EliteGuitarist.com - The Controversial Right Hand Position - Beginning Classical Guitar Technique
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- čas přidán 11. 08. 2019
- Classical Guitar Posture & Right Hand Placement
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Please continue the classical guitar lessons. I look forward to your lessons.
I was having a great deal of trouble with consistent Tremolo and accuracy. Went back to the basics - imagine that. Thanks for the self induced reminder Tavi. Cheers.
Thank you so much for the suggestion. I’m 5”2 with short arms, and when I started learning to play classical guitar more than 50 years ago, it’s hard to get small scale guitars that would fit me and my arm better. It’s like golf, we need to get fitted well and right.
Very practical.Thanks elit
Great advice!
I wish more guitarists would use the Sagovia style. It makes rest strokes sound amazing. Guitarists today don't use enough rest stroke.
I heard once from one of Segovia's student that new guitarist hold the guitar luck a shotgun.
Thank you, this is very interesting.
Without being polemical, regarding the arm positioning.. It's true and it's wrong at the same time, there are lots of great guitarists that use the forearm positioning, Segovia, Russel and Bream (Bream used both) just to make 3 name used the "wrong" position. I believe we are all different and that it takes time to understand what works better for you. Just my opinion of course.
really nicely explained, u earned a sub and an eager student
Nice video. For me, the real pedagogical danger here is teaching students that there is only one hand position. In my opinion, there are a variety of spectrums of which we need to be aware: plucking perpendicular or obliquely, using a high wrist or a low wrist, playing with flesh or nail, etc... I think we as musicians need to master ALL of these techniques. Which one we use is entirely dependent on what the music needs at that moment.
Indeed, every viewpoint is plagued by the inherent miopia of the one teaching it. Guitar playing is so deeply personal and no two individuals have identical techniques because of the physical and preferential peculiarities of each individual. Your point is well taken, thank you.
Hello, Brandon!
Sup Brandon
@@EliteGuitarist I like the pick
Very detailed and informative analysis that one you did - thank you for that. I admire the fact that you took the time to talk about different schools of thought and giving your personal opinion and experience on that. On an irrelevant note, whenever you do talk, the guitars strings reverberate and they generate some harmonics, thus creating a bit of a 'muddy' atmosphere for your video and it tends to distract me :) . Then again, it's is not an issue. Overall, excellent, beautiful analysis.
There are a few RH positions developed throughout times, but they all have common principle, i.e. the finger movement is on the knuckle joins, not finger joins. The difference between techniques is the angle of attack. Some players like to use Right side of the nail, but some Left, or both in combination. Segovia, Williams and Yepes have what I call the most widely acceptable position. Ida Presti has different position. Liona Boyd uses both sides of her nails.
Grate! Thank you! Still it's a mystery for me what to do with the right hand pinky. I see the masters are often do two things: 1) glue the pinky to the ring finger, which when I try to follow 7:15 w this manner has a definite disadvantage, for the ring finger, being the weakest, has, in addition to its own movement, to drag the pinky 2) stack the pinky out, which when I try to follow ends up with a tension in the palm. What on Earth should I do?
I have longer arms; how do I accommodate ?
I am guilty of using my pinky for stability, even on electric guitar. I also palm mute a lot to keep in place so i have stability and minimal string noise but big reduction in speed and movement
What is the name of the song that you demonstrated with tilted hand position at 3:07
Cadenza in E Minor from Concierto de Aranjuez
Can you please make a video for people who want to learn how to play with a bent wrist?
Best Guideline for Right Hand. Thanks.
I will only be able to get a classical guitar in a few months, and currently have an acoustic. Do you think its okay that I start learning classical on it? Or should i wait?
Start anyway. You will be able to transition just fine in the future.
@@EliteGuitarist Thank you!!
I have bad habbit picking string
You must have a very short arm?
Spain is Europe also, like Germany.
Yes, we are European. ~Miguel, Guitar Lessons from Spain 🇪🇸
You have a very unusual H
high positioning of your guitar.
Perhaps if you had included that in the lesson, your right hand technique would have been more feasible to the viewer
Since just about all, if not all, of the best guitarists place the actual forearm on the guitar without getting any nerve damage, I would say that you are wrong about this.
There’s no doubt that bent wrist is superior. The flat wrist is the reason for the horrendously long thumb nail we see today, and long nails in general, which sound bad.
You are overstating your case, Kyle. Parkening has very long nails and yet, his tone is unequaled.