I love this ... ) My grandfather once played it to me with all his passion and soul... I was just stunned.. And thats why I asked him to teach me guitar... ))
Thank you very much for this breakdown of the opening section of Asturias, a piece that features prominently on your channel and very rightly so if I may add as it is a monument of the classical guitar repertoire. Just for guitar-talk sake I have to say I prefer the "Yates chord" on measure 37 which is essentially a 2nd inversion C major with the 7th (A#) in the bass that gives it this mysterious Andalusian flavor but that's the nature of this piece on guitar, there is no 'definitive' version so it's open to interpretation. At any rate my remark substracts nothing from your copious efforts to inspire people to play more guitar (as in my case) for which I am grateful. Oh, and btw this Cordoba guitar sounds gorgeous. Keep 'em coming!
Hello and thank you! Yes, it is a great piece. In fact, I have made a new arrangement of the piece which I will share a small portion of it later this week. I wanted something that was closer to the original piano piece than what I was playing before
I once tried pentatonic scale practice but gave up, partly because I had difficulty stretching my fingers wide to cover four frets. But the opening section of this beautiful piece, starting from the 7th fret, may serve as a finger-stretching exercise for me. Thank you, Robert!
Legend! This will definitely come in handy. I'm stucked at 37-44. For days now. Fingers just don't want to listen. 🤣 That jump from 10th fret to 12th fret on 41st tab is a horror show for my small fingers. 😂
Hi Rob, did you remove the second part of Asturias slow version? I got stuck at tab 78. So I was hoping to check the slower version but unfortunately, I can't find it anywhere on your channel.
@@vragonja Hello! I haven't removed anything. I haven't recorded a slower version of the middle section yet unfortunately . I do hope to get to that soon
Ohh, okay then. I didn't realise until yesterday how many uploads you have. Your channel is like musical wikipedia. 😄 I especially loved those videos with juicy little hints for playing guitar.
Hi robert . What is your preference of your guitars action. some guitars have high / some guitars have low action. I can imagine that theoretically low action requires less force from the left hand Like the flamenco guitar that have the lowest action. high action requires more force from the left hand. But there may be benefits as well? Many thanks for your insights!
Hello! I think string action is more of a personal preference. I prefer mine to be slightly higher than what a lot of guitarists like because I hit my strings fairly hard and I try to minimize the amount of buzzing
Hat off man! I recognize you just move the first knuckle of your thumb! it looks fantastic easy. Which tell me.. that it is not! Do you think it is necessary to train this separately or doesn't IT matter when the whole thumb is moving? Greetings
I don’t really know the answer about which is best. I have tried moving the thumb in a single movement but I am not able to. The way I do it, it is much more relaxed
@@RobertLunn japp.. it look very relaxed.. i try it, but my whole thumb is moving everytime.. but i kepp trying.. it looks very controled and efficient!
@@RobertLunn there is like no tutorial on the internet and my grandpa used to play it but he sadly passed away and I’m trying to learn all his songs that he used to play when I was younger
I love this ... ) My grandfather once played it to me with all his passion and soul... I was just stunned.. And thats why I asked him to teach me guitar... ))
It is such a wonderful piece! The first time I heard it I was also stunned!
It is So helpful to have you play it at this pace for those of us new at classical guitar.
I am glad to hear that!
Dear Maestro Robert Lunn I don’t know why it is easy to learn from you ( have nothing else to say) 🌹
That is wonderful to hear! Let me know if you have any questions
@@RobertLunn yes for sure Maestro Robert, Thank you so much .
Gros morceau bien découpé par vos soins. Toujours très stimulant. Merci Robert !
Thank you!
Thank you very much for this breakdown of the opening section of Asturias, a piece that features prominently on your channel and very rightly so if I may add as it is a monument of the classical guitar repertoire. Just for guitar-talk sake I have to say I prefer the "Yates chord" on measure 37 which is essentially a 2nd inversion C major with the 7th (A#) in the bass that gives it this mysterious Andalusian flavor but that's the nature of this piece on guitar, there is no 'definitive' version so it's open to interpretation. At any rate my remark substracts nothing from your copious efforts to inspire people to play more guitar (as in my case) for which I am grateful. Oh, and btw this Cordoba guitar sounds gorgeous. Keep 'em coming!
Hello and thank you! Yes, it is a great piece. In fact, I have made a new arrangement of the piece which I will share a small portion of it later this week. I wanted something that was closer to the original piano piece than what I was playing before
@@RobertLunn great to know, thanks in advance!
Gran ayuda éste tutorial para los que nos atrevemos a caminar entre las cuerdas de la guitarra.Muchas gracias MAESTRO.
I am glad you enjoyed the video!
I once tried pentatonic scale practice but gave up, partly because I had difficulty stretching my fingers wide to cover four frets. But the opening section of this beautiful piece, starting from the 7th fret, may serve as a finger-stretching exercise for me. Thank you, Robert!
Oh nice! It would certainly make a good finger exercise!
Hi Mr. Lunn - all your lessons are amazing. Thanks a lot
I am glad you enjoy them!
You make it easy. Thanks a lot 🙏
Thank you! I am glad you enjoyed it
Demorei pra te encontrar, mas agora eu sei que vou melhorar, com um professor tão gabaritado. Valeu! Show!
Oh wonderful!!
Legend! This will definitely come in handy. I'm stucked at 37-44. For days now. Fingers just don't want to listen. 🤣 That jump from 10th fret to 12th fret on 41st tab is a horror show for my small fingers. 😂
That's a tough move! The middle finger connects the two chords. I just run that finger up and down the strings
@@RobertLunn Great advice. Thanks.
Hi Rob, did you remove the second part of Asturias slow version?
I got stuck at tab 78. So I was hoping to check the slower version but unfortunately, I can't find it anywhere on your channel.
@@vragonja Hello! I haven't removed anything. I haven't recorded a slower version of the middle section yet unfortunately . I do hope to get to that soon
Ohh, okay then.
I didn't realise until yesterday how many uploads you have. Your channel is like musical wikipedia. 😄
I especially loved those videos with juicy little hints for playing guitar.
Este tema es muy especial por la dedicación y la persistencia que hay que dedicarle pero muy bonito muchos saludos!!! sr Robert lunn
Thank you and greetings to you!
Thank you so, SO much for this!!!!
You are welcome!
This is extremely useful! I was learning from a tutorial video, now this seems to be a great video to practice.
That is wonderful to hear!
Thank you Robert for this tab
You are welcome!
That's it. That's the stuff.
My favorite!
Fantástico. Agora vou tentar 😊
Good luck!
Thank you very much to play that slowly
I am glad you enjoyed it!
Teşekkürler
Lmao i legit did half of the songs with an electric guitar
Is so beautiful ! But a part is missing... When for the next ?
Thank you! I will post the middle section soon
Merçi !!! Vous m aider Beaucoup🙏
Thank you!
Hi robert . What is your preference of your guitars action. some guitars have high / some guitars have low action.
I can imagine that theoretically low action requires less force from the left hand Like the flamenco guitar that have the lowest action.
high action requires more force from the left hand. But there may be benefits as well?
Many thanks for your insights!
Hello! I think string action is more of a personal preference. I prefer mine to be slightly higher than what a lot of guitarists like because I hit my strings fairly hard and I try to minimize the amount of buzzing
Complimenti Maestro
😊🙏
I was just going to say that the fingerings you're using are John Williams' technique, specifically in measures 37-47. I like this much better.
Yes! I love his arrangement of this piece
@@RobertLunn My struggle is trying to build up the speed and accuracy without my fingers getting all tangled up. haha!
00:01 1,2,3
00:20 4,5,6
00:37 7,8,9
00:53 10,11,12
01:10 13,14,15
01:26 16
--------------------------------------------------------
01:31 17
01:44 18,19
01:54 20,21
02:04 22,23
02:14 24
----------------------------------------------------
02:19 25
Hat off man!
I recognize you just move the first knuckle of your thumb! it looks fantastic easy. Which tell me.. that it is not! Do you think it is necessary to train this separately or doesn't IT matter when the whole thumb is moving?
Greetings
I don’t really know the answer about which is best. I have tried moving the thumb in a single movement but I am not able to. The way I do it, it is much more relaxed
@@RobertLunn japp.. it look very relaxed.. i try it, but my whole thumb is moving everytime.. but i kepp trying.. it looks very controled and efficient!
Brawoooo🌷🌷🌷😍😍😍👍👍👍
Thank you!
Merci 🎊😊
Thank you!
wow
😊🙏
❤
🙏🙏🙏
thanks
You are welcome
Many Thanks can you please do a lesson on Moon Flower by Sanatana along with solo part :)
Thank you! I will check that out
@@RobertLunn joe robinson did an awsome video on that but no lesson will be waiting for a lesson from you on that
wow nicee
Thank you!
any tips when holding bar with index finger sounds very mute
I have some bar chord tips in this video at the 14 minute mark: Mruclips.net/video/-QGtXSAz1HI/видео.html
Could you make a tutorial for Nelly from Antonio Lauro
I don't know that one but I will certainly check it out
@@RobertLunn there is like no tutorial on the internet and my grandpa used to play it but he sadly passed away and I’m trying to learn all his songs that he used to play when I was younger
@@ohhhdear477 I am sorry to hear about your grandpa
@@RobertLunn thank you sir appreciate it
qua tuyet .
👋👋👋
😊😊🙏🙏
bpm=?? please
Unfortunately I don’t know. I don’t recall playing this to a click track so my guess is it changes
@@RobertLunn thank you so much ❤️❤️
Im From Tunisia 🇹🇳
Very nice to meet you!
@@RobertLunn ❤️❤️