might have to use some of this in a solo.
Love videos like this. This how you know someone is an expert at something... when they don't gatekeep these type of hacks. Once you fool people into thinking you a pro, you'll actually practice & actually become one.
reading the original comment makes me feel such a range of emotions. Joy that you maybe discovered how easy and user friendly learning piano and music can be. Curiosity about what kind of other piano tutorials you saw that "lied about what the notes do". Almost a giddiness and humor to the thought of someone seeing a piano tutorial and saying "this person is lying about what the notes do... its so absurd. Kudos honestly with this comment. Clearly it struck a chord with many people. Trolling or serious its really great.
Remember from long ago....i used to be a dumpy fat blonde before i drank Slurpees. Now im no longer a dumpy fat blonde, im a dumpy fat brunette. I used to be a dumpy fat piano player. Now that i learned this trick, im no longer a dumpy fat piano player, im a dumpy fat jazz piano player.
the only people you'll be able to trick into thinking that you are even remotely familiar with jazz piano with this are non-musicians and people who have never listened to jazz.
☝️ Learn Songs in 2 Minutes or Less - Link in bio
Here
Tell me th name of the song plz
@@CalebJohnson-eo8pybro it’s made up 😂😂😂
cool now I can be a piano poser
Are you ok? I notice tremors in your left hand but not your right. I really hope you're ok but you may want to get checked for Parkinson's 😢
Hit the road Jack vibes
the left hand part is Hit The Road Jack but he is playing other notes over it to add depth
Almost any descending scale sounds like hit the road Jack.
@@VyndettaahMedia ya I totally agree
@@alandenaitprobably because that’s what hit the road jack is based off
I immediately started singing it
Wow... An actual piano tutorial that didnt lie about what the notes do. Im impressed
You can't be serious
@@Versul1 where am I wrong?
He did use the word "jazz" to describe this though, which is like calling a banana taped to a wall "art".
@@gormauslander I didn't comment on the use of jazz. I commented on the fact that the notes he played were the notes we heard.
@@mazingdaddid you didn't learn jazz. Trust me.
One day I swear it’s gonna be a video like “How to trick ANYONE into believing that you are a PIANO PRO” and it is gonna be a 11 hour long video on the basis of music theory.
Only 11?
With note names and numbers burned by a soldering iron into the keys.
do not listen to this.blues scales will help you for about two weeks. You need to actually put in the work and learn how to improvise legitimately,if you're in seventh grade this can be helpful but if you want to be a genuinely good piano player take lessons and learn from a professional.
I mean, he basically just explained minor-pentatonic and blues scales in about a minute. Imagine how much theory he could pack into 11 hours of short-form content like this.
I was the thousandth like! Ha!
This is crazy. My dad taught me this back in the 80s. That’s how I came to love songs like summer time, curella deville , etc ended up having fun making up my own tunes .
Jazz Saxophonist here, the reason the right hand notes will sound good in any order is because they’re blues notes from a series of blue scales that are derived from major scales. It’s a lot of jazz theory but if you memorize all 12 major scales you can pull up a lot of other different sounds. They’ll all sound good no matter what order you play it, but remember to add some different rhythms to spice it up.
Amazing!!
I'm 54 and tomorrow I will start to play jazz.
Thank you. ❤
I played sax for a decade and now piano. And yeah, your spot on. Once you understand music you can just make up whatever and it sounds amazing.
What he said
I have no clue what you're saying lol
Taken from the famous jazz pianist, Efga Acdega Eflat
Eyyyyy
@@kalleousvoncheez Is that pianist middle eastern?
@@xRiPw0lFxbro didn’t catch the joke 😭
@@xRiPw0lFx No - I do believe he was French Canadian (since he had originally changed his surname from 'Descharpe')
@@VelvetVoice 😆 I love it
I just got a gig at Carnegie Hall, thanks.
😂
As someone who actually performed there (part of a chorus thing) it was a great venue but the waiting room was terrible. There was a funky smell and the entire hall is hard to navigate
I got booked after you!
Answers the question "How do you get to Carnegie Hall?"
@@sealand000 I took an Uber, I am sure there are other ways.
