Aaron Gilmartin Teaches Basic Flamenco Chords

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • A sample from "Easy Steps to Flamenco Guitar - Play Along and Learn!" available as an instant download here: leapingbrain.c...
    Sound like a flamenco guitarist instantly! Aaron Gilmartin has made his introduction to this guitar style so easy that even someone with just a minimal amount of guitar experience can start playing this exciting and passionate music.To get you going, Aaron has chosen Tango Flamenco, one of the great traditional Latin dance forms transformed by flamenco. It's based on a simple, instantly recognizable four-chord progression and a driving rhythmic pulse. (Popular groups such as the Gipsy Kings have made this sound famous in recent years.)The rhythm (compass), with its familiar percussive effect, is key to this style. Aaron teaches you the basic right hand strums (rasgueados) and picking (picados) that conjure up the sounds of Spain. Aiming this DVD at true beginners, Aaron takes each step of his lesson at a very slow and deliberate pace. He builds your flamenco technique in a logical, step-by-step method, providing numerous exercises, play-alongs and great advice about everything from getting good tone to using fake nails. He helps you with each chord, gradually adding grace notes, bass and melody lines, arpeggios and other techniques until you are playing a full-fledged flamenco solo.
    To get "Easy Steps to Flamenco Guitar" as a DVD from Homespun Tapes, click the link below:
    bit.ly/wmMyl7
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Комментарии • 23

  • @deldia
    @deldia 7 лет назад +1

    This is where I started 4 years ago. That baby-bar was so strange at the time but is everything to me now. Thanks again Aaron! Video shows x10330 for Bb - you can also play x13030.

  • @BobWebbmusic
    @BobWebbmusic 14 лет назад +1

    Hi Aaron, thanks for posting. You a great teacher and wonderful player.

  • @davidkettlewell829
    @davidkettlewell829 10 лет назад +1

    I'm a musician and i feel Aaron's style is excellent, so easy to understand, a nice slow pace for the beginner/ intermediate player and overall just what many players need. If you can get a little music theory training it will help you, I suggest William Duckworth's A Creative Approach to Music Fundamentals, 6th edition, available used on zmazon.

  • @smudgeguitar
    @smudgeguitar 12 лет назад +2

    true but i've been playing 30+ years and never thought of playing that open B flat chord, so we never stop learning.

    • @tannercolson1886
      @tannercolson1886 3 года назад

      a trick: you can watch series at Flixzone. Me and my gf have been using them for watching lots of of movies lately.

    • @kellenlincoln2052
      @kellenlincoln2052 3 года назад

      @Tanner Colson Yea, I have been using flixzone} for since november myself :D

  • @Justin141415
    @Justin141415 12 лет назад +2

    2:39 "You get a very spaticular kind of sound"

  • @driss409
    @driss409 8 лет назад +11

    You escaped prison to teach us =D

  • @fijimorgan
    @fijimorgan 12 лет назад +3

    I'm not a guitar player but I'm trying to learn more about flamenco chord progressions. Are there certain books that you would recommend for learning flamenco chord progressions and notation?

  • @pleasepermitmetospeakohgre1504

    Flamenco music never uses the A chord with an open B string (A+9).
    It's always Ab9.

  • @nutmegger1957
    @nutmegger1957 16 лет назад +1

    Any speculation about the facination with cat gut strings by Chet Atkins and Jerry Reed?
    -Nutmegger1957

  • @97LuckyStrike
    @97LuckyStrike 13 лет назад

    @HillbillyJ bith, ususally they use nylon guitar, but steel is good too

  • @ChuloDavidcito
    @ChuloDavidcito 10 лет назад +1

    Ok? Ok? I'm afraid it's not OK. ;) Terry Bozzio's variation when he gives a clinic is "K? K?"

  • @Shibzzeg
    @Shibzzeg 13 лет назад +1

    "Play it, mkay?" LOL

  • @ozzydabigpapa
    @ozzydabigpapa 13 лет назад +1

    isnt that a classical guitar?

  • @deniscassiere
    @deniscassiere 10 лет назад +1

    aaron

    • @AaronGilmartin
      @AaronGilmartin 8 лет назад +1

      Hello Dario

    • @JoseLeon-sc3kb
      @JoseLeon-sc3kb 8 лет назад +1

      +Aaron Gilmartin Can I ask you what happend to your left hand?

  • @oullahtakanebghikawilihbib9305
    @oullahtakanebghikawilihbib9305 6 лет назад +1

    too much bla bla for to chords with his "name" in the title

  • @lgatoloko
    @lgatoloko 7 лет назад +4

    why Tango if you're playing Flamenco? two different styles. lmfao. ... is either tango or flamenco! your playing Flamenco so why say tango. mixing people up

    • @AaronGilmartin
      @AaronGilmartin 7 лет назад +2

      Hello Rafael, thanks for the question. The answer is that there are a group of flamenco palos that are called ida y vuelta (palos meaning form or rhythm i.e. solea or buleria). They use sounds from cultures outside of Spain and retain the name of a style from the other culture as well. Examples of these are: Colombiana, Guajira from Cuba and Tango from Argentina.