Even more from selftaughtgirl
Even more from selftaughtgirl
Pittaluga, Bautista, Jose – firsts, by the great guitarist Ricardo Iznaola. Part of the wonderful archive of BBC broadcasts that selftaughtgirl has posted for us on the internet.
A few weeks late for a homage , but this is an interesting interview with the Godfather of Punk and cofounder of Velvet Underground in Guitar World, 1998. He was obsessed with guitar technology and did surprising things with guitars!
Xuefei Yang played a beautiful version of my arrangement of a Chinese song “Spring Breeze”.
I knew it had come from some soap opera or a film, and thanks to Nigel Warburton via @teobesta here is the original use of the piece! (Probably a bit steamy if you are a music teacher!)
See below
Continue reading
Yet another Finnish guitar release!
The indefatigable Otto Tolonen plays
Wayne says:
“The following content is related to the December 2012 issue of Guitar World. For the full range of interviews, features, tabs and more, pick up the new issue on newsstands now, or in our online store
In this month’s column, I’d like to talk about practicing with a metronome. I’m sure most of you have read or been told at some point that practicing to a metronome is an important thing for guitar players to do on a regular basis. I think that practicing with a metronome can reap many benefits and have spent a lot of time doing it over the years.
Although I’ve always felt that my sense of “time”—my ability to play at a steady tempo and in a groove “pocket” without speeding up or slowing down—has been pretty good, I realized at one point that it was not quite as good as I wanted it to be. So I spent a considerable amount of effort really focusing on that aspect of my playing, and I think there are ways to practice with a metronome that are more beneficial than others.”
Brilliant advice
More on Metronome
Wigmore Hall 22 November 2013 – 1:00pm
Fabio Zanon plays
Prelude, Fugue and Allegro in E flat BWV998 (guitar version in D major)
Nocturnal after John Dowland Op. 70
Hailed by Classical Guitar as ‘one of the true stars of the 21st century’, the renowned Brazilian guitarist Fabio Zanon returns to Wigmore Hall to play Benjamin Britten’s seminal Nocturnal, written exactly fifty years ago.
His programme includes favourite works by Bach and Granados, and Sergio Assad’s virtuosic depiction of watercolour technique, Aquarelle.
I came across this on Digital Music News and thought I would share it – hope it will work for you!
“The following very awesome tip comes from Ari Herstand, a performing musician, actor, and part-time blogger who also advises bands and artists (check out his services here).”
(1) Please show the counter agent, guard, or other said official the 145 page FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 section 41724. It was signed into law by Obama last year.
Print it out. Continue reading
Great work, this…
Hopefully the other three will make it to the internet soon.
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Gilbert says-
I waited 35 years (nearly!) to hear this piece! Thanks to the marvels of modern computer, digital, technology now I can and I want to share this with you al, my dear friends. With the exception of a few significant changes the love-impact and the passage of time, the perspective that changes a little, perhaps…) the piece is as I wrote it. Let me know how you like it. It is subtitled Aronne, and this is reflected in the emotion and structure of the piece. It IS the emotion of the piece. Possibly, my age…
For hundreds of years guitars have been made the same way, but now this could all change. A new music documentary, “MUSICWOOD” follows the journey of a band of the most famous (acoustic) guitar-makers in the world as they attempt to save a primeval forest and the acoustic guitar.
Musicwood Documentary – 2 min trailer from Helpman Productions on Vimeo.
Of course, Paul Fischer already foresaw the problem of diminishing stocks of precious instrument hardwoods and in 1983 he was awarded a Winston Churchill Travelling Fellowship to extend his research into the forest of Brazil.
He produced many instruments with alternative, non-threatened hardwood species and did a memorable “blind test” with John Mills playing traditional Brazilian rosewood and mixed other species (e.g. Kingwood, Jaguar wood) behind a curtain, with the audience invited to judge whether or not they could tell the difference.
Nowadays, it is quite common to find instruments made of alternative hardwoods (the most common and long standing being the so-called “Indian” rosewood). but Paul was a pioneer who did research with the help of native Brazilians such as Sergio Abreu.