I love jazz piano so much in my day❤
Blue note turned pink 👊👍
Black note called blue note turned pink
Tv girl???
Identified as blue😂😂😂
It’s 2024
That’s life
"We're going to add in the blue note."
*proceeds to put a red sticky note*
-_-
That's hot pink
@@RealFanOfSteel tomato tomahto
@@goober50000 touché
Pretty sure it's nicknamed the blue note because it's a popular note in the blues genre
for all the beginners here, it doesn't trick people into thinking you're better, it just simply make you better, it's called a scale and they are really useful for both improvising and writing
edit : why is there like two people trying to type in morse code in the responses 💀💀💀
edit again : HELP I'VE ACCIDENTALLY SUMMONED THE ENTIRE MORSE CODE COMMUNITY
Bro just played the A blues scale
@@zendal9997 i commented this for beginners, not for you, ofc you're gonna know what the blues scale is 💀
Thanks
@@MoiPlayz you're welcome !
Yeah, might as well go online and just look up scales, and start messing with them. They will sound good together regardless. Ofc unless you have zero sense of rhythm or tempo😅
I can't play any instrument, I have no talent for it. BUT NOW I WANNA TRY THIS
this is based off something called a A minor pentatonic scale. Look that up on any instrument and youll get this sound
Для этого не нужен талант, для этого нужна практика. Все получится!
i'm about to try it on my ipad and garage band. will report back.
@@ivan_last well said
it effin works.
Congratulations, you just taught your subscribers the blues scale
I think it’s c blues because of the e flat
Nevermind the e flat is an accidental
@@Jojodium no you are right, Its the C blues scale, the e minor is the minor third wich is the accidental in the blues scale
@@albergoni2191 oh right lmao I was watching the video and just confusing myself lol
@@Jojodiumwait no it’s the a blues
The reason why this works is because the melody is part of the pentatonic scale. The pentatonic scale notes don't clash with each other since no two neighboring notes are half a step apart.
Yup the notes in the scales definitely do not clash with each other just like alphabets do not clash with each other in words and sentences😃
E and F in the bass are 1/2 note apart
Actually this is the minor blues scale, which is the minor pentatonic with the #4
I don't know music theory but why do they put letters on the keys?? notes don't have proper names like in french?
@@francoisloriot2674 the letters are the names for the notes.
Use your thumbs for the left hand notes and use your pinky 4 white keys to the left from your thumb each timeand rock between your pinky for a double time bass moment
I always love piano.forever.nice notes
I have been using this trick for a while, and I can say it really impresses people!
Do another one so people dont get suspicious
@@randorando12 these tricks are called music :P
@@randorando12tbh, just learn tricks, and someday you will realise you can really play piano. I'm being honest.
Ofc it's only improvising and composing. To play existing songs, you should learn the notes.
It's called a scale
try it on a pianist lol you aint foolin me.
That's Mr.Bean cartoon 😢
Was looking for this
Where’s Teddy 🙁
@@RestlessSpinTeddy gone 🙁
Also sounds like Hit the Road Jack
Sounds like the human fall flat song.
This is generally how music works, I remember when I went from learning other people’s songs on guitar to actually learning theory. Finding a key and playing the scale of that key I was amazed. Especially with pentatonics, it’s so hard to make it sound bad. Obviously there are levels to it, you don’t want it to sound like you’re just playing a scale but that you’re in a state of flow and all these unique combinations of the notes in that scale just appear. It’s not a conscious thought, it just pours out. And the moment that music you’re creating touches someone’s soul…you’ve done it. An unconscious action from you has produced and unconscious emotion within someone else.
HOW DOES THIS HAVE NO REPLIES
@@nachocheese5311 right?!
Wow, I'm so glad I read this! This sounds like my journey w/the guitar. As a kid, I played trumpet and violin, so I knew how to basically read music. Then, I taught myself guitar, which didn't seem too hard after those other instruments. When I got good at playing 'other people's' music, I took a classical guitar class at school (CC), and learned a tiny bit of theory. Anyway, I just hit a wall. I didn't have anyone to play with and just got sick of playing someone else's stuff and basically stopped playing. One big part of it was that I didn't want to 'sound like someone else', when everyone gets their inspiration from someone else?! Idk... I still play once in awhile, and still get into it while I'm playing, but no progression - nothing new.
