You took this piece to a whole other level for me! I have begun playing the tremolo sections not only faster, but with much more musicality after watching this. And I have made the arpeggio sections more musical also. This was a great lesson for this piece (Carcassi op. 60 no. 7).
Sorry to be offtopic but does someone know a tool to get back into an instagram account? I somehow lost my login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can give me.
@Reign Micah Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Although the video was released in 2015, the video might have been taken quite a few years back and it was recorded probably on a video tape and not digitally.
Actually, I think I misquoted the piece and the tab... hard to tell when everything is numbered and not named. Going through the whole tab list of Carcassi on classtab.org is good for everyone to do though.
aside from the fact that you are a great player and whatever you are saying about tremolo is really helpful I have to mention you've made the same mistake about this piece that most of CG player make; this is not a tremolo study by Carcassi, in fact it has to be played by p i m i on the 3rd string as in the next part where the notes are on different strings.
Actually, this is not true. I have played this piece since the 60s and studied with some of the best and I have never known anyone to play it as you suggest except as an alternative fingering for practice.
You guys are using too much compressors on this. Classical guitar is NOT steel string. The dynamics are very different. Study it and learn it THEN record it.
Ciao, sei da tempo il miglior chitarrista classico del mondo, tecnica, tempo, esecuzione e sentimento, è un piacere ascoltarti. Ignazio da Roma ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Its carcassis Op. 60, No. 7 incase anyone is looking for the music. He mentions 7 but not the opus number
I am studying this piece! I appreciate all the ideas presented here. The performance of the piece at the end is wonderful!
I love the phrase 'independence in your tendons'
One of the greatest living guitarist
Merci Marcyn cette une lumineuse leçon de musique et de technique!
You took this piece to a whole other level for me! I have begun playing the tremolo sections not only faster, but with much more musicality after watching this. And I have made the arpeggio sections more musical also. This was a great lesson for this piece (Carcassi op. 60 no. 7).
Wow! He's done his homework. Just oustanding everness in his tremolo and arepgio. Thaiks for sharing. very useful..
this is such a great lesson...thank you Marcin!
I agree. I learned a lot.
Sorry to be offtopic but does someone know a tool to get back into an instagram account?
I somehow lost my login password. I would appreciate any tricks you can give me.
@Tyson Adriel instablaster =)
@Reign Micah Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and Im trying it out now.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Reign Micah it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I am so happy!
Thanks so much, you really help me out !
Great lesson,while I wish I had found this video a couple years ago this changes the way I play this piece big time for the better.
Amazing way of thinking. Thank you!
A rock star of the classical world. 🙃
Very insightful lesson. Thank you.
😮 great insight!!
A very good and wow recommendation for the tremolo mistakes
Wow Marcin! Thanks 😀
Fantastic 🍀🍀🍀
12:17
A close up form different camera angles of the right hand to see the correct action on the strings would have been fantastic. But thanks all the same.
what is the name of piece? Who is composer?
Mateo Carcassi - Etude 7 Op. 60
Upload with better video quality please!
Nice videos.
I think the video quality is adequate, but the focus is on the background, not the subject!
Although the video was released in 2015, the video might have been taken quite a few years back and it was recorded probably on a video tape and not digitally.
which is the name of the piece ?
+marco mallardi Hi. Capricho 4 by Carcassi www.classtab.org/carcassi_op26no4_capricho_in_am.txt
Actually, I think I misquoted the piece and the tab... hard to tell when everything is numbered and not named. Going through the whole tab list of Carcassi on classtab.org is good for everyone to do though.
+marco mallardi its actually Carcassi - Op.60 #7
aside from the fact that you are a great player and whatever you are saying about tremolo is really helpful I have to mention you've made the same mistake about this piece that most of CG player make; this is not a tremolo study by Carcassi, in fact it has to be played by p i m i on the 3rd string as in the next part where the notes are on different strings.
Actually, this is not true. I have played this piece since the 60s and studied with some of the best and I have never known anyone to play it as you suggest except as an alternative fingering for practice.
I practice 10 different patterns for tremolo. p i m i is just one of them. Tremolo doesn’t have to be p a m i.
@@Thefare1234 you are right but Carcassi had different intention by writing this study
@@payambehtash7124 Surely if that was his intention he would have written that into the score. It IS a study after all.
You guys are using too much compressors on this. Classical guitar is NOT steel string. The dynamics are very different. Study it and learn it THEN record it.
Lol clown you come to these videos to troll guys who are ten times the musician you would be if you tried hard for the rest of your life.
That person is talking about the compression used on the audio of the recording and not Marcin's playing.
wtf so fast