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RE: Most incredible picado of all times...
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Mark2
Posts: 1862
Joined: Jul. 12 2004
From: San Francisco
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RE: Most incredible picado of all ti... (in reply to Ricardo)
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Not sure cause he only indicates fingers(i,a,i,) not the direction. But my guess is you are correct in that he means i up, a down, i down. No golpes. You could do the golpes with the other interpretation -i down, a up, i up. From the vid though I think he did it like you did. -i down, i up, a down. quote:
ORIGINAL: Ricardo Moraito and Tomatito do this thing reversed, i up on the beat, flicking i down from thumb, and NO GOLPES. Perhaps that is how Faucher wrote it as well???
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Date Mar. 23 2017 15:14:18
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mark indigo
Posts: 3625
Joined: Dec. 5 2007
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RE: Most incredible picado of all ti... (in reply to Dudnote)
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quote:
quote: ORIGINAL mark indigo quote: Moraito ..... pretty much blue printed "perfect" accompaniment for all time with his HUGE body of work with singers.... that would make a REALLY interesting (and maybe impossible) discography. I have loads of recordings of Moraíto with singers, but probably only scratched the surface of what's out there. It would be an awesome thread! Which are your favourites? Well.... there are maybe 4 categories: albums where he is sole or main guitarist; albums where he guests on a track or two; official videos like the Carlos Saura films, Agujetas Cantaor or Jose Merce Puro y Jondo; and live "bootleg" vids on YouTube. The first two are kind of fuzzy. On Macanita's "con el Alma" he is sort of main guitarist but with Parrilla de Jerez on some tracks either with or instead (not completely sure, need to listen to it again). Torta's Colores Morenos and Luna Mora he is sole guitarist i think. On Mujerez he accompanies Juana la del Pipa and Macanita, but her son accompanies Dolores, except on the bulerias where they play together.... There are loads and loads and loads of these albums. And there are the "Gazillian cameo appearances where the singer have multiple guitarists." too, of course. Only yesterday i found a couple of tracks [on YouTube] of Moraito and Torta from an album i had never heard of. Torta's wiki page showed it was his first album, but it looked like it was only released on cassette! EDIT: and there's another Torta album listed as "descatalogado" on elflamencovive.com that's not mentioned on the wiki page. I bought as many as i could then afford of the Auvidis Ethnic Flamenco Vivo CD's when they were coming out in the 90's (Macanita, Torta, Ines Bacan etc.) and since picked up some [that i missed or had previously taped from friends] on Amazon (Fernando de la Morena, Fernando Terremoto, Barrullo etc.). Moraito's solo album "Morao y Oro" was on that label, and he seems to have been practically the house guitarist for them.
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Date Mar. 28 2017 12:27:23
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Piwin
Posts: 3556
Joined: Feb. 9 2016
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RE: Most incredible picado of all ti... (in reply to Filip)
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On a sidenote, though this doesn't answer your question on the fastest picado out there, I've been reading some books on psychoacoustics and the sections on speed are pretty interesting. If the interval between each note is under 100ms, it starts getting pretty difficult for the human ear to distinguish each note. The notes start blurring pretty quickly if you drop that interval below the 100ms mark. If you reach 50ms, which I'm not even is humanly possible, though probably somewhere close to the limit, then it starts getting really confused. Under 20ms you've entered the realm where rythm starts being perceived as pitch. Basically, as I understand it, around 50ms your mind can get pretty confused as to whether it's hearing rythm or pitch. A picado run with an interval under 100ms (so 10 notes per second) doesn't seem all that uncommon. Some of the guitarists here can probably manage that. But once you start going any faster, then the way you compose your picado run will determine whether it's perceived as a melodic line or just a blur. Basically the idea would be that you have to find a way to make certain notes stick out so that the ears can hang out to a musical Relationship between two notes that are further than 100ms apart. If none of the notes stick out, than you're stuck with that 100ms interval and you can't really process it as single separate notes. Another factor seems to be how long it takes for the instrument to produce sound. The longer it takes the produce the sound, then the more blurry a fast run will sound. A 100ms-interval picado run will still sound like there are distinct notes in there, but do the same thing on a pipe organ and it's just a blur.
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Date Apr. 4 2017 7:57:18
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Ricardo
Posts: 14746
Joined: Dec. 14 2004
From: Washington DC
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RE: Most incredible picado of all ti... (in reply to Filip)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Filip Guys, do you have any idea of how many notes per second was in the fastest picado you ever heard (in flamenco) ? Also, if it happens to be on YT I would appreciate if you would share the video ;) I'm thinking about La Barrosa ending in Light and Shade, or about improvisation with McLaughlin from the same documentary, but no clue about the number of notes. Cheers Tight and controlled, on Caña de Azucar jose maria banderas does a run of 8's at 117 bpm that the other two players did not attempt. There is the "Rumba" by Cerreduela, basically paco's Rio Ancho, taken at 120 bpm or so and he does a run there that would be 16 notes per second. Todd and grisha both argued against my claim, so we need some one to slow it down for us. Finally Paco Cepero, pushes the tempo way up but it's not metronome tight, but I am thinking he is up around 120 or so on the fast run. PDL fastest I heard was on Chanela solo on Solo quiero caminar. Ricardo
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Date Apr. 4 2017 15:08:46
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