Luteshop's Top Tips - Plucking Strings

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 36

  • @jsmonges
    @jsmonges 4 месяца назад

    Even though I've played classical guitar for many years, I'm realizing how much I don't know about the lute. Thanks for these videos, they'll be really helpful!

  • @iberius9937
    @iberius9937 4 года назад

    I love the interior and atmosphere of this man's home. Very Mediterranean. Nice lesson.

  • @susannekalejaiye4351
    @susannekalejaiye4351 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you, yes, thank you for both sharing your knowledge and making the videos, and yes please more of these.

  • @renaissance9932
    @renaissance9932 5 лет назад +32

    Im 15 and decided to learn the lute, I will not let the lute die 😤

    • @apollbro7957
      @apollbro7957 5 лет назад +5

      same brother

    • @sorntorkelson6119
      @sorntorkelson6119 4 года назад +2

      I'm 16 and play classical guitar. I'd love to play lute, but they are just so damn expensive.

    • @GunsNRoosendael
      @GunsNRoosendael 3 года назад +1

      @@sorntorkelson6119 There's some affordable options out there. But affordable as in over 1K, but in perspective with a high end guitar, it's about the same as a Gibson or high end Fender would cost.

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 3 года назад

      @@GunsNRoosendael gibsons ? fenders? the comparison has to be with classical guitars surely

  • @187brokeN
    @187brokeN 6 лет назад +2

    Please keep on making these videos !

  • @jsguitargeek1432
    @jsguitargeek1432 3 года назад +1

    This was a brilliant tutorial. Thank you very much

  • @ricardoarnt5886
    @ricardoarnt5886 7 лет назад +3

    Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge, sir!

  • @snickelman
    @snickelman 5 лет назад +8

    Going to make an extremely obscure reference:
    Watching this video is like reading Erdnase.

  • @danielsebrian4330
    @danielsebrian4330 7 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much for your videos Martin!

  • @Marianofrv
    @Marianofrv 3 года назад

    Beautiful explanation

  • @Goodmorningroosterlive
    @Goodmorningroosterlive 6 лет назад +7

    Well done. I teach for many years but other instruments. I'm new to Lute. Thanks for a great video. i'm not used to the thumb on the inside position. Do you think a guitarist who plays thumb outside should continue doing so on lute because of hard ingrained muscle memory already acquired? Or should I try to learn thumb inside at 40 years old?

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  6 лет назад +10

      Historically, most players used thumb inside before 1600 and thumb outside after. It's certainly easier to play the earlier music thumb inside. You will find that you cannot directly transfer your guitar playing to thumb outside on the lute and you will have to devise a method which allows you to play both strings of a course simultaneously. Whichever you choose to do, good luck!

  • @silmarilasmr6801
    @silmarilasmr6801 4 года назад

    I love this guy, alright, you’ve got a new subscriber 👌🥰

  • @alphamale3141
    @alphamale3141 4 года назад

    Very helpful. Thank you.

  • @skinnybreakfast
    @skinnybreakfast 18 дней назад

    Thank you kind sir! Can you recommend your favourite strings please?

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  17 дней назад +1

      I prefer gut strings, but of course there are two problems - finding top strings which are strong enough, and finding a solution to the bass string problem. The problem with top strings can be alleviated a bit by adopting a lower pitch standard (g' at a'=440 being the absolute maximum for a 60cm string length). For a six-course lute, high-twist strings can be good enough for 5th and 6th courses, but for lutes with more basses another solution must be found, and loaded strings are probably the best answer. I often use Savarez KF strings for basses (they're made from a polymer called PVDF) but they are very stiff and must be thinned where they go through the bridge. Aquila CD (red) strings are worth trying, though they are not always as true as one would like. I'm not a fan of Nylgut strings - they're very stretchy and have a rough surface, but they can be useful if you want to use synthetic strings. Both the KF strings and gut work well at low tensions, which is not so true for other types of string.

    • @skinnybreakfast
      @skinnybreakfast 17 дней назад

      @Luteshop thank you so much for taking the time to detail that! I am overwhelmed! I’ll try as you suggest. Thank you again!!

    • @skinnybreakfast
      @skinnybreakfast 17 дней назад

      I have just received a 6 string lute. The rounded back is vibrating much more into my body and I feel far more connected to the music than with my guitars. Which I’ve been playing for decades. The Lute has taken me!!

  • @caneti3
    @caneti3 4 года назад

    1:20 You Must See If You Want To PLay Lute. 100% Recommended

  • @JuanDeMarias
    @JuanDeMarias 4 года назад

    Thanks for the video. 2 questions: How different is the plucking of the m and a fingers, you just talked about the index. Also, are the nails used traditionally at all or is it a choice? Thanks

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  4 года назад +2

      The m and a fingers pluck in the same way as the index, though because of their different lengths they start in different places. The a finger is not used much except for chords. Playing with nails is possible but probably better with a "thumb-outside" technique. The important thing is that both strings of a course are played together and simultaneously.

  • @JoelAdamson
    @JoelAdamson Год назад

    "Under my thumb" 🎵

  • @MacKenziePoet
    @MacKenziePoet 3 года назад

    May I please ask how you are stabilizing the right hand? Is it by the little finger touching the sound board???

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  3 года назад

      Yes the little finger rests lightly on the soundboard. This is a consistent feature of historical lute technique and persisted into early 19th century guitar technique. In the baroque period, when lutenists were playing with the thumb outside the fingers (as in modern guitar) they still rested the little finger, close to the bridge, on top of the bridge, or even behind the bridge.

  • @jake.the.riffer
    @jake.the.riffer 2 года назад

    Im a guitar player, but lately I really want to buy a Renaissance Lute and learn to play. 😬

  • @yuridanylko
    @yuridanylko Год назад

    How about fast scales? Does this use flamenco techniqur?

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  Год назад +1

      Fast runs are usually played with alternating thumb and index finger. In the 16th century, this was the preferred technique for most runs (thumb-inside). After 1600, with thumb-outside, slower runs were usually played middle-index, fast runs thumb-index.

    • @yuridanylko
      @yuridanylko Год назад

      @@luteshop Clear answer, thank you (:

  • @Ana_crusis
    @Ana_crusis 3 года назад

    it's very close to classical guitar technique but with lutes isn't the index finger also used to play down strokes?

    • @luteshop
      @luteshop  3 года назад

      In renaissance lute tablatures the single dot below a note means it is struck upwards with a finger (not necessarily the index finger, though in later tablatures two dots are used for middle finger). According to Le Roy, dot below a chord means play without the thumb, and in his music and that of Albert de Rippe you often find 3-note chords marked like this, often preceded by a bass note played with the thumb - in this case you play the 3-note chord with ima just like you would if you played them simultaneously with the bass note. In later French baroque lute music a dot next to a chord can mean a brushing downstroke with the index finger. The vihuelists also used a technique called "dedillo" for fast scale passages where the index finger plays up- and downstrokes alternately, like a plectrum player would today.

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 3 года назад

      @@luteshop
      i was only asking about playing downstrokes with the index finger. I've just watched a video of a lutist doing just that , especially with a scale, So i presume that is a standard technique.
      As a classical guitarist I'd love to also have a lute but sadly that are way too expensive

  • @sarabelleimaginary
    @sarabelleimaginary 4 года назад

    Arthritis? 🤔