Brain dead comment
bingo
❤I tried it and it works. I felt like I did achieved something. Thank you very much!
Play them in any order . Dude proceeds to hit a proper combo .
it's valid.
As long as you have rhythm, you truly can freehand it, just play it by ear and introduce some variation. Its not magic, just music theory, or more accurately jazz theory.
you're right it's not that easy, he did hit a propoer combo, and, not every combo will sound good, he's clickbait
😂 that right. SMH
@@aluhutmann4622 let me guess you never heard of the pentatonic scale and also never played any instrument?
i’m not a pianist, but for anyone who doesn’t know, this works in many scenarios. With those four notes, he established a key, and he played a scale along with that key. notes in a scale will always sound good, and the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes will just about always sound good to hang on.
Dayum! Music theory, who would have thought.....!
My eyes :"Seems easy"
My brain and hands : "STOP PLEASE THIS IS TORTURE"
My hands aren't coordinating 😢
it's all about practice, trust me@@shaynedruz5038
fr he didn't even talk about swing and its alot harder than just play random stuff improvising is harder than you think
@@Mr_french_squirrelor fingering
Exactly. My brain can't do a slow tempo left hand and an up-tempo & random right hand.
My daughter and I started playing this straight away. We sound so good.
I love how piano-bro here escalates from one dimensional to two dimensional to three dimensional. The smoothness is awesome.
For a moment even I thought I could play 😅
There is nothing smooth about playing with one finger. This is smooth: th-cam.com/video/zucBfXpCA6s/w-d-xo.html
Now we need a tutorial on where the notes are located 💀
Abcdefg! D is always in the middle of the 2 black keys 🔑
@@Denito818 Also G and A...
It works for every octave
My guy, just look at the video. A B C D E F G A B C D E FG A B C D E F G, etc.
@@SamuraiGamer91111 My guy I’ve never played piano before, but thank you for the help
I learned this when I asked a friend how to play jazz, he basically told me what you did although slightly diffrent, my SO was impressed, then I actually had to learn keys
What’s the difference?
@@Bootyeatter6969 different keys
@@TomDytorn Yeah you can do it in any key. You can also transpose what this dude did, into any key
This is not Jazz tho. This is Blues
@@nurikkulanbaev3628blues scale is very commonly ysed by newer jazz musicians in jazz blues or other blues that are considered jazz
Before watching this tutorial, I was a nobody. After watching this tutorial. I am now somebody.
This man really taught 100% of musicians a free song
*songs. 😂
I mean it’s just the A blues scale, it’s a pretty standard thing to know.
He taught 100% of non jazz musicians, and 10% of (new) jazz musicians. Totalling about 50% of newer musicians. It's a very normal thing for a beginner to learn and that's where I started in jazz too
Was i the only one who thought it was "Hit the road Jack" at the begining?
Or stray cat strut by stray cats
It is james Bond theme from on her majesty's secret service.
Bruh, I Thought it was *J O H N C E N A* .
Blue note: Pink sticky note
Piano Player: Colorblind
Vibes: Immaculate
I think he was referring to the genre
He did that to get comments, knowing people would have to come correct him.
It's called blues, therefore blue note
Hotel: Trivago
Pretty sure he was talking about the actual music note NOT the sticky note,
WOW SHOCKING I KNOW😮
amo seus vídeos de teclado estou tentando aprender com você ❤❤sou de Brasil você ganhou um inscrito ❤❤❤❤🎉
When I was a kid I would “find” groups of keys like this that sounded good together for both hands and then just play around with those keys
So scales?
This guy found what scales are 💀
@@lalalala3243 yeah I was 5 dude, what’s with the condescension?
@@lalalala3243 ...or chords, harmonic intervals, etc.
Doesn't have to be a fully fleshed out scale to sound good.
