Gotta say also: the moments when it's apparent that you are shushing your taste for the sake of keeping the material straightforwrd are MANY across tutorials and always make me smile. "This 3/3rd inversion also works and has this.. cool kinda vibe to it.. in some perverse way" haha
😮j'ai du boulot j'essaye de suivre tes cours mais j'avou je comprends pas l'anglais mais bon. Je travail quan même ton anciennement merci encore tes un tueurs 😊
What you are offering is literally helping in real life. I would be delighted if we could collab and i could make you the voice of a series i am designing, relevant to your niche, music. (Ps - it will be paid offc)
Loved that arpeggio at 1.57, I need that in my life, can you expand on this? Excellent tutorial, you're a natural teacher Scot, sweet rich sounding guitar. Liking the cooool stubble/beard too!👍😎
Thank you Scott,really opens up this rumba. Can I ask why there is animosity towards Juan Martin? I have known about this for some years but do not understand why this would be so. I have some of his books and believe him to be a great educator (like yourself). I have also seen him play solo in Australia. Best regards.
I don’t know, I think it just comes down to Flamenco being a very insular niche esoteric thing and people get very snobby about it. I remember talking to a very famous flamenco guitarist who I won’t name and asking him what he thought of Paco Peña, who I think is great. He said, “He’s OK…“ dismissively. I think anyone who puts out instructional books is looked down upon us less of an artist by the purists as ridiculous as that may seem.
Thanks a ton as always for your masterful and lucid teaching, Scot. I just happened to download the Martin and Gerhard books from genlib today earlier so it's uncanny to stumble on this 3 day old video of yours too. I was wondering if you might also recommend a resource for the ~history of flamenco? A book/blogpost/documentary or video of yours or someone else.. I'm interesed in the flamenco form, but also very much the evolution of famous pieces and people. For example, there are standards and icons in jazz, and theorems and household texts in mathematics, which, if you follow you can kind of get the narrative of the discipline. I'm quite new to flamenco, so i just devour and google the hell out of bits you and others drop ( ex. like the "Romanza" piece in this video). The books above mostly talk about technique and that's great, but i'd love to learn "anthropology" of the genre too. Thanks a hell!
There’s a book I’ve never read but heard great things about a book called “Paco de Lucia: A new tradition for the Flamenco guitar” by Paco Sevilla. Also, “Flamenco Music Theory” by Lola Fernandez. There aren’t too many books on the subject you just have to gather little tidbits here and there!
Sir my one question is is it seriously possible to learn flamingo style from youtube without any guide . I am a intermediate and I am playing only plecturm . But till 7/8 month practice classical style to show videos from youtube.
Flamenco is one of the hardest things you can do on a guitar! That said, you can learn a lot by watching and listening but it is good to have some feedback to know if you’re doing something wrong.
Gotta say also: the moments when it's apparent that you are shushing your taste for the sake of keeping the material straightforwrd are MANY across tutorials and always make me smile. "This 3/3rd inversion also works and has this.. cool kinda vibe to it.. in some perverse way" haha
Besseren Unterricht kann man kaum bekommen.
Thankyou , Scot .
Very welcome
Thanks Scot, I like your style! Subscribe for sure. Thanks!
Awesome, thank you!
Excellent Scot
Thank you so much again
Great imagination 👏
Thank you!
😮j'ai du boulot j'essaye de suivre tes cours mais j'avou je comprends pas l'anglais mais bon. Je travail quan même ton anciennement merci encore tes un tueurs 😊
What you are offering is literally helping in real life. I would be delighted if we could collab and i could make you the voice of a series i am designing, relevant to your niche, music. (Ps - it will be paid offc)
Loved that arpeggio at 1.57, I need that in my life, can you expand on this?
Excellent tutorial, you're a natural teacher Scot, sweet rich sounding guitar.
Liking the cooool stubble/beard too!👍😎
I did a tutorial on this but in a different key:
ruclips.net/video/-gkzrbANYwM/видео.html
hi scot. can you make a tutorial of fixing alzapua mistakes
It’s on my list!
Thank you Scott,really opens up this rumba. Can I ask why there is animosity towards Juan Martin?
I have known about this for some years but do not understand why this would be so.
I have some of his books and believe him to be a great educator (like yourself).
I have also seen him play solo in Australia. Best regards.
I don’t know, I think it just comes down to Flamenco being a very insular niche esoteric thing and people get very snobby about it. I remember talking to a very famous flamenco guitarist who I won’t name and asking him what he thought of Paco Peña, who I think is great. He said, “He’s OK…“ dismissively. I think anyone who puts out instructional books is looked down upon us less of an artist by the purists as ridiculous as that may seem.
Thanks a ton as always for your masterful and lucid teaching, Scot. I just happened to download the Martin and Gerhard books from genlib today earlier so it's uncanny to stumble on this 3 day old video of yours too.
I was wondering if you might also recommend a resource for the ~history of flamenco? A book/blogpost/documentary or video of yours or someone else.. I'm interesed in the flamenco form, but also very much the evolution of famous pieces and people. For example, there are standards and icons in jazz, and theorems and household texts in mathematics, which, if you follow you can kind of get the narrative of the discipline. I'm quite new to flamenco, so i just devour and google the hell out of bits you and others drop ( ex. like the "Romanza" piece in this video). The books above mostly talk about technique and that's great, but i'd love to learn "anthropology" of the genre too. Thanks a hell!
There’s a book I’ve never read but heard great things about a book called “Paco de Lucia: A new tradition for the Flamenco guitar” by Paco Sevilla. Also, “Flamenco Music Theory” by Lola Fernandez. There aren’t too many books on the subject you just have to gather little tidbits here and there!
🙏 🎸💃
"when we play an arpeggio"? that's a cool lil ditty right there whats that???
Yeah, that arpeggio at 1.57 had me hooked too!
Check out this tutorial: Learn an AWESOME Tango and Rumba Guitar ARPEGGIO Pattern | Guitar Lesson w/TABS
ruclips.net/video/-gkzrbANYwM/видео.html
Sir my one question is
is it seriously possible to learn flamingo style from youtube without any guide . I am a intermediate and I am playing only plecturm . But till 7/8 month practice classical style to show videos from youtube.
Flamenco is one of the hardest things you can do on a guitar! That said, you can learn a lot by watching and listening but it is good to have some feedback to know if you’re doing something wrong.
What don't they like about Juan Martin?
They say he’s a fraud and not authentic 🤷🏼♂️
Check out some flamenco discussion forums