Love this video so much! I could honestly sit and listen to you playing all day long and your passion for pianos and for the music! You play with such skill and with a lot of fun!
I absolutely love hearing you jam out on pianos.. and the Rag. Good golly, the RAG! let's hear more of these and longer jams! You got a new sub pal. 6:21 - love that pattern and style of music - what is that!?
Nice but the tag line is wrong. Brinsmead pianos were second half of 19th Century, from 1850s to 1890s, and have that tinny sound like in dance halls and saloons in old western movies.
I have one of these pianos. I'm not sure if it's worth fixing. Lots of broken ivory keys. 1 stuck key. Very out of tune. Minor dents and scratches. I can't sell it for anything. Utah has an over abundance of pianos and no one wants them anymore. I don't play. I don't know what I should do with it. I got it cuz I thought it was pretty, but I don't have a lot of space. Please explain at what point a piano is garbage. Also, please show us how to tune it.
I really love your videos ❤️
You clearly have so much fun when playing and I think that is beyond valuation. Thank you for sharing sir
Great Kris. Many thanks. Keith.
Love this video so much! I could honestly sit and listen to you playing all day long and your passion for pianos and for the music! You play with such skill and with a lot of fun!
Thank you, Kris. The upright is well tuned &:has a nice sound.
(The 1800's would be the 19th Century.)
(Liverpool is in England.)
Be Well.
I absolutely love hearing you jam out on pianos.. and the Rag. Good golly, the RAG! let's hear more of these and longer jams! You got a new sub pal.
6:21 - love that pattern and style of music - what is that!?
@@riddleyo thank you so much, my friend. I promise you next time I’ll put more longer ragtime on it. That piano was very hard to get used to.
Kris Nicholson is best a pianist in the history of the world.
Thank you so much, my friend for saying that I really appreciate it 😊❤
‘would like to hear more details regarding the birdcage action.
Nice but the tag line is wrong. Brinsmead pianos were second half of 19th Century, from 1850s to 1890s, and have that tinny sound like in dance halls and saloons in old western movies.
I have one of these pianos. I'm not sure if it's worth fixing. Lots of broken ivory keys. 1 stuck key. Very out of tune. Minor dents and scratches. I can't sell it for anything. Utah has an over abundance of pianos and no one wants them anymore. I don't play. I don't know what I should do with it. I got it cuz I thought it was pretty, but I don't have a lot of space.
Please explain at what point a piano is garbage.
Also, please show us how to tune it.