I'm a beginner and this is the first classical piece I've tried. This tutorial is superb! I learned so much from this vid. Thanks for all the technique! God bless.
Very nice tutorial..very intricate breakdown analysis..bar by bar..makes it very easy for the beginners to learn to play such beautiful pieces..Very kind of you.. please keep up the good work
A rest stroke [ or Apoyando as it is also known ] is when you strike say the first string and the right hand finger comes to rest on the string below ie 2nd string giving a stronger and fuller tone, as oppossed to the free stroke [ or Tirando ] where the finger justs pulls away from the string. See 2-50 in the tutorial to see how you play the rest stroke with the 'a' finger
I'm a beginner and this is the first classical piece I've tried. This tutorial is superb! I learned so much from this vid. Thanks for all the technique! God bless.
Thank you I'm glad to be of help.
I have no words to thank you. It's an amazing tutorial. Much better than the ones I tried in Portuguese. Music is really an universal language.
Thank you only to pleased to help.
Thank you very much for this lesson and it gives me insights of that piece which I learned long before.
Only to pleased to help out.
Very nice tutorial..very intricate breakdown analysis..bar by bar..makes it very easy for the beginners to learn to play such beautiful pieces..Very kind of you.. please keep up the good work
Glad to be of help.
THANKS!
Glad it helps.
💐👍👏🙏
My pleasure - enjoy.
This might be a dumb question, but how does a D7 fit into a piece that's in the key of C major? I don't understand the theory behind this.
The music temporarily moves into the key G major therefore the D7 is the dominant chord of G major . G is the dominant then of C.
Could someone tell me what a rest stroke is?
A rest stroke [ or Apoyando as it is also known ] is when you strike say the first string and the right hand finger comes to rest on the string below ie 2nd string giving a stronger and fuller tone, as oppossed to the free stroke [ or Tirando ] where the finger justs pulls away from the string. See 2-50 in the tutorial to see how you play the rest stroke with the 'a' finger