Greg -> RE: Just to say HI! as I've just joined and to advice on playing for dancers! (Jan. 21 2006 23:28:45)
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Thanks guys, first to John for your advice. Sort of suspected that was the case, and in fact by keeping to the beginners classes I'm learning at a manageable pace. Sevillanas I got together pretty easily, just making sure that I kept a steady rhythm, and nice because the dancers just follow the guitarrist, rather than vice versa. The Tientos is coming together too, as I begin to understand the dance and the choreography. The trick I realise (I'm almost on my own here except for occasional advice from my former teacher who moved away) is to strip everything down to basic rhythm, and follow the dancers, especially the feet, speeding up with them but learning that some footwork (zapateado) is not actually doubling the pace but simply taconeos that mark offbeats (if that makes sense..?). After that it's a matter of recognising the llamadas, and the choreography of the dance, i.e. for this dancer/dance teacher's choice of the Tientos ramping up to a Tangos, slowing down, and then going for a Tangos finale (the key for me at the end understanding when to stop!). I'm working off a couple of cassette tapes made by the dance teacher using two other guitarrists, and as I become more savvy I learn more from these. I did start with advanced dancers and it blew my head off, especially doing Soleares and Alegrias. Actually the Soleares isn't too bad, if I break it down to basic chords and rhythm, but then I don't even know how to be creative with these, i.e. what are good chord sequences to fit with the choreography before it breaks into a bulerias. Then the bulerias I can do, again, on my own at home using some fancy stuff, but to break from the soleares into bulerias on the twelfth bar, and then instead of doing fancy stuff actually use the guitar with right compas and stuff to work with the dance is a big challenge. Same sort of issues with alegrias, i.e. I can do it in bits, but I don't know how to tie it all together and make it work with the dance. Duende - thanks for your lead, I'll check that one out. Sorin - the "Solo compas" series I talk about is a series of didactic CDs published by a Sevillian record producer, available over the web, e.g. try www.esflamenco.com and type "solo compas" in the search. I've actually only got one of the CDs, Solo Compas Sevillanas, but it's brilliant. What I like is how they play the palo in different ways, e.g. without singer, with palmas only, and so on. I would buy more of their CDs, and probably will when I feel I know how best to use them. Meantime, the shops selling them tend to have try-before-you-buy audios that I listen to, some of which are very useful, e.g. esflamenco has a 6 minute rhythm section for Tangos which is great to play along to, and an example of the same with guitar which shows one way of playing the basic rhythm. Keep that conversation coming! Greg
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