Hi Jon, great interview and video. What a charming and intelligent young lady Rosie is. I did see her interview with Brian and it was also great and very interesting. I really enjoyed this, good choice! 👍
Fascinating chat, she's delightful to listen to and has a very grounded view of life and music, it had never accurred to me that classical guitarists might also be keen on building there own guitars as well, I can identify with how she felt about her music lessons at school, unlike Rosie I gave up, I just couldn't cope with endless scales and no tunes... I had to do it my own way, which may not have been the best, but it was the only way I could find the joy in music. Great podcast.
Thank you so much for listening and so sorry you had a sour experience with music lessons, hope you managed to find the joy and still continue and enjoy it! I don't understand why so many teachers prescribe the architecture of music like a punishment, they're doing everyone a disservice, I think perhaps it's just because it's easier to teach than exploring the fascination and curiosity kids have. Hope you are otherwise well and enjoying music on your own terms!
Rosie, can you ask Brian what his biggest regret is…. (if he even has any) Rosie… you are a great inspiration for me.. thank you for following your Bliss🙋🏻♀️💕🎉💃🕺🎸🎤💕🙋🏻♀️
Noise from the table too off putting esp as you are both so softly spoken. Not being intentionally critical but perhaps something to think about for next podcast ❤❤❤
Que en inglés la palabra "guitar" se escriba con "u" (pero igual que en castellano, se ignora esa "U" y sirve solo para que no suene como una "J/H", me da que pensar que es una palabra "de la península ibérica" en su origen, y que la palabra "gitano" (gipsy) y "guitarra" tengan mucho que ver en sus orígenes también 🤔
I like the content but for a podcast from and for musicians the audio is surprisingly bad. The mikes standing on the table in a way where you don't address them when you look at each other, so you constantly turn your head with severely varying volume (and no post compression?) . The mikes being attached at the table without a spider or anything resulting in horrible table noises being picked up. Is that a version of this youtube fad where you make it deliberately bad to appear more authentic?
Thanks for your comment. It’s just the equipment I have and can afford. I will take your advice though and when possible look to upgrade the equipment I travel with. Thanks for watching though
@@TheRedSpecialGuitarPodcast - I didn't think it was quite _that_ bad, but maybe do refrain from drumming with your fingers on the table next time! 😉 Other than that, this is a very enjoyable conversation, and thank you both! 😊👍
Hi Jon, great interview and video. What a charming and intelligent young lady Rosie is. I did see her interview with Brian and it was also great and very interesting. I really enjoyed this, good choice! 👍
Thanks for watching and commenting. I’m glad you enjoyed it
Thank you Jon for another exciting video ❤🎉
My pleasure!
Fascinating chat, she's delightful to listen to and has a very grounded view of life and music, it had never accurred to me that classical guitarists might also be keen on building there own guitars as well, I can identify with how she felt about her music lessons at school, unlike Rosie I gave up, I just couldn't cope with endless scales and no tunes... I had to do it my own way, which may not have been the best, but it was the only way I could find the joy in music. Great podcast.
Thank you so much for listening and so sorry you had a sour experience with music lessons, hope you managed to find the joy and still continue and enjoy it! I don't understand why so many teachers prescribe the architecture of music like a punishment, they're doing everyone a disservice, I think perhaps it's just because it's easier to teach than exploring the fascination and curiosity kids have. Hope you are otherwise well and enjoying music on your own terms!
It’s such a shame Jonathan. But you are a fine guitar player and an amazing drummer! So you did well on your own in the end
Great Interview!! 😃
Glad you enjoyed it!
Rosie, can you ask Brian what his biggest regret is…. (if he even has any)
Rosie… you are a great inspiration for me.. thank you for following your Bliss🙋🏻♀️💕🎉💃🕺🎸🎤💕🙋🏻♀️
Thanks for watching
"Exactly" (dijo ella) 😜
Thanks for watching
Noise from the table too off putting esp as you are both so softly spoken. Not being intentionally critical but perhaps something to think about for next podcast ❤❤❤
Good feedback thank you
Que en inglés la palabra "guitar" se escriba con "u" (pero igual que en castellano, se ignora esa "U" y sirve solo para que no suene como una "J/H", me da que pensar que es una palabra "de la península ibérica" en su origen, y que la palabra "gitano" (gipsy) y "guitarra" tengan mucho que ver en sus orígenes también 🤔
Thank you for this - very interesting
I like the content but for a podcast from and for musicians the audio is surprisingly bad. The mikes standing on the table in a way where you don't address them when you look at each other, so you constantly turn your head with severely varying volume (and no post compression?) . The mikes being attached at the table without a spider or anything resulting in horrible table noises being picked up. Is that a version of this youtube fad where you make it deliberately bad to appear more authentic?
Thanks for your comment. It’s just the equipment I have and can afford. I will take your advice though and when possible look to upgrade the equipment I travel with. Thanks for watching though
@@TheRedSpecialGuitarPodcast - I didn't think it was quite _that_ bad, but maybe do refrain from drumming with your fingers on the table next time! 😉
Other than that, this is a very enjoyable conversation, and thank you both!
😊👍