Nico Cornwall and here I am 3 years later just finding this. It's amazing that we all learn things at different times but a dedicated guitarist will always find this at some point when they're bored of playing leads all the time and interested in interesting rhythm and styles of music.
aye i was just looking through youtube & i saw this video & it is really similar to sierreño which is a mexican genre,i play it & alot of the chords look similar sounds pretty cool too
Great lesson! I'm quiet new in this field of gypsy swing though I always was big fan of D. R. Simple swing rhythm is not new for me but with some surprise I noticed this little upstroke. That's the cream in the coffee. ;-) BTW: What guitar are you playing? Sounds very nice! One of the more expensive I guess. Custom made? What woods is she made of? Cedar + Rosewood? What an effortable model you can recommend for a beginner? If I see and hear right you use nylon strings...? I prefer that warm sound, too. Thanks for any hint! Cheers from Berlin/Germany
Eva Koderman Am6 Bm7b5 E7 Am6 E7/B Am/C C#dim7 Bm7b5 Am6 E7/B Am/C Fm6 E7 Am6 F7 E7 Am6 The E7/B is missing the E, but sounds like an E chord to me. Added the F# to giving it more of a Bmb6 sound sounds wrong to me. I'm curious what Mr. Voet thinks of it as. Probably meaning less for this style of music. It's not like they did much substitution until the tail end of Django's life. The C#dim7 is missing the b5, but once again sounds like a C#dim7. If you don't already know some chord theory Eva I'd suggest you learn it. It makes learning songs and playing interesting voices a breeze. No more looking up shapes. Knowing all the notes and every place you can grab them is a useful skill. I enjoy your videos Mr. Voet!
Me too, I'm trying hard to find that one, lol. Came to the comments to see if someone knew. I think it's some inversion of a Bb7, starting in the 5th (F) and adding the minor seventh octave (14th)
Practice changing the angle at which your fingers reach across the fret board. You can do this by moving your thumb up behind the neck opposite of your middle finger. It is better technique in all though obviously experienced musicians can get away with having their thumb on the 6th string.
He is Dutch, probably he doesnt speak French very well... like me..... i am glad he speaks at least English (with an accent) so i can understand what he says.
I think his accent is amazing and so is his intonation (said as a sworn linguist). Mind you, he also speaks French very well, it seems!:) So let's all play La Pompe like he does first and then comment. A great video lesson!
amstermosh, mind you/ it seems, zeg je , je zegt nu als fervent linguïst dat je iemand eraan herinnerd dat het 'misschien' zo is dat ie goed Frans spreekt? of begrijp ik je verkeerd?
Hallo Paul. Dank je voor jouw bericht, Wat ik zeg is dat Reinier prima frans spreekt (ivm "why don't you speak French?". Well, I know he actually does and even quite well!). Die opmerking is wat mij doet reageren; wat mij belangrijk lijkt is de goede inhoud van deze video (en wat een investering om het te maken!) en niet een zogenaamd "accent" dat iemand zou hebben of niet. Accenten vind ik juist prachtig. En dat zeg ik als linguïst. Fijne dag, Paul.