Sagreras: El Colibri (Tariq Harb, guitar)
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- Опубліковано 15 сер 2023
- Guitarist Tariq Harb performs "El Colibri" by the great Argentinian composer Julio Salvador Sagreras. It is a virtuosic composition written for the classical guitar that is meant to imitate the hummingbird. Please enjoy!
Guitar: Martin Blackwell, double cedar top and Brazilian rosewood back and sides, 2019
Strings: Savarez, 540 CR
Guitar support: Murata
Camera: Sony a6400
Mics used: Rode NT55 Condenser Microphones
www.tariqharb.com
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Tariq Harb teaches at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada: www.concordia.ca/faculty/tari...
Online store: tariqharb.com/shop/
As a classical guitarist myself, the most amazing thing about this performance (other than the execution) is that he's playing it in a standard room that offers zero acoustic benefits. You have to be a really good guitarist to pull that off. Wonderful performance as per usual.
Amazing.
I can make my fingers fly through the frets too. But not producing such a good music or anything good at all.
What I mean is that this gentleman is highly skilled. Excellent.
I am learning to play the guitar lately. Hopefully I'll get to play something sometime. These performances are so encouraging ❤
Damn!
Wow. I live in the cloud forest of Ecuador, where hummingbirds (colibríes) are constandly buzzing around my feeders, especially first thing in the morning. This piece perfectly captures the frenetic pace of their life. Thank you for this amazing performance, Maestro Harb!
Always a pleasure to hear you - love that Blackwell guitar too
Just Unbelievable his skilness on the guitar. Very seldon we have seen so amasing performance.
Absolute Wow!
Guitar virtuoso
Хорошо. Чистенько.
Great articulation. 👏 👏 👏
Thank you!
Grande músico!!!
Excellent!
Oh my! I love this, thanks for the many hours I spend watching your posts over and over.
So glad to hear that you are enjoying my posts! Thank you.
Those sweeps are epic. Mind blown
Glad you enjoyed it!
Oh man, that is a work out!
Hello! Virtual game! I am impressed! Thank you!!!
I've watched this on a loop for the past 30 minutes. What virtuosic technical and expressive ability. If you perform in California, I'll be there my friend !
Bravo
Amazing performance, as always!
I'm sure I can see your fingers catching fire playing this one Tariq ! Another great performance.
..WOW!!. ..beats per second fleeting through the strings like their wings,beautiful!! Absolutely amazing interpretation! 👏👏👏
This rendition is so tight I can’t stop listening to it. Damn you, Tariq Harb!
Beautiful! Thank you. 👏👏👏
WOW, Bravo Maestro!
Mumtaz!!!
عالمي بجد 😮😮
Fantastic
Sensacional. Parabéns. Poste mais vídeos...🎉
I think this is the most perfect rendition of this song I’ve heard.
search for Tamayo's colibrì
Wow.
Those fingers are flying! Great as always Tariq.
Thanks so much, Snowfire!
Yes. See he slides his fingers along all the guitar stem (arm) from the highest accutes notes to the gravier sound notes at oposite extremity with surgical precision and so fast.
Even i studied 18 hours a day on my mandolin shurely I won't get there. LOl
Excelente interpretación, Maestro Tariq.
Muchas gracias!
C’est mon tout premier commentaire sous une vidéo UA-cam. Je ne peux plus m’empêcher d’écouter votre interprétation d’El Colibri au moins 10 fois par jour. En espérant pouvoir la jouer aussi bien que vous d’ici quelque temps. Pour l’instant je peaufine le Caprice Arabe (en m’aidant de votre vidéo là aussi). Merci Tariq !
Marvellous performance 👏
Bravo !
Wicked
Thanks!
Monster Tariq at it again! Just amazing!
Thanks a lot! :)
Always a treat!! Fantastic performance!
Thank you so much 😃
Outstanding!!
Excelente! felicitaciones!
Que limpieza y precisión uff
Muchas gracias!
Tecnica elevata. Eccellente.
Grazie!
Concierto de Arnjuez sir?
Nicely done sir (PS. Nice jacket) 😊
😁
Wooooo... sensacional.. Bravo grande Maestro
Obrigado!
