Ricardo -> RE: sheet music to share? (Jun. 14 2016 16:59:56)
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ORIGINAL: greatusername Thanks for everything, what I was trying to say is not that I don't want to invest in good quality scores , but I've been a metal guitar player for 7 years now. When I bought my classical a year ago, I started playing opeth on it and slowly moved to classical music. Searching for classical guitar technique I found a lot of videos about flamenco techniques(that I won't name because I don't speak spanish and the names are somewhat difficult for me to remember). I started thiniking about getting flamenco scores (because I try to get better at sight reading) but all I could find was not that well written tabs so I went here and asked :). I just don't really know flamenco enough to know what scores to buy. Classical guitar as a genre promotes standard notation exclusively, but in the end it is a very interpretive style. You find various versions and in the end the pro classical guy is always looking for "a good fingering" version of printed music or arrangement (unless composed by a player). While guitar generally can be like this, you should know darn well from metal world, that score +tab is the ONLY way you encounter accurate transcriptions. Same deal for flamenco. I have not yet seen the standard staff versions of FLAMENCO transcriptions that really spells out all the important info...Even Faucher's excellent volume of Ramon Montoya transcriptions. No no, dude...listen to me....score +tab is the way to go if you honestly want to get things correct. ALAIN FAUCHER ...again, and he only has that one book only standard notes. He has under the table cheaper tabs of single pieces, and the rhythms are clearly part of his personal way to write them. The fingering is not alway shown as in a standard score, but for what you want, position and string accuracy, right hand patterns, etc, it's the best way. All his printed books have both score and tabs.
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