I've played Classical Guitar for over 45 years, I used to teach. From about midpoint on, she is talking about illusion. I quit teaching when I realized I learned many illusions but could not teach them. Illusion is what separates great musicians from good ones. For instance, when she shows a vibrato note "sounds" like it sustains more (it doesn't, it's actually much shorter). Pay close attention to her words, there are entire worlds in some of her words. She describes many illusions, this is a fantastic video!!!
Your comment….. thank you as much as thanking her for the video…. I replayed and listened for you points and heard everything you said which I would not have picked up on.. again thank you
Cavatina is one of my favourite piece. I have been playing this piece for over 15 years. There are always some technical difficulties that I could not overcome. Her advice helps so much on it. I just cannot stop playing this piece all over again and again. Thanks!
Cavatina is also one of my favourite piece on my classical guitar. I've been playing this piece for over 20 years. Love it even when I play the tunes to this day!
Surfeit is so erudite in her presentation.. both her voice, and her musical voice ...Always was my dear mother's favorite... thanks, Al from the Oregon Coast
I am playing Cavatina these days. I am memorizing it and polishing it, and this video was fantastic. I will try to bring out the melody with the arpeggio played softly. I will play it as dreamy and calmly and clearly as possible. The video made me very enthusiastic about getting Cavatina almost perfect. That is my present guitar goal, and your video was great!
Listen to you playing the guitar, and/or listening you speaking are quite inspiring, and I love your accent and voice. 1000 Thanks for the lesson, and all your incredible way to share all that knowledge, and with such a dynamic...
What’s so very beautiful about this lesson is that it applies to every level of player. Such wisdom broken down to presenting every note as one note at a time. And take care of the player so as to realize that they are as important as is each note. Pure love. Tx❤
Asolutely perfect Xuefei..!! Dynamics and tonality come from the fingers.. the Melodic expression comes from within your heart, soul, mind and body. Thank you...!!
Just a side note it I may. I came across a duet of John Williams and Cleo Laine. She put lyrics to it “He’s Beautiful” and also a great lesson from a great artist thank you, all the best
I been playing this piece for 3 years now. Still struggles a lot. My left hand always fell so tiring and painful in the process but i really love this piece.
Thanks so much.. I've known and loved that piece for a very long time.. But haven't actually managed to play it. Thankyou so much for sharing your ideas and knowledge.. Really valuable
I hope you got as much joy out of teaching this beautiful piece as much as I enjoyed and benefitted from you teaching. I wish I could have a Master player like you as a personal teacher.
Cavatina was actually composed for the 1970 film The Walking Stick, and most of the piece is used throughout the film played on classical guitar. Well before The Deer Hunter.
The chart for Cavatina has been behind the other music on my music stand. (I can't imagine how it got there!) I have now brought it forward. Thank you for your guidance with this piece and, as always, for the encouragement and inspiration.
Thank you so much. Your inspiring words are a graceful accompaniment to your advice on technique. I would love to find some more sheet music from China and other countries in Southeast Asia because even the simplest piece gives a feeling of intimacy with the culture of the country of origin. I hope you will tour the US (especially Florida) in the near future as I would love to see and hear you in person. Ramon Carrion
Stanley Myers originally wrote "Cavatina" for the 1970 film The Walking Stick, but it became more popular as the theme for the 1978 film The Deer Hunter. Beautiful song❤
Myers wrote it on piano for "The walking stick", a British crime thriller. It was played on that soundtrack, transcribed to guitar, but only the lyrical aspect. The backing to the piece was orchestrated. The guitar was played by an unknown, uncredited musician. John Williams convinced Myers to expand the piece into a full work for classical guitar. Then it became the Dear hunter theme, played by Williams. So Ms Yang has got this slightly wrong but I forgive her, as she is one of my favourite guitarists! (Yes, I'm a guitar nerd..)