Quelle classe et quelle maestria! Bravo 👌👏👏👏
Un grand merci!
Lovely 🎸
Amazing performance!
Thank you!
@TeeHarb
Greetings!
I'm the one who should say thank you Sir!
Thank you for your art!
Wow. Amazing.
Thank you! Cheers!
Great, great playing! It would be hard to play it much better than this.👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉
Wrill good music.
Bravissimo!
impressive virtuoso!
Many thanks!
😊😊😊
Great performance from Jason Statham!
👋👍👋👋👋
Excellent work on a modern classic! You need to let that hair grow again though to let your true genius shine! lol
LOL working on it!
Great, except for the string squeak at 0:41.
So do you always look for the smallest error instead of actually enjoying a musical performance?
Just wondering…
@@worldsheaviestjamband93 : Ask instead why I mentioned it in a comment that Mr. Harb might read. It's called "constructive feedback."
Most guitarists on this channel play much worse... so much squeaking & creaking of their strings (due to failure to fully lift the fingers of their left hand off the strings before repositioning the left hand) that I don't listen to more than about a minute of their playing. The squeaking & creaking of strings are unmusical noises that a talented guitarist is capable (in principle) of learning to reduce or eliminate (and then must remain mindful of to avoid regressing). Unlike coughing by a member of the audience, which is an unmusical noise that the guitarist can't fix (and why I prefer studio performances with no audience during recording).
@brothermine2292: Your response to the point about your mentioning the squeak is a bit labored. After all, do you think Tariq was not aware of the squeak upon his own listening of the video, or indeed when it occurred during his performance? - Of course not. If you define perfection as free of any perceptible human imperfection, then you have high (perhaps impossible) standards indeed.
Most of my favorite performances almost always include minor human flaws. That’s where you feel the heart in it, and that’s what makes it human. Best wishes.
@@davidnefesh : (1) If you have any evidence that Mr. Harb was aware of the squeak, cite it. Even if he was aware, my comment lets him know he's not the only person who's aware... gushing uncritical praise by most commenters presumably undermines performers' incentive to minimize this kind of noise.
(2) There's nothing wrong with including "freedom from noise" in the definition of perfection. You're conflating two different measures... perfection is NOT the same as enjoyability. I enjoyed Mr. Harb's performance here, even though it wasn't perfect. He came close to perfection. Another guitarist who does is Irina Kulikova. They set a high standard that most guitarists fail to meet, but might meet if they pay more attention to this issue when they practice.
(3) I believe you're bs'ing when you claim performers' noises are where you "feel the heart" of performances. It's like saying the heart of baseball umpires' performances is when they blow the call. I just listened to your most recent youtube performance (posted 3 months ago) and I could hear why you would prefer that listeners ignore these squeak & creak noises, which I heard every few seconds (until I aborted your video after about 30 seconds). Constructive criticism: I recommend you practice lifting the fingers of your left hand a moment earlier each time you're about to reposition your hand. Best of luck.
@@brothermine2292 Neither Tariq nor I have asked for your criticism of any kind, yet you persist in offering it. Did Tariq preface the video asking for advisement?
I have just started classical guitar over a year ago. I could care less if my starter-classical videos bore you or whatever. I do them for me. Tariq is a virtuosic enough player that I can't possibly see the purpose of pointing out to him that he squeaked once. He's well aware of the importance of trying to reduce noise by efficient lifting of the fingers amid transitions, which of course I'm very much working on myself, as you noticed quite nastily. I can honestly say I was uncomfortable putting those videos out on my page alongside my more polished work (folk/rock/electric/voice), but I did it simply to step out, for me, not because I think my execution of the two etudes "rank" or are very good. They simply reflect the place I've reached from the work I've put in so far.
And while the idea of "technical perfection" and its relationship with artistic quality could be debated, this isn't the place for it. But I do tend to appreciate performers in all genres who reflect obvious emotions in their work, and sometimes that means energetic vigor and creative-expression at the price of occasional perceptible flaws. I see this performance as one of those. It's quite possible another player could also play the piece great but with no perceptible squeak, and I might end up preferring Tariq's version of it, even with the one small squeak. For me, it's just not important in this context. He did an awesome job of it. The squeak only matters to you, it seems. That's cool. Done too. Take care.