00:26 Lesson 61 by Julio Sagreras 01:21 Snowflake by Andrew York 03:27 Going Home by Lief Ellis 05:25 Allegro (AKA Le Papillon) by Mauro Giulliani 07:03 Study #3 by Leo Brouer 07:56 Outro
@@marc56273 Thanks, that bugged me. Snowflight is correct. Bonus points for those who learn it: Just because it's repetitive doesn't mean it has to be monotonous...use it to practice your dynamics, too!
Just the thing I needed, I didn't dive into classical songs I can play yet and only know spanish romance which I'm sure my relatives are tired of hearing!
I’ve played electric guitar for four years, mainly heavy metal and I’ve now enrolled in a classical guitar ensemble, hoping I can get up to speed a bit before I meet with them.
I think there's a lot of overlap between classical and heavy metal. Look forward to hearing these pieces on an electric guitar with a few effects thrown in!
@@unwaveringdiscipline5489 lol okay, just ignore all the barre chords in the second part in high positions and that most graded series put it in grade 5 or 6. But you must be so right
Nice Collection, only familiar with 2 of 5. Been playing Allegro for a long time and still enjoy it. I tend towards the more Spanish sounding pieces in tonality. Thanks
I wanted to say that it'll be great if you do a video about hardest pieces for classical guitar, and then I got curious about something... I've seen lots of discussions on "Hardest Classical pieces" and I've never seen any Paganini piece, and I rarely see Giuliani or Legnani either. 'cause those are the artists I've study most, and I was wondering, why? What do you think of that?
I have a video on some really hard pieces actually haha. But i think at a certain point difficultly isnt how hard it is to technically play but how musically deep the music gets
Agreed, difficult pieces are actually the unfamiliar pieces that need more technical attention. But, even the most simple works can have a depth that only a seasoned player may extract.
@@00vTv00 The unfamiliar pieces, that's right. There's a short Barrios piece called Maxixe, I remember having a lot of trouble with that one on some parts, and it was because its rythm was so unusual to me
Haha if this was any other video than a classical guitar video that would be weird! But it’s totally okay! They are real. I put a coating on them to make them a little stronger and it makes them a little shinny haha
@@Fortheclassicalguitarist the amount your able to control that extra brightness is something i will never be able to do. I love your videos, technique, everything.
00:26 Lesson 61 by Julio Sagreras
01:21 Snowflake by Andrew York
03:27 Going Home by Lief Ellis
05:25 Allegro (AKA Le Papillon) by Mauro Giulliani
07:03 Study #3 by Leo Brouer
07:56 Outro
I know i made it when someone does my times stamps in teh comments haha! Thanks so much!
Snowflight not snowflake
@@marc56273 Thanks, that bugged me. Snowflight is correct. Bonus points for those who learn it: Just because it's repetitive doesn't mean it has to be monotonous...use it to practice your dynamics, too!
Just the thing I needed, I didn't dive into classical songs I can play yet and only know spanish romance which I'm sure my relatives are tired of hearing!
Please do another video like this!
Thanks so much! I did one recently for intermediate pieces!
I’ve played electric guitar for four years, mainly heavy metal and I’ve now enrolled in a classical guitar ensemble, hoping I can get up to speed a bit before I meet with them.
Thats awesome ! Enjoy it!!!
I think there's a lot of overlap between classical and heavy metal. Look forward to hearing these pieces on an electric guitar with a few effects thrown in!
spanish romance rules them all
that deserves its own video!
Yes, it's true!
Except it’s not actually easy. Unless you’re ignoring fundamentals and ignoring playing it well.
@@droneblake8968 romanza is actually a beginner piece. The minor part is what i use to teach the existence of new sight reading positions to children
@@unwaveringdiscipline5489 lol okay, just ignore all the barre chords in the second part in high positions and that most graded series put it in grade 5 or 6. But you must be so right
I love Allegro, I'm definitely going to try and learn it. Thankyou for the helpful video!
No problem! Enjoy!
I am also from New England. Cheers from Boston!
These are great! Thanks for posting.
thank you for watching!
Nice Collection, only familiar with 2 of 5. Been playing Allegro for a long time and still enjoy it. I tend towards the more Spanish sounding pieces in tonality. Thanks
Thats a good start though! Now you know some more pieces to check out!
all are beautiful but #3 really spoke to me. Will be learning it.
Go for it!
Fantastic! Nice playing…Hugely helpful-thank you!
Awesome! So glad it helped!
Thank you for the tips! It’s awesome
Thanks for checking out the video!
Thanks! Nice pieces!!!
Thank you for checking it out!
What a beautiful Classical Guitar! May I know the brand?
A crime that the lief ellis one doesn't have sheet music / tab for it anywhere online, maybe you could make a video?
Great content.
Thank you so much!
Nice! Do you have any tips for a beginner at classical guitar?
Practice slow, find a good teacher, practice well
Also check out Maria Linnemann.
Great Work ! Wondering what type of guitar you play? Your technique along with the guitar sounds good. Thanks.
Thanks so much! The guitar used in the video is made by allan chapman and gef fisher!
I wanted to say that it'll be great if you do a video about hardest pieces for classical guitar, and then I got curious about something... I've seen lots of discussions on "Hardest Classical pieces" and I've never seen any Paganini piece, and I rarely see Giuliani or Legnani either.
'cause those are the artists I've study most, and I was wondering, why? What do you think of that?
I have a video on some really hard pieces actually haha. But i think at a certain point difficultly isnt how hard it is to technically play but how musically deep the music gets
Agreed, difficult pieces are actually the unfamiliar pieces that need more technical attention. But, even the most simple works can have a depth that only a seasoned player may extract.
@@Fortheclassicalguitarist Yeah, you're totally right
Oh, and I think I found the video! Haha I've been watching a lot of your videos lately
@@00vTv00 The unfamiliar pieces, that's right. There's a short Barrios piece called Maxixe, I remember having a lot of trouble with that one on some parts, and it was because its rythm was so unusual to me
What's the name of the Leif Ellis piece?
Nice! Guitar? Thanks
Thanks! Your welcome?
My cuban brother Brower is a weird one
He’s one of the best though!
New video!!
Number one as always!!!
@@Fortheclassicalguitarist 😆
Hey.
Yoooo!
I was hoping to hear
I was made for loving you by kiss
and jump by EVH
Disappointed
Me too!! but these ones seemed more important for beginners.
eres peruano?
Si
I dont normally ask this on a first comment, but your nails…. R they real or enhanced? Tell me about your nails
Haha if this was any other video than a classical guitar video that would be weird! But it’s totally okay! They are real. I put a coating on them to make them a little stronger and it makes them a little shinny haha
@@Fortheclassicalguitarist the amount your able to control that extra brightness is something i will never be able to do. I love your videos, technique, everything.
Some parts of Snowflake sounds like Blink 182 😅
Hmmm yea i hear it!
Can u do a tutorial 😊
I gave up after nine seconds
Give it a solid 10
That's a pity
Repetitive ,boring,blah,not " impressive😮