Easier said than done. Masters always have a way of making art look easy
yeah, I would mess up the left hand stuff the moment I start playing with my right
It usually works, but it does depend on how much musicality you have. I've done this a lot with people and most do fairly well, some excel, but some are 'music dyslexic' and just don't feel it at all.
Btw, the guy doing the tutorial actually showed an unnecessarily more difficult way. If you jam on e-flat, instead of a, then you can you can simply just use all the black keys (and later add the blue note).
I came up with that, because I actually didn't even play piano.
This is literally the simplest tutorial on how to improvise the blues scale. Any simpler and It isn't blues and doesn't sound good
@@partisancord9643 yeah, but the black keys already are the pentatonic scale, aka the blues scale without the blue note, so you don't even have to look, which keys you need to hit while improvising. To then add the blue note (the 'a' key) is no problem.
It's WAY easier than to memorize, which keys are allowed and which not. This way, there is both a physical as well as a visual difference between them.
Its like 5 different notes mate its pretty easy
This guy just tricked me into learning.
People like that are sorcerers!
He also tricked you into thinking you learned something
@@Versul1But we did learn something????
@@20SecBlinker not really
Unfortunately I have no keyboard
Genius! 👏🏾
If you’ve ever played human fall flat that left hand sounds like memories
Im thinking that too lol
I was looking in the comments for someone who said this like this dudes comment up
@V0rtecx7 I’m a chick😭
@@VOX_official_account-cw9jo dude is not gender specific
@rareuploads8347 I’m not trying to start an argument but I’m that context it was
Turns out you need a piano first. I just wrote on a desk and pressed the letters...
lol
Ha!
As soon as I heard the AG my brain immediately started hitting the road, Jack.
Brilliant ! 💎
I don't even play piano, now I want to thanks 😂 that sound so fun
Do you believe in the name of Jesus Christ ?
@@energy2374hail Satan
“HIT THE ROAD JACK AND DON’T YOU CONE BACK NO MORE NO MORE NO MORE NO MORE” 🔥💯
Edit: OMG 145 LIKE ON MY COMMENT IS THE MOST I HAVE GOTTEN ON A COMMENT THX YOU AHHHHHHH
Don't you cone back !!!
*COMB
COME* BACK you made a mistake
Nah, check Mr. Bean theme
@@TWilson-t8hCRUMB*
I love how blue note is pink.
Edit: Thx for the likes lol this was my first comment on this account.
It is always like that, in every book and every lesson 😂 and I still havent found out why after 10 years of guitar 😁
Blues note*
Its the 🌈 agenda
@@damianpogu7272blue Note*
AHGAHAH
you made it simple....worth subscribing
WELL FINALLY --Smeone took the trouble to teach basic PIANO TECHNIQUE ---Been waiting for tis for =many years!--thankyou --wow !
Thanks for sharing this piano sound.
My piano teacher taught this to me waaaaaay back in the 70's. She called it, "Boogie Woogie".
in the 70s??
Praise YAHUAH
This is definitely not boogie woogie!
@@MrFirstdance2000 yeah, well you and I know that....😆
Additional tip, add the G# in the esuation, it works like a charm and can be used similarly to the blues note
yes, for people who don't understand anything about music, that sounds like pro.
please make more of these, very very useful
Mr bean ahh beat 😭🙏
I love it❤❤❤❤❤
Every animal evolves into crabs, every blues tutorial turns into Hit the Road Jack
11 billion crabs
I can honestly say I would not be tricked into thinking someone was a jazz piano expert if they played this.
The blue note made it so much better yes sir
This is actually amazing. Wow... Props to you!❤
Blues scales melodic line. Brings back memories of music theory in the 1980’s.
The Andalusian cadence with a melody on the pentatonic scale. Plus the flat 5th. A classic for sure.
This is incredibly satisfying
Thanks so much for sharing this beautiful piece with me. ❤
The flat notes are what make music so interesting and beautiful.
Watching this guy play with one finger was pure pain
It makes it easier for beginners. All gotta start somewhere
@@ben6993it absolutely does not. You’re just handicapping yourself by doing that. There’s no piano teacher in the world that would start people off like this
@@damienm.9677 it makes it easier to show though.
like if you play with one finger like this you're not gonna fool anyone into thinking you know what you're doing XD
The bass notes remember hit the road jack
There's that. Feelin' good as well
So super cool! 😎
Man that e flat feels sooooo goood.....
