I got a copy of these pieces as well as many others in 1996 from Philip. The whole collection in his own writing. He handed them to me over dinner. Personal notes written through out. Commenting on friends etc... "Bring the back tomorrow" he said trusting me to do so. I did. His originals were stolen many years later. I had an archive from that day. His trusting deed was repaid because I had the only copies in the world and still do. I treasure from an amazing person and composer. God Bless PR!!
Bravo, David, as usual, your playing is impeccable. What a great tribute to our old friend Philip. Marvelous were the days of Tomás, Alicante and old Spain ...
@Orange1117 It's most likely built by Matthias Dammann. A now world famous luthier of the new school. Many poeple like this sound but I prefer the old masters(Fleta, Friedrich, Romanillos and so on) with less percussion and more romance. But Matthias Dammann guitars is top three in the world today. The other two would be Smallman and the Swedish luthier Per Hallgren. imho :-)
break it down and remember it in segments. practice specific segments in your practice sessions, specifically the ones you cant remember as well and focus on the most frequent fuck-up points!
These are very nice pieces. But they are like Jorge Morel´s or F. Hand´s pieces. They´re elegant pieces that don´t add to current guitar repertoire (which is already stagnant).
And what did You write that was so great? What baloney. Classical guitar has a strong tradition and Philip was an important part of it. First American to win the Segovia Competition. Try topping that.
I agree, these Rosheger compositions aren't the most interesting compositions on the "For David" CD. But they compliment some of the more energetic, frenetic compositions on the CD. As for classical pianists, I've heard many light pieces played at piano recitals, and by serious classical players ... It's not that unusual. It's part of the entertainment.
Russell is great, But no tone color ever. However, great dynamics and a big sound second only to Narciso Yepes, I think. But I´m a checker player and a fisherman from Brazil (Rio).
I got a copy of these pieces as well as many others in 1996 from Philip. The whole collection in his own writing. He handed them to me over dinner. Personal notes written through out. Commenting on friends etc... "Bring the back tomorrow" he said trusting me to do so. I did. His originals were stolen many years later. I had an archive from that day. His trusting deed was repaid because I had the only copies in the world and still do. I treasure from an amazing person and composer. God Bless PR!!
And you keep them to yourself why?
Thank you David...
Waltz No.7 "La Gitana"
A Lullaby To Wake Up With
Waltz No.8 "Good Luck Waltz"
Phillip is channeling some great music.
Glad to see that he is getting the recognition he deserves.
Rosheger is a superb composer. His music must be included in programs more often. He is among the best!
Bravo, David, as usual, your playing is impeccable. What a great tribute to our old friend Philip. Marvelous were the days of Tomás, Alicante and old Spain ...
RIP Phil.
He's such a great guitar player. Beautifull tone, great articulations, and his interpretations are always brilliant. That's David Russell.
great playing- this is not an easy piece. Amazing control and presentation of a clear and clean melody line despite crazy left hand work!
the supremacy of Rosheger is evident to those with ears to listen
Nice pieces. I feel very comfortable with David's mellow tone. A very goooooood combinations bet a great composer and a superb musician.
This is just amazing! Great music by Rosheger.
wow~bravo
Meraviglioso!
The guitar is by Greg Byers. This video is linked from his site. Cheers!
This is the only video I've seen where he plays with his Greg Byers guitar.
Guitar solo in San Francisco has published these pieces
This is awesome! I wonder why he skipped the chromatic run at the end of the "C" section.
God blessed him
I am not sure this guitar was made by Dammann. It may have been made by Gregory Byers (pay attention to the shape of the headstock at around 4:10).
Amazing!
2.08 theres a lovely change in tone colour
Музыка очень интересная, первый раз слышу этого композитора.
@simonshusse Thank you :)
this is greg byers guitar.
@Orange1117 It's most likely built by Matthias Dammann. A now world famous luthier of the new school. Many poeple like this sound but I prefer the old masters(Fleta, Friedrich, Romanillos and so on) with less percussion and more romance. But Matthias Dammann guitars is top three in the world today. The other two would be Smallman and the Swedish luthier Per Hallgren. imho :-)
does anyone knows who made his guitar?? it sounds great :)
Try pausing the video until it all loads. You should then be able to listen to it in its' entirety.
That is Waltz No. 7
break it down and remember it in segments. practice specific segments in your practice sessions, specifically the ones you cant remember as well and focus on the most frequent fuck-up points!
Do you know what the score says or what the composer wants?
These are very nice pieces. But they are like Jorge Morel´s or F. Hand´s pieces. They´re elegant pieces that don´t add to current guitar repertoire (which is already stagnant).
And what did You write that was so great? What baloney. Classical guitar has a strong tradition and Philip was an important part of it. First American to win the Segovia Competition. Try topping that.
Here is James Kline performing Phil's "Serenade." th-cam.com/video/JHSb2FW0z0E/w-d-xo.html
you can dress them up but will they pratice to able them self..........
I agree, these Rosheger compositions aren't the most interesting compositions on the "For David" CD. But they compliment some of the more energetic, frenetic compositions on the CD. As for classical pianists, I've heard many light pieces played at piano recitals, and by serious classical players ... It's not that unusual. It's part of the entertainment.
Russell is great, But no tone color ever. However, great dynamics and a big sound second only to Narciso Yepes, I think. But I´m a checker player and a fisherman from Brazil (Rio).
the first part sounds very jewish-old-styled.
Certainly better than Lobos.