Villa Lobos created musical monuments fingered and voiced with so much loving care for the physical peculiarities of the guitar, that technical challenges for the player became of little moment, even for the early intermediate player. But, Mr Krivokapic's faithfulness to EAR makes this my favorite performance of a work I've ALMOST played as well thousands of times . . . Thank you for showing us that, together, the music and the instrument decide, but the ear disposes . . . Mr Krivokapic's unerring ear and intimate connection of heart and mind carry himself and his listeners--from start to finish!
So Wonderful classical guitar music video. Thank you very much, Heitor Villa-Lobos Musician, Goran Krivokapić classical Guitarist and Siccas Guitars 🌹💖🌹💖🌹💖🌹💖
Is there a name for when you can hear the fingertips slide from one note to another? And is that preferred when hearing certain kinds of guitar music? Not trolling, just genuinely curious after listening to Sicca's channel the entire morning 🙂 (I don't know much about guitar)
What you're probably talking about is called a Glissando. It can be a choice by the performer, but it is often written in by the composer. In this piece that are a few included by Villa-Lobos.
If you are referring to the metallic sound, then no it's not glissando (more like an unfortunate side effect of glissando) and it should be avoided as far as classical guitar goes. Goran Krivokapic is one of the finest guitarists in the world and I have no idea why the sliding sound is so audible in his recordings.
@@Rodrigo-me6nq when I was learning Etude 11, and later Prelude 1, my teacher basically said to leave those metallic sounds in. I can't quite remember why, perhaps Villa-Lobos liked it?
Villa Lobos created musical monuments fingered and voiced with so much loving care for the physical peculiarities of the guitar, that technical challenges for the player became of little moment, even for the early intermediate player. But, Mr Krivokapic's faithfulness to EAR makes this my favorite performance of a work I've ALMOST played as well thousands of times . . . Thank you for showing us that, together, the music and the instrument decide, but the ear disposes . . . Mr Krivokapic's unerring ear and intimate connection of heart and mind carry himself and his listeners--from start to finish!
🙌🙌👏👏👏👏
Wooow beautiful interpretation
The most desirable balance between technical and emotional possibilities! ... My goto, FAVORITE rendition of this classic. THANK YOU, Mr krivokapic!
Wonderful; thank you for sharing.
Dear artist, you are a giant guitarist and you performed this prelude in an excellent way. Thanks for uploading.
Very beautiful..such precision.
So Wonderful classical guitar music video. Thank you very much, Heitor Villa-Lobos Musician, Goran Krivokapić classical Guitarist and Siccas Guitars 🌹💖🌹💖🌹💖🌹💖
Simply breathtakingly beautiful! Thank you Goran and Siccas.
Que beleza, Goran!
Que som cheio e robusto!!!
Parabéns!!! Adoreiii!!!
Obrigada!!!!
Maestro Heitor Villa-Lobos foi um dos maiores compositores do período moderno.
Thank you! You really coaxed something special out of this piece. Very dynamic!
Very well played. I love trying to play this tune myself.
Maestro, something in your touch on the guitar + strings makes the song that much moving . . .
👏👏👏Bravo! And today is Villa-Lobos’s 135th birthday!
I'm doing this piece right now, this is a great help and inspiration thanks!
Bravooo!
Perfetto !!!
Really talented love the piece 👍👍👍
Mestre Villa-Lobos...
Wow
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
太棒了
❤👏👏👏👏👏
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
is this guitar a secret? Who is the luthier?
Is there a name for when you can hear the fingertips slide from one note to another? And is that preferred when hearing certain kinds of guitar music? Not trolling, just genuinely curious after listening to Sicca's channel the entire morning 🙂 (I don't know much about guitar)
What you're probably talking about is called a Glissando. It can be a choice by the performer, but it is often written in by the composer. In this piece that are a few included by Villa-Lobos.
@@Daniel-oq7xy Thank you!
If you are referring to the metallic sound, then no it's not glissando (more like an unfortunate side effect of glissando) and it should be avoided as far as classical guitar goes. Goran Krivokapic is one of the finest guitarists in the world and I have no idea why the sliding sound is so audible in his recordings.
It might be the newness of the strings, not glissando but a consequence of brand new strings
@@Rodrigo-me6nq when I was learning Etude 11, and later Prelude 1, my teacher basically said to leave those metallic sounds in. I can't quite remember why, perhaps Villa-Lobos liked it?
Very Nice. Which luthier's guitar is being played?
Not bad
Vrlo lijep ton.....ovu stvar sam ja svirao na koncertu,pa me sjetilo
very good but he is consuming oxygen
He screwed that up big time. I heard that extra note, bro.
Where's the extra note
@@Rodrigo-me6nq There's one small hiccup at 3:34, but I think @muhfeels is just messing with us :)