Ricardo -> RE: Arpeggio practice combinations (Sep. 28 2021 14:28:28)
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However...is that really whats happening? ppi? and even if it is... is that classed as an arpeggio? p-i-p, p-i-p, etc. triplet. Majority of the time p drags across adjacent strings. Occasionally double p stroke are required, sometimes a golpe. Occasionally pull-offs affect the rhythm so a double i stroke is required (up down usually) to fill in the rhythm. Mixing all that stuff can be very tricky timing-wise. Also the same technique might be at once a triplet or sextuplet phrase, but used in a different palo as 16ths (4 per beat), so even more synchopated and tricky than normal. My reference is mainly manual Morao who I feel had the most sophisticated use of the technique (it probably derives from his teacher Javier Molina). Arpegio is a musical term that means notes of a chord played separately or in sequence. Indeed the above tech is used that way often. However the main concept is that the melody is a bass line melody, so hence some bass line melodies reappear in modern toque as Alzapua. So most players probably view this as old fashioned alzapua. To guitar players “arpegio” is also a technique, such as ami repeating. This technique can be used to play musical lines that are not broken chords so a distinction needs to be made when talking guitar.
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