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Flamenco techniques but not flamenco!
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Music88
Posts: 7
Joined: Apr. 9 2014
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Flamenco techniques but not flamenco!
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Hello everyone! Just joined the forum and I'm so excited. I'm planning to start the journey of learning the amazing art of flamenco guitar soon. But before I do so, I wanna ask a question. It has nothing to do with reason why I'm here, but it's been a dilemma I just couldn't solve for a long time. I have a strong feeling I'll find the solution here..hope you wouldn't mind guys helping me out! FWIW, I heard that studying and learning the techniques used in classical guitar playing would give the foundation needed, technique-wise talking, to play anything you want on a nylon string guitar. Especially if someone is interested in learning solo or chord-melody type of playing to play jazz, latin, bossa nova..or even for doing fingerstyle arrangements of pop or rock.. tunes. I'm not against this advice nor I dislike classical guitar music, and it actually makes sense to me to some extent. But having heard and seen many flamenco players, I've always thought that their right hands are more developed and more... athletic when compared to classical guitarists' but yet to hear an advice regarding learning flamenco guitar techniques to start fingerpicking on your guitar.. or to expand your technical abilities for making a better arrangement of a chord-melody solo of some sort of music on a nylon string guitar! It might be thought that the techniques used in flamenco guitar only serve the player to play flamenco music. Not sure though. I do understand the difference in the tone produced by classical and flamenco players. And I'm definitely not saying that the reason why anyone should study flamenco guitar is to learn the techniques! I'm just wondering why many people tend to think that one has to learn classical guitar techniques if (s)he wants to play the right way on a nylon string guitar! My question is for you experts here, especially those with experience in both flamenco and classical guitar.. Which help more to make the best use of the nylon strings and therefore set a better foundation for playing different music genres on a nylon string guitar.. flamenco guitar techniques or classical guitar techniques? All the respect to both styles, of course. Thanks for taking the time to read this!
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Apr. 9 2014 21:29:45
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Music88
Posts: 7
Joined: Apr. 9 2014
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RE: Flamenco techniques but not flam... (in reply to Ricardo)
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Thank you guys for the welcome! No surprise to read such friendly and informative replies, it has to be said. Erik and Ricardo made a very good point. Each music style has its own flavor, its own authentic sound...along with its techniques which, the techniques, should be no more than tools to express the music.. right on Ricardo when you said the music gave birth to the techniques. I love flamenco music and, admittedly, I'm impressed by the techniques.. but I surly won't study flamenco guitar for the techniques.. that would be silly! To rephrase the point I was trying to make...I think the nylon string guitar has been used in different types of music..flamenco, bossa and brazilian music, cuban music, classical, some jazz...etc. That said, and despite the different colors and expressions, and from a technical point of view , I can only see, IMHO, two main big styles or two big different approaches to playing the nylon string guitar..the flamenco way and the classical way... Now, though I tend to think, and some people here would agree too, that holding the guitar, strumming and fingerpicking the nylon strings the way the flamenco player use is a better and more versatile way to express yourself on this instrument, whether you're playing flamenco or non-flamenco music... I still hear many people recommend learning classical guitar techniques, even if one is not interested in playing classical music, that is to learn the sure and time-tested way to play the nylon string guitar! Sounds familiar? Why not recommending learning flamenco guitar techniques in such example or situation.. Could be ignorance maybe as Ricardo already said.. Regardless, I'm happy to be here. Cheers!
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Apr. 10 2014 12:35:45
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