I haven't seen anyone foottapping for rhythm for this piece. If I want to implement tapping, is there any rule? Im getting lost on all those tempo changes. After the intro 2 taps/bar feels natural. In the intro more like 3 or even 6 taps/bar. Im playing it at 40% speed or something since Im learning it.
Well personally I don't think there would be any issue with that, especially if performed in a place with wooden floors and you wore a hard soled shoe Flamenco purists would defo take issue though.. Are you self taught as well? I struggled getting this any higher then say 70-80%.. if I try and play any faster it becomes a hot mess.. Best to sound clear and good at 40% then muffled and incorrect but super fast.. As a tip I always get confortable playing it through first and then add embelishments like tapping afterwards
@@AkiraGuitar777 Thanks for answering. I have come to overcome the tempo issues. Just took it slowly and by feeling. I abandoned tapping for now and just guided by internal groove. I also researched the actual guajiras compas lol and it was helpful. Im keeping it slow and good. Focusing on left hand chord placement, 65% learned in 10 days, im happy with that. Or I should say memorzied instead of learned actually. No lesson ever taken. Just trying to get both of my hands fluent and then "retire" on rumbas and some more broad guitar techniques. Apparently I dont feel for flamenco that much but there are some gems I want to take under my belt for the rest of my life like this guajiras or zapateado that I have already learned and some more. Peace.
@@michaelk1589 Hey I just saw your reply, I don't get notifications sometimes.. 10 day's is pretty good progress to get half of the song down..👍.. I take it you mean his 'percussion flamenco'? That's a very nice song as well.. I learned both, hard to say which one is more difficult as they both have tricky parts.. For me personally the 2 technique's I need to practice more (Rasquedo's and tremelo) are absent in both piece's so I can play them both well now.. I can actually keep up and play along with Paco to both song's, which is something I never ever thought would be possible, so it really does show that practice and patience are key... I attempted both piece's waay to soon, when I'd only been playing a few year's so I failed miserably lol, but I came back to them 5 year's later to give flamenco guitar another try, and to my very pleasant surprise my year's practicing classical allowed me to follow these hard flamenco song's (apart from the crazy strumming and tremelo) because you don't come across those much outside of flamenco.. Anyway cheer's for the reply, good luck in your guitar journey... I may in the new year attempt to record some of Paco de Lucia's songs with my own cover's.. Especially this song, I feel confident in my playing compared to other version's.. But if I was to record it today, I'd have to take the tempo down a notch because when I try and keep up with the great man himself, a lot of the musicality is lost and I sound scrappy 😆.. Happy new year all the best 👊
@@AkiraGuitar777 Yes I meant percussion flamenca. That was my 1st flamenco piece I challenged myself with (lol) 3,5 years ago. Took me 3 years to learn it on 75% speed but I had to develeop all the proper RH techniques in the meantime since before that I was just a foolish noodler with bad technique on classical guitar and was playing some Tommy Emanuel boom chick stuff on acoustic so I had some guitar basics but with bad RH technique. Was frustrating but worth it tho. Well, if you can play it on 100% then congratulations bro. But imho it's slightly too fast anyway, like 90% is perfect for musicality. If you want to challenge yourself with tremolo, checkout Andrey Trush 99 and his quintiplet pinky tremolo. I have added pinky into my tremolo practice and it gave new level of stability into my hand. I can't go too fast yet since I go into staccato mode and it sounds bad but my right hand gained new level of control thanks to applying pinky into tremolo. And it automatically boosts your rasguedos. Takes some 20-50 + hours of active slow practice to get your pinky into some basic level of control since it's weak AF but its worth it in the end at least for me. And rasgueados - just keep it slow and focus on finger independence when striking each finger and relax between each strike - that was dealbreaker for me. And find proper RH position by experimenting and lock it in, after that it should go "easy quickly". The pinky tremolo helped me develop proper RH rasgueado position as a side effect of the very pinky tremolo exercising itself. Now 5 minutes of pinky tremolo warm up practice sets me up for good rasguedo playing. Good luck to and happy new year. Let me know if you put up some covers, peace.
esta pieza es muy dificil
I haven't seen anyone foottapping for rhythm for this piece. If I want to implement tapping, is there any rule? Im getting lost on all those tempo changes. After the intro 2 taps/bar feels natural. In the intro more like 3 or even 6 taps/bar. Im playing it at 40% speed or something since Im learning it.