There really IS a great side of the internet. Thank you for such a brilliant short. Thumbs up.
Well that’s blues. Not jazz.
adding on to that it’s the most bare bones blues you could play.
Improvising and irregular rhythms is jazz. Blues can often be a component of jazz. This is 100% Jazz.
All blues is jazz not all jazz is blues
Coming from someone who regularly performs jazz and has studied it extensively, Jazz fits so many different subgenres, including blues (latin, prog, electric, big band, solo, list is extremely long)
@cofedafoax5912 also a tritone isn't a blue note really
Love it, can't wait to learn. Music can unite the world, continued blessings.
Alright!
Now all I need is to know where those keys actually are on the piano and I'm in business!
USING this next Friday at my second concert recital! Thanks again for all your support!
It reminds me of the song called hit the road jack❤
I'd be happy just being able to play this much. Now I need a piano.
Most jazz scales are pretty forgiving. Nice lil tutorial to introduce part of them.
Sounds like A minor pentatonic to me
How to trick anyone that you're pro piano player,
Step one: Be a pro piano player
Lol
Wow! That does sound good.
I'm actually in a youth jazz band (8th grade, playing piano since 4th grade) as the pianist and i play mostly chords, but i might have to use some of this in a solo.
Andalusian Cadence with an A Minor Blues Scale. Got it. Thanks, brah.
Close. True Andalusian is Harmonic Minor
@@rathenslog8490
You right.
why is this example such a banger
Love videos like this. This how you know someone is an expert at something... when they don't gatekeep these type of hacks. Once you fool people into thinking you a pro, you'll actually practice & actually become one.
reading the original comment makes me feel such a range of emotions. Joy that you maybe discovered how easy and user friendly learning piano and music can be. Curiosity about what kind of other piano tutorials you saw that "lied about what the notes do". Almost a giddiness and humor to the thought of someone seeing a piano tutorial and saying "this person is lying about what the notes do... its so absurd. Kudos honestly with this comment. Clearly it struck a chord with many people. Trolling or serious its really great.
When you hit that D sharpe I literally said “OUU!!”
Ha!
Human Fall Flat vibes
Yup
Yeeee
Fr tho
I am Bread vibes
Fr that is staight up Labour from human fall flat
This is great, thank you,I learn a lot of nice melody with you.. 🎉
Bro, I take piano lessons and do not know this so before piano, imma show off my skills! Thx bub.
Petatonic scale, a... genuinely good trick. I am surprised. Didn't expect it out of TH-cam shorts.
Blues scale
@@voltagestorm1787First C-Major scale and then blues scale.
congrats, you learned pentatonic.
with a flat 5 making a blues scale lol
this short literally changed my life
Remember from long ago....i used to be a dumpy fat blonde before i drank Slurpees. Now im no longer a dumpy fat blonde, im a dumpy fat brunette. I used to be a dumpy fat piano player. Now that i learned this trick, im no longer a dumpy fat piano player, im a dumpy fat jazz piano player.
one of the best music lessons I've seen.
Wait, with which hand I’m gonna hold my beer then?!?
Your teeth dimsip. 😂
Ok but you should have the right hand form
🤯 Doooooooope!🫡🫡💯
That's how music is made yo, it's not really a "trick" its learning how to play
Yeah exactly 😂
As someone that is terrible with instruments trust me it helps in the slightest way
You ain’t tricking anyone.
Tricked me
Wdym
Hit the road, Jack.
Classic.
Technically referred to as the Andalusian cadence. It’s a chord progression. Therefore you can’t copyright a chord progression
As a jazz pianist, I’m not convinced that would trick me.
the only people you'll be able to trick into thinking that you are even remotely familiar with jazz piano with this are non-musicians and people who have never listened to jazz.
That's fine by me😂
I thought that was the point of the vid, munkey boy
Mr. Bean theme!?
Mr bean ahh song 💀
mmm... bean...
Some people are just amazing!