If I remember correctly Cavatina was a piano original by Stanley Myers and was composed for the film The Walking Stick. It was transcribed by the famous English guiarist and lutanist Julian Bream. He played it back to Myers and got his approval to perform it as a guitar solo. The well known Australian subsequently recorded cor use in the film Deerhunter.
@@matthewshannon6318 Julian Bream was first you know, John Williams transcribed his own and the movie misappropriated credits to John Williams. Bream waited for the gaffe to be corrected but it never was. However; his version appeared on record about two years earlier, so the proof lies in the vinyl. Read about it in Bream's autobiography 'a Life on the Road'.
Cavatina is one song you also have to focus on proper spacing of notes to sound smooth and not choppy.Those full bars are a real killer at first so make sure your timing is right.
Below is not quite correct Stanley Meyers was composing it for the film The walking stick or The broken walking stick. John Williams heard him playing it on the piano Meyers told him he was writing it for the film but only had the A section so John Williams said it is a lovely melody if you write a B section you will have a long complete piece so that is how it was created. That is how John Williams came upon before anyone else.
You are a very good performer and everything that you say in the lesson is true. However, those are basic rules for any experienced player. I was hoping you would get to the middle section which is the great challenge of this piece.
I noticed her guitar, while neck looks standard size, the strings are somewhat closer. This may help people with smaller hands or lesser strength. Is that correct? Can this be achieved on an existing guitar? Thanks all.
Having spent a long time learning this piece that I craved to play , I now dislike it and don’t play it anymore,it was a beast and injured my hand , will never revisit which is a shame ☹️
I've played Classical Guitar for over 45 years, I used to teach. From about midpoint on, she is talking about illusion. I quit teaching when I realized I learned many illusions but could not teach them. Illusion is what separates great musicians from good ones. For instance, when she shows a vibrato note "sounds" like it sustains more (it doesn't, it's actually much shorter). Pay close attention to her words, there are entire worlds in some of her words. She describes many illusions, this is a fantastic video!!!
Your comment….. thank you as much as thanking her for the video…. I replayed and listened for you points and heard everything you said which I would not have picked up on.. again thank you
Cavatina is one of my favourite piece. I have been playing this piece for over 15 years. There are always some technical difficulties that I could not overcome. Her advice helps so much on it. I just cannot stop playing this piece all over again and again. Thanks!
Cavatina is also one of my favourite piece on my classical guitar. I've been playing this piece for over 20 years. Love it even when I play the tunes to this day!
Stanley Myers extended the piece to include that beautiful 3rd part, upon a request by John Williams. Great lesson!
Thanks, this advice is golden. Never did I believe that I could have access to the advice of the world’s best.
My favourite , she plays with so much emotion
Surfeit is so erudite in her presentation.. both her voice, and her musical voice ...Always was my dear mother's favorite... thanks, Al from the Oregon Coast
Incredible guitarist and equally talented teacher. I find her use of words like 'energy ' and 'tension' very helpful. Bravo & thank you!
Apart from her outstanding performances, XueFei is such a charming woman.
One lady classical guitarist I admire and have been following. She's so talented.
Was at her concert tonight....got to meet her after....Oh my what an astounding talent. prodigy..and really sweet
What an inspiring and supremely talented lady. Wow. I am viewing my guitar playing in a whole other way now. Thank you
THANK YOU FOR BEING SO REAL AND HONEST (VERY REFRESHING)A LOVELY INSIGHT XUEFEI
XUEFEI, your kindness in sharing your expertise says so much.❤
I am playing Cavatina these days. I am memorizing it and polishing it, and this video was fantastic. I will try to bring out the melody with the arpeggio played softly. I will play it as dreamy and calmly and clearly as possible. The video made me very enthusiastic about getting Cavatina almost perfect. That is my present guitar goal, and your video was great!
Invaluable insight into technique. Thanks for posting.
You are showing somuch love from the heart it makes you a brilliant teacher.
Listen to you playing the guitar, and/or listening you speaking are quite inspiring, and I love your accent and voice. 1000 Thanks for the lesson, and all your incredible way to share all that knowledge, and with such a dynamic...
Guitar Goddess
❤Yes she is….😊
What’s so very beautiful about this lesson is that it applies to every level of player. Such wisdom broken down to presenting every note as one note at a time. And take care of the player so as to realize that they are as important as is each note. Pure love. Tx❤
Asolutely perfect Xuefei..!! Dynamics and tonality come from the fingers.. the Melodic expression comes from within your heart, soul, mind and body. Thank you...!!
Excellent insight into a gorgeous piece of music for classical guitar!
I have adapted this peace to steel string guitar and thank you so much you have helped me tremendously. Thank you
Just a side note it I may. I came across a duet of John Williams and Cleo Laine. She put lyrics to it “He’s Beautiful” and also a great lesson from a great artist thank you, all the best
OMG, was the Deer Hunter 45 years ago??? Aside from that: It's a uniquely beautiful guitar piece, and she plays wonderfully.
This is an excellent guitar class on this piece of music. Thank you.
Great tips..I learned this so long before TH-cam...this would have helped so much.
I been playing this piece for 3 years now. Still struggles a lot. My left hand always fell so tiring and painful in the process but i really love this piece.
What a wonderful video for her to make for us
Thanks so much.. I've known and loved that piece for a very long time.. But haven't actually managed to play it. Thankyou so much for sharing your ideas and knowledge.. Really valuable
Just learning this piece now, this advice helps me a lot. Thank you very much!
I hope you got as much joy out of teaching this beautiful piece as much as I enjoyed and benefitted from you teaching. I wish I could have a Master player like you as a personal teacher.
Excellent class in real world! Thank you for the insight sharing!!!
Really helpful tutorial. Thank you so much.
A real and perfect class. Every second is gold. Many thanks
Thank you Xuefei, This is very helpful too me
Cavatina was actually composed for the 1970 film The Walking Stick, and most of the piece is used throughout the film played on classical guitar. Well before The Deer Hunter.
Thank you Yang for this enrichement in any way! ❤️
Thank you very much for this video. Thank you very much Ms. Xuefei Yang for giving us insights on how to properly play this beautiful piece of music.
Very nice lesson on a popular but difficult piece, I am sure many people will benefit from your presentation. 😊❤
Thank you so much! I was wondering about the tuning. I’m glad you mention it here. Great tips!
The chart for Cavatina has been behind the other music on my music stand. (I can't imagine how it got there!) I have now brought it forward. Thank you for your guidance with this piece and, as always, for the encouragement and inspiration.
Thank you Xuefei. You are one of my favorite guitar artists. Thank you again for posting and teaching.
thank you Great!!! appreciate information!
This is solid gold sprinkled with jewels. ❤😊
This is such an extraordinary classic guitar lesson. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much. Your inspiring words are a graceful accompaniment to your advice on technique. I would love to find some more sheet music from China and other countries in Southeast Asia because even the simplest piece gives a feeling of intimacy with the culture of the country of origin. I hope you will tour the US (especially Florida) in the near future as I would love to see and hear you in person.
Ramon Carrion
Lovely tutorial!Very inspirational 👍🙏🎶
Обожаю это произведение CAVATINA ❤
very funny and natural tutorial, thanks a lot Xuefei ! beautiful
Great thought process.
Very nice !
Stanley Myers originally wrote "Cavatina" for the 1970 film The Walking Stick, but it became more popular as the theme for the 1978 film The Deer Hunter. Beautiful song❤
Nice !!
Wonderful presentation 🙏
Does anyone now which guitar she plays? Sounds gorgeous! The lady is a master of supermegahiperbeautiful sound!
I love you're music so much your amazing clever lady ❤️😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍❤️
I am Brazilian! I Love you
You have just become the greatest teacher of all time
I'd love to have the tab written so I could understand as I'm only the beginner ❤️🙏
like strumming a beautiful harp but it's a beautiful guitar amazing beautiful talented musician ❤️
You have inspired me to try and learn this piece, thank you :)
Oh.... I love this. Thank you. ❤👍🙏🙂😋
Myers wrote it on piano for "The walking stick", a British crime thriller. It was played on that soundtrack, transcribed to guitar, but only the lyrical aspect. The backing to the piece was orchestrated.
The guitar was played by an unknown, uncredited musician.
John Williams convinced Myers to expand the piece into a full work for classical guitar.
Then it became the Dear hunter theme, played by Williams.
So Ms Yang has got this slightly wrong but I forgive her, as she is one of my favourite guitarists! (Yes, I'm a guitar nerd..)
Very good tempo
Very nice, thank you.
If I remember correctly Cavatina was a piano original by Stanley Myers and was composed for the film The Walking Stick. It was transcribed by the famous English guiarist and lutanist Julian Bream. He played it back to Myers and got his approval to perform it as a guitar solo. The well known Australian subsequently recorded cor use in the film Deerhunter.
BTW lovely performance!
@@matthewshannon6318 Julian Bream was first you know, John Williams transcribed his own and the movie misappropriated credits to John Williams. Bream waited for the gaffe to be corrected but it never was. However; his version appeared on record about two years earlier, so the proof lies in the vinyl. Read about it in Bream's autobiography 'a Life on the Road'.
Awesome tips.
Beautiful music soundtrack to THE DEER HUNTERS.
I've always wondered if there is an easier version someone could write using different chord positions on the guitar neck. Maybe in a different key.
Thank You, Very Usefull Lesson. ♫♥♫
she's absolutely amazing godess❤️🙏💐🍾🥂
Brilliant video
Cavatina is one song you also have to focus on proper spacing of notes to sound smooth and not choppy.Those full bars are a real killer at first so make sure your timing is right.
Great respect for the truth of this performer when she left in the mistake at 3:52 ... this is one of those pieces that is deceptively challenging ...
You play a Lot, i am your fan
There is so much sadness in my life I cry every time I hear this.
Below is not quite correct Stanley Meyers was composing it for the film The walking stick or The broken walking stick. John Williams heard him playing it on the piano Meyers told him he was writing it for the film but only had the A section so John Williams said it is a lovely melody if you write a B section you will have a long complete piece so that is how it was created. That is how John Williams came upon before anyone else.
Marvelous.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ thanks 🙏
YOU are becoming a great teacher
I go silent when you process the melody in the high notes, it's as smooth and lyrical as the flow of a river
Bravo musicality
You are a very good performer and everything that you say in the lesson is true. However, those are basic rules for any experienced player. I was hoping you would get to the middle section which is the great challenge of this piece.
Ohuenno,spasibo
My god she's so beautiful that music oh my god amazing I wish you was with me teaching me 💗
You have more passion than could fit in the universe
You are overstocked with passion
Glad I’m not the only one that thinks bar 3 is extremely difficult.
Hi. Good job
You love john Williams
とても分かりやすい英語で分かりやすい解説をありがとうございます😂とても美しい女性です❤とても美しい響きです。😊
Ennio Morricone is in this..... A lot of Ennio Morricone .... How come absolutely no one ever mentions this....
Passion
I play this song for my beautiful wife, this video can make me increase my passionate ❤
I noticed her guitar, while neck looks standard size, the strings are somewhat closer. This may help people with smaller hands or lesser strength. Is that correct? Can this be achieved on an existing guitar? Thanks all.
I'm going to watch the Deer Hunter right now
Having spent a long time learning this piece that I craved to play , I now dislike it and don’t play it anymore,it was a beast and injured my hand , will never revisit which is a shame ☹️
bad technique - unless u figure out the exact weight for barres u will never be able to play
that is so beautiful so romantic a beautiful lady like yourself 🍾🥂🌹
I love you Fei
You are a teacher now Book of Songs
Please record my. Little réd.and les anges work. I made a classical guitar arr. Of papillon secret garden if you want.