Well personally I don't think there would be any issue with that, especially if performed in a place with wooden floors and you wore a hard soled shoe
Flamenco purists would defo take issue though..
Are you self taught as well?
I struggled getting this any higher then say 70-80%.. if I try and play any faster it becomes a hot mess.. Best to sound clear and good at 40% then muffled and incorrect but super fast..
As a tip I always get confortable playing it through first and then add embelishments like tapping afterwards
@@AkiraGuitar777 Thanks for answering. I have come to overcome the tempo issues. Just took it slowly and by feeling. I abandoned tapping for now and just guided by internal groove.
I also researched the actual guajiras compas lol and it was helpful. Im keeping it slow and good. Focusing on left hand chord placement, 65% learned in 10 days, im happy with that. Or I should say memorzied instead of learned actually.
No lesson ever taken. Just trying to get both of my hands fluent and then "retire" on rumbas and some more broad guitar techniques. Apparently I dont feel for flamenco that much but there are some gems I want to take under my belt for the rest of my life like this guajiras or zapateado that I have already learned and some more. Peace.
@@michaelk1589 Hey I just saw your reply, I don't get notifications sometimes.. 10 day's is pretty good progress to get half of the song down..👍.. I take it you mean his 'percussion flamenco'? That's a very nice song as well.. I learned both, hard to say which one is more difficult as they both have tricky parts.. For me personally the 2 technique's I need to practice more (Rasquedo's and tremelo) are absent in both piece's so I can play them both well now.. I can actually keep up and play along with Paco to both song's, which is something I never ever thought would be possible, so it really does show that practice and patience are key... I attempted both piece's waay to soon, when I'd only been playing a few year's so I failed miserably lol, but I came back to them 5 year's later to give flamenco guitar another try, and to my very pleasant surprise my year's practicing classical allowed me to follow these hard flamenco song's (apart from the crazy strumming and tremelo) because you don't come across those much outside of flamenco..
Anyway cheer's for the reply, good luck in your guitar journey... I may in the new year attempt to record some of Paco de Lucia's songs with my own cover's.. Especially this song, I feel confident in my playing compared to other version's.. But if I was to record it today, I'd have to take the tempo down a notch because when I try and keep up with the great man himself, a lot of the musicality is lost and I sound scrappy 😆..
Happy new year all the best 👊
@@AkiraGuitar777 Yes I meant percussion flamenca. That was my 1st flamenco piece I challenged myself with (lol) 3,5 years ago. Took me 3 years to learn it on 75% speed but I had to develeop all the proper RH techniques in the meantime since before that I was just a foolish noodler with bad technique on classical guitar and was playing some Tommy Emanuel boom chick stuff on acoustic so I had some guitar basics but with bad RH technique. Was frustrating but worth it tho.
Well, if you can play it on 100% then congratulations bro. But imho it's slightly too fast anyway, like 90% is perfect for musicality.
If you want to challenge yourself with tremolo, checkout Andrey Trush 99 and his quintiplet pinky tremolo. I have added pinky into my tremolo practice and it gave new level of stability into my hand. I can't go too fast yet since I go into staccato mode and it sounds bad but my right hand gained new level of control thanks to applying pinky into tremolo. And it automatically boosts your rasguedos. Takes some 20-50 + hours of active slow practice to get your pinky into some basic level of control since it's weak AF but its worth it in the end at least for me.
And rasgueados - just keep it slow and focus on finger independence when striking each finger and relax between each strike - that was dealbreaker for me. And find proper RH position by experimenting and lock it in, after that it should go "easy quickly". The pinky tremolo helped me develop proper RH rasgueado position as a side effect of the very pinky tremolo exercising itself. Now 5 minutes of pinky tremolo warm up practice sets me up for good rasguedo playing.
Good luck to and happy new year.
Let me know if you put up some covers, peace.
Nice job, Axel!
Great music!
Very nice, thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing this.
maybe consider adding PACO DE LUCIA - Percussion Flamenc Zapateado.
Thanks.
Espectacular!!!
🤗
Hola podrías sacar rumba improvisada te dejo el enlace gracias por tus vídeos 😊
Lo he añadido a mi lista.
Gracias👍
cuantos meses de estudio para jugarlo discretamente
He's a gypsy that grew up in Spain his father and older brothers were guitar players he said before he even started playing he knew all the rythms
depende de tu nivel tecnico, creo que si tienes un nivel intermedio en un mese trabajando dia a dia, puedes tenerlo