What are you currently listening to? II
#12876
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 09:20
#12877
Guest_Logan Cloud_*
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 09:23
Guest_Logan Cloud_*
#12879
Guest_Logan Cloud_*
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 09:46
Guest_Logan Cloud_*
My favorite song.
#12880
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 09:48
#12881
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 09:55
#12882
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 10:25
#12883
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 10:30
#12884
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 10:43
#12885
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 10:47
#12886
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:01
#12887
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:34
Can anybody tell me what genre this song is in? Specifically how he plays it on the guitar. Looks like a lot of fun to play and I wanna find more songs like it.
#12888
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:45
the big bang -Rock Mafia (acoustic)
Can anybody tell me what genre this song is in? Specifically how he plays it on the guitar. Looks like a lot of fun to play and I wanna find more songs like it.[/quote]
It's not one specific style. It has Spansih influences, but it's more than just one thing. If you like this, I reccomend:
Chingon[/quote] Which is a more lively interpretation of the style,
Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros[/quote] which is about as close as you'll get to having a studio recording match a live acoustic performance.
Lole y Manuel[/quote] This is pure Flamenco, which inspired "spanish" guitar and would be a good style to get in to if you like the acoustic performance you listed.
Hope that helps.
I'm listening to The Dresden Dolls - Coin Operated Boy[/quote]
#12889
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:50
#12890
Guest_Tigerblood and MilkShakes_*
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:56
Guest_Tigerblood and MilkShakes_*
#12891
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:56
#12892
Posté 09 mai 2012 - 11:59
android654 wrote...
Hellbound555 wrote...
the big bang -Rock Mafia (acoustic)
Can anybody tell me what genre this song is in? Specifically how he plays it on the guitar. Looks like a lot of fun to play and I wanna find more songs like it.
It's not one specific style. It has Spansih influences, but it's more than just one thing. If you like this, I reccomend:
Chingon Which is a more lively interpretation of the style,
Joe Strummer & The Mescaleroswhich is about as close as you'll get to having a studio recording match a live acoustic performance.
Lole y Manuel This is pure Flamenco, which inspired "spanish" guitar and would be a good style to get in to if you like the acoustic performance you listed.
Hope that helps.
I'm listening to The Dresden Dolls - Coin Operated Boy
TY, so it has a Flamenco twang to it. Gawd I wish I knew how to play like that. How do you add stuff like that in? Is it a strumming thing?
Also: Thousand miles -Vanessa cartlon
Modifié par Hellbound555, 10 mai 2012 - 12:01 .
#12893
Guest_Catch This Fade_*
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 12:02
Guest_Catch This Fade_*
#12894
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 12:06
#12895
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 12:10
Hellbound555 wrote...
TY, so it has a Flamenco twang to it. Gawd I wish I knew how to play like that. How do you add stuff like that in? Is it a strumming thing?
Also: Thousand miles -Vanessa cartlon
The style is more "Spanish guitar" which is like Flamenco but how it's played in S. America. The fast style people normally associate with pure Flamenco is what you normally hear in Spain, the difference is the tempo is slowed down a lot from it's Flamenco roots. The only difference is it has a few fundamentals from traditional rock. So it's not so much him adding in elements, it's just how Flamenco guitar evolved when it was brought to S. America and then when hispanic people immigrated to the U.S. the styles began to blend into "Spanish Guitar" as we know it now. A lot of bands from S. America, Mexico and in the U.S. west use it as a staple.
If you can play acoustic rock of any kind, you can learn to play Flamenco easily.
Modifié par android654, 10 mai 2012 - 12:13 .
#12896
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 12:22
Oh, so the song ITSELF is in a spanish style?android654 wrote...
Hellbound555 wrote...
TY, so it has a Flamenco twang to it. Gawd I wish I knew how to play like that. How do you add stuff like that in? Is it a strumming thing?
Also: Thousand miles -Vanessa cartlon
The style is more "Spanish guitar" which is like Flamenco but how it's played in S. America. The fast style people normally associate with pure Flamenco is what you normally hear in Spain, the difference is the tempo is slowed down a lot from it's Flamenco roots. The only difference is it has a few fundamentals from traditional rock. So it's not so much him adding in elements, it's just how Flamenco guitar evolved when it was brought to S. America and then when hispanic people immigrated to the U.S. the styles began to blend into "Spanish Guitar" as we know it now. A lot of bands from S. America, Mexico and in the U.S. west use it as a staple.
If you can play acoustic rock of any kind, you can learn to play Flamenco easily.
Edit: Holy moly I think I can play this song.
Call me, call meCall me, call me[/url]
Modifié par Hellbound555, 10 mai 2012 - 12:23 .
#12897
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 04:39
#12898
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 06:07
#12899
Guest_Son Ov Mars_*
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 07:29
Guest_Son Ov Mars_*
#12900
Guest_Son Ov Mars_*
Posté 10 mai 2012 - 07:44
Guest_Son Ov Mars_*





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