Great lesson! I’ll never understand the entitlement some people have judging by the comments. “It’s boring!” “Too much talking!” It’s a lesson not a performance, listen and you might actually learn something. The same people usually are the ones that keep asking how to get better but can’t even sit through an awesome lesson because of their tiktokified brains.
@CanadianDivergent13 күн бұрын
exactly! best comment in 2024 so far.
@mopsydaisy11 күн бұрын
They don't have any entitlement. I believe they project their mediocrity onto more advanced individuals. In the days before KZbin and online commenting they were as irrelevant as they are today, but they have a keyboard these days
@yesok42447 күн бұрын
sorry but I have to watch this in 2x speed and preferably with subway surfer and family guy in the background
@skyko14 күн бұрын
ATTENTION: This method can be applied to ALL instruments!! This is the absolute BEST video of a practice method I have EVER watched!! It's simple, clear, and intense! It's about maximizing our time, which is imperative for us older musicians (who've wasted a great deal of time over the years)! Wow, thank you so much for this!
@bricklifter174911 сағат бұрын
I play banjo with Exact same method of practice
@melinamartins441917 күн бұрын
People might confuse between technique and virtuosity, and vice versa. He's cleary showing how technique is built, with awareness and not rushing a bunch of notes through the guitar. Excellent!
@skyko14 күн бұрын
Or any instrument. (or even things we do during life in general)! Realizing that the years of my life that went by the fastest were those where I was coasting and not focusing - sucking the marrow out of each day.
@Gregorypeckory13 күн бұрын
You said people get confused about technique versus virtuosity, conflating one with the other. I don't agree that people conflate them, but they are related. You made your semantic point without giving your definitions, or explaining how and why you think people are confused nor how that creates problems. I think everybody pretty well understands that a virtuoso is somebody who already has a prodigious level of technique. It seems like you're trying to amplify the wisdom that one should practice slowly and pay attention to the details, but the words virtuosity and technique have nothing to do with why people tend to rush. We rush because we're impatient. Most people who spend hours a day practicing would probably like to be a virtuoso; too many of us spend too much time playing as fast as we can trying to get there faster. To me saying that we conflate technique with virtuosity is like saying people conflate Kung Fu with black belt. Like the black belt, the word virtuoso is a judgement that a particular musician has reached a level of technical skill that merits the compliment; since we don't have any ultimate musical authority to award people with some kind of a token of recognition for their skill like Kung Fu schools award belts, it means a lot of musicians and fans will argue endlessly about who is a virtuoso and who isn't and whether it's a good thing or a bad thing. But generally I think people know what a virtuoso is, and they know what technique is. It would be great if all we needed is a semantic clarification to become disciplined musicians. Unfortunately it's got nothing to do with semantics.
@Andy-hr2ui15 күн бұрын
In four years of learning guitar this advice was the most valuable to date!
@JackT1316 күн бұрын
What a brilliant educator, not to mention his exceptional musicianship
@GWGwilbo22 күн бұрын
Profoundly helpful and actionable. Probably the most useful video on how to practice I've ever seen.
@airiushunt11 күн бұрын
I didn’t even make it fully through this video before I had to go pick up my guitar ( I came back and rewatched the whole thing). But this is the most useful advice I’ve ever gotten. I didn’t realize how much unintentional movement I use when playing guitar. 10 mins into focused slow practice and I immediately came across so many flaws in my technique.
@magnumopus51114 күн бұрын
Probably the most valuable advice that validates my practice and he is telling 100% FACTS. I don't practice more than 3 hours, - "Quality over quantity, shorter but precise focused practice is key"👏 I would like to also add, you should eliminate distractions like social media during practice. 💯
@guitareMTL14 күн бұрын
No kidding?
@magnumopus51113 күн бұрын
@@guitareMTL Yeah, absolutely I swear to that, especially if you are talking about "eliminating social media to avoid distractions" When I did that, I was able to play and learn really complex stuffs like if you are a fan of shred, I learned to play "Trilogy Suite #5" by Yngwie Malmsteen, "Glassgow Kiss" by John Petrucci and "Scarified" by Paul Gilbert. I can't do them before when I'm always checking my phone, but when I was able to eliminate social media and did the "precise focused practice" I was able to learn each song in a month with just 3 hours a day of practice. So I agree with the validity of the speakers advice on this video. Cheers!🤘
@liyook27 күн бұрын
this video is incredible, being a teacher myself made me feel like I kind of overcomplicate stuff. Even going for the same "slow and precise but steady" aproach to studying music performance
@bobperu17 күн бұрын
I love this guy,so much compassion,in the preparing for playing,and playing. Great accent too.
@ronedee7 күн бұрын
Lucas, is a great teacher. Even after 50 years I can certainly appreciate the fundamental's, again! My “children” are all grownups, but can still be unruly at times!
@TheCompleteGuitarist27 күн бұрын
This is an important message for any music student regardless of instrument. I adopted this way of learning recently(ish) and advise my students as much as possible. Many just want the music to appear in their fingertips as if by magic. Well, this is how you make that happen.
@ramdav895027 күн бұрын
Most most most helpful video I’ve ever seen in this topic. Thank you Tonebase to make it happen❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@coreyfleig213912 күн бұрын
Finally, finally, finally here is someone who talks with common sense, he is logical, and rational. I have become sooooo weary with teachers on You Tube who claim you don't need to practice... "You can do this in 5 minutes." Chris Parkening once told me that one slow, beautiful measure is worth more than 10 sloppy ones. I used to love practicing just one measure, and really enjoy the beauty of it. And then you add the next measure when you're ready. This guy is speaking truth - thanks!
@TheTektronik11 күн бұрын
The lesson about being precise is what struck me the most. Thank you for such a gem.
@CK-qf7mn26 күн бұрын
Excellent detailed instruction on how to practice slowly. Knowing the steps to take is so helpful. It reduces practice anxiety and helps my hands to be more relaxed especially at challenging passages. Thank you ❤️❤️❤️❤️
@Manfish15426 күн бұрын
Wonderful video, and so motivating. You understand that practicing and playing are two completely different things. And how practicing is about precision and not speed. The latter comes naturally at some point.
@PabloskyS8415 күн бұрын
One of best guitar or music lesson I ever seen! 🙌
@pastoulon15 күн бұрын
You must be joking…:-)
@grudarts11 күн бұрын
My 5-string banjo sessions have improved, phrasing, timing, clarity and consistency all noticeably better, since watching this one simple video. I like your style Lukasz, no BS. I look forward to practicing now and I'm using the metronome again after 3 years. Thanks buddy!
@nonretrogradable27 күн бұрын
This is remarkable. Wonderful to see and very helpful. I’ve been asking myself a lot of these questions and have not been able to ever “practice” as much as I want / assumed I needed to. This is brilliant advice with clear demonstration
@ThisloveisforUs20 күн бұрын
This hit home. Thank you for the comments about tools, and sharpening.
@soultylive26 күн бұрын
Such an interesting guitar learning approach! I wish I would have learn it way before. It makes so much sense, hats off.
@berh506219 күн бұрын
Very very thankful for this moment, and time-friend demonstration...
@denniswade499816 күн бұрын
Thank you soooo much! That was absolutely incredible, and so important. It really cleared up so much for me!
@LeeEisenstein27 күн бұрын
Absolutely right. I knew a friend of Julian Bream and he said that is how he saw Bream practice.
@Mark_13523 күн бұрын
Thanks very much for sharing.
@richardlenz265517 күн бұрын
I have been on a concert vom Julian Bream in Zurich. It was one of the worst concert I ever went in my life. A true robot without emotions 🤭
@hindenburg15962 күн бұрын
@@richardlenz2655 I had the absolute opposite experience, it was mesmerizing 😊
@richardlenz26552 күн бұрын
@ interesting. I was at the Jimi Hendrix concert in Zürich at the time when he still was alive. This was music for me. I did not booing and whistling at the Bream concert because my sister, also a classical concert musician, was also with me and I did not want to make a bad expression when she was around. Now I am also very old. Maybe I would probably even like Julien Bream today as I am still playing guitar myself and sometimes also play classical pieces like Bach and Beethoven 🤭
@delicrux10 күн бұрын
thank you for this fantastic lesson, i now have the information i have needed for 15 years to improve my technique, i understood i needed to slow down but didnt understand the correct way to practice and position the hands, being self taught certain things were not obvious to me.
@Harrier_DuBois6 күн бұрын
Great lesson! I struggle to slow myself down when practicing, I'm going to use the metronome more now. The only issue with playing really slow is sometimes its hard to hold difficult, stretching chord shapes for a long time.
@Flowlimit15 күн бұрын
Thank you for flowing so beautifully. ✨
@SimonPersey16 күн бұрын
I have been playing seriously for a little less than a year and this was fortunately the way I've started out. However it's really useful seeing now as I begin to finish a couple of Brazilian Jazz songs that I do need to slow it right down so I can tidy the songs up as I hit the odd bum note as I'm trying to speed through them. I practice /play for between 2/6 hours a day at the moment however it's certainly a mix of practicing and playing as I'm continuously trying to learn new songs rather than finish the ones I've been playing for the past year. I can't wait to start uploading the songs but having them perfect is definitely what I'm aiming for!
@macleod4106927 күн бұрын
I’m very good at doing shorter unfocused practice
@DanieleBaire-lf6rw26 күн бұрын
Me too
@elsyd363614 күн бұрын
If you can focus it’ll make a ton of difference. I remember learning new songs in their entirety so fast back in the day before my attention was so bad, I think Facebook and insta have ruined my brain and my attention span.
@macleod4106914 күн бұрын
@ are you American?
@bbowjazz18 күн бұрын
64, retired from tech and averaging about 3 hours per day split between traditional classical guitar and plectrum jazz on archtop guitar. On each instrument, I do 20 to 30 minutes at a time and then take a break before beginning the next segment. By the end of the last session my brain is exhausted.
@Recommendable27 күн бұрын
I remember listening to Łukasz live when he was a child prodigy, it was 30 years ago a it was a great experience. From then to now it surely must have been an ocean of experience for him though.
@richardroskell345214 күн бұрын
I love hearing how the masters approach practicing. Slow, focused and with a metronome is my preference too. Possibly more than any other class of instruments, playing the guitar well requires very minute and subtle manipulation of the fingers, just as Lucasz emphasizes. Practicing slowly makes the tiniest error obvious. Also the slow tempo means the player must faithfully internalize the beat, because small errors there will also be obvious. Thanks to the maestro for sharing!
@DeutschlandGuy10 күн бұрын
Sometimes KZbin's algorithm actually gets it right and feeds us a link that is truly useful. That is the case here. Watching Mr. Kuropaczewski's philosophy on practicing, I became an instant fan! He seems like truly a great guy, someone you would love to grab a coffee with. I love instructors whose advice can immediately be incorporated into our playing. (Classical pianist Nahre Sol is another purveyor of immediately absorbable musical insights... Check her out too!) I'm off now, to find more of Mr. Kuropaczewski's amazing work. 😊
@alvaroibarra332117 күн бұрын
This is really insightful, thank you. However, I would appreciate that he could share the actual process from these steps to the finished performance. Otherwise, it feels like the joke of this is what we study in the classroom (1+1=2) and then in the exam: calculate the mass of the Sun. We need to see how this is built up to an actual performance, and not just saying just increase the tempo.
@danjonesguitarist13 күн бұрын
I love this video. So much wisdom and delivered with passion and intensity. Thank you for your knowledge and energy.
@billnelson527915 күн бұрын
This is it. Keep it in your hands as often as possible, take time to slow down and get better, the rest of the time is to just play and sound things out.
@SusanBloodgood-o5s13 күн бұрын
Eating food slowly is the best for digestion and nourishment, stopping before you’re full, taking breaks between meals, let yourself get hungry, I can’t just play music, I have to feel it, sometimes it just bubbles up and I have to play
@wakitakiwakitaki14 күн бұрын
This is an incredible piece of teaching; does anyone happen to know the origin of this approach? Perhaps Mr. Kuropaczewski learned it from Manuel Barruecco? I see one commentor suggested that Julian Bream practiced in this way. Does anyone have further information on this claim? I'm curious if this is common knowledge or a unique "method" created by Łukasz? Thanks!
@aficionado47326 күн бұрын
Very good video ! Many thanks. To exercise slowly and mindful lycannot be mentioned enough. Great to talk about the hand and arm position.
@mootal28128 күн бұрын
Wished I had found this video earlier...😅 But still not too late to follow good practices. 🎉
@pawszu26 күн бұрын
The most important guitar lesson period
@joaniepeters256511 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this video on your practice approach, it makes perfect sense. This will help me immensely. Also very beautiful instrument and playing tone, sounds very similar to a piano
@philipcooper829713 күн бұрын
The best advice I've ever got was to be relaxed at all time and build up the speed and accuracy eventually. Playing an instrument should not cause any strain, nor pain. If you feel like your fingers and wrists hurt when you play, stop. Many people want to play too fast soon and this only results in frustration and even injuries.
@ErickJiuJitsu20 күн бұрын
This is some extremely valuable information
@davidwhite294916 күн бұрын
Very helpful, thank you!
@HarryVerey11 күн бұрын
Wonderful and inspiring guitar teaching
@vanzamee16 күн бұрын
Everyone absorbs at different rates, and in different ways. When you start to lose concentration, it’s time for a break, no matter how soon in. I hear a lot of folks talk about how much new information one can process in a given time. It can be 5 minutes, or 1 minute, or 15. Take that break when you start to glass over. I like to do some balance exercises (stand on one foot with eyes closed, swap to other foot, also taken slowly and swapped often,I’m 51, no spring chicken). Get some water, come back, take another nibble. My progress, like trudging uphill in deep snow, is measured in inches, not feet. Consistency and patience *will* reward you. Enjoy it.
@Nickredshred6 күн бұрын
Much respect, agree on a lot of this. The Joe Rogan approach is a great way to lose your mind entirely... Balance. 🙏🤘
@BillStratton-j9r23 күн бұрын
This moved me forward massively,. Thank you so much!
@ichirofakename26 күн бұрын
Dang this is going to help me with my piano practicing. Thanks.
@paulgibby693225 күн бұрын
Brilliant and clear. Thanks!
@gitmanjon15 күн бұрын
So many great tips! Anybody who knows what kind of nails Lukas is using?
@Uuur1016 күн бұрын
I thought that was remarkable, it's the closest recorded demonstration I've seen of a practice method analogous to the Meadowmount method described in the Talent Code book
@Sergio_deus18 күн бұрын
well sometimes youtube suggestions really hit the nail in the head l gotta admit
@delicrux10 күн бұрын
so because of lack of access to proper lessons i practiced the guitar for 6hrs a day incorrectly, thanