Victor
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Post by Victor on Feb 23, 2005 10:58:32 GMT -5
Sunday, February 20, 2005 Songbooks The following songbooks are available:
Nouveau Flamenco Borrasca Opium
The Opium book also contains a transcription of the song The Winding Road/La Primavera from the album Leaning into the Night. The whole book was transcribed by Daniel Ward, who played Flamenco guitar in Luna Negra XL from 1997 to 1999.
posted by Ottmar @ 18:48
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Victor
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Post by Victor on Feb 23, 2005 11:10:09 GMT -5
I am going to get the Opium transcipt soon. I like the idea that it was transcribed by someone who actually travelled an played with you!
The book description says it contains notes on Ottmar's playing technique. Well, certainly there are many others beside myself who were inspired to take up guitar because the love of your music - but I wonder how you feel about people trying to copy your style of playing?
For that matter, I'm curious if you've ever put on a guitar workshop for students or considered doing such? That would be very inspiring to get some firsthand knowlege of your technique and approach to playing! Well, I'm happy for what you share of your creative process through your blog! Thanks!
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Victor
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Post by Victor on Mar 12, 2005 13:44:51 GMT -5
Ottmar wrote:
Well, if I had a truly special and unusual technique I would not allow anybody to write about it, yes? But, the really special stuff can only be learned, not taught. It is how you touch a string, how you produce a tone. That cannot be shown to you, rather it must come from practicing, from your experience with the guitar.
Every person's hands are different, the length of a finger, the width, the angle of the nail etc. - and if you give the same guitar to ten guitar players, they will produce quite a variety of different tones. Really, that's the beauty of the guitar versus a mechanical tone producer like the piano, where a hammer strikes the string. It is all in your touch.
My right index finger has either adapted from three and a half decades of playing guitar, or is genetically deformed, but because of the slight right turn this finger makes from where it is connected to the hand to the tip, it lines up perfectly on the string next to the middle finger... which in turn helps me get a very even tremolo and a fast piccado. Every pair of hands is different and you will discover what yours can and want to do.
There is a beautiful intimacy that comes from time spent with your instrument. I figure I have spent at least 14,000-20,000 hours playing guitar so far. Nothing will ever replace that experience... although it would be interesting if at some point science found a way to extract/copy this intimacy from a musician's mind and insert/install it into the mind of a beginning guitar student, let's say. What would that be like? I imagine it would feel unsettling and foreign, since the experiences that created this intimacy would not necessarily all be available to the beginner. Imagine your mind as a very complex web page with millions of links and the ability to spontaniously create new links every moment...
Anyway, pardon my rambling - if you can glean anything from the opium songbook I will be very happy.
I have no plans at this time to put on a guitar workshop. But that doesn't mean it will never happen.
Thank you for that perspective! Yes, that would be exciting if science could allow me to have a "mind meld" with someone as accomplished as yourself, but I suppose that still would be no substitute for experiencing the growth myself. It would probably be similar to what Ken Wilber calls a "peak experience" in spiritual growth - a glimpse of what's possible without the personal experience to sustain it.
Well, I just did a calculation and estimated that at my current rate of guitar practice I'll be approaching your experience range in about 50 years - I should be one hell of a guitar player by age 87! ;D
Anyway, my Opium transcipt arrived this week! Very nicely put together book! I have the Nouveau Flamenco transcipt as well but I really like the detail and notes on the various strumming and tapping techniques in the Opium book. Cool stuff!
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