thanks for introducing me to this amazing player i never knew about , until today!
I will never forget when I saw this song on UA-cam for the first time...it was a musical revelation and I wish I could learn to play this!
you can. . it's just notes and pretty regular chords. technique is easy, even a monkey can develop technique on the guitar. i have endless technique on multiple instruments, but, alas, i have no repertoire, because i'm lazy. getting the technique was easy, it took a few days to understand it and a few months to get it, but learning songs and having a repertoire, that's the real work. this is just a song with really average chords. he's improvising a lot, but there's nothing really mysterious there... he's got a great tone and dynamic range, but those are easily reproduced, if your heart is into it. there are no secrets about how to have a good tone or good dynamics, it's just whether you want to play that way, or not, and decide to work on it.
I can’t believe this is available as a tab! So very happy. A truly beautiful piece of music
merci . Angelo ; and valentin
one of the best transcriptions ever. Thakns a lot!
This is a great job, very accurate. Thank you Valentin !
chapeau bas, Valentin, pour cette transcription d'un thème plein de sensibilité !!
Super bien :)
NICE PIECE
Merci beaucoup Valentin !!
Thank you very much my Friend !!
wow, beautiful! many thanks!!
Una maravilla de transcripción!!
Merci ! I put it in my favorites, just need to work it now :)
great job man, amazing transcription!!!
Superb work transcribing... wow..
Thank you soooooo much 🙏🏻🙏🏻
Wow! Thank You!
Que booooo, joan😍😍
Super boulot !!!🎸🎸🎸
Thank you!!!
Thanks you very very very much, I just suscribed to tour channel : Such wonderful gifts !
Every measure is a PhD course in arpeggios and rhythmic placement.
Reminds me of Kali Sara (intro to Latcho Drom)
Why does “Manoir de mes rêves” appears as the tittle? Does anyone know?
я манал...
song written by Hungarian jewish Ernő Kondor, musician, actor, songwriter, cabaret director in ~1910.
(sorry, my earlier comment somehow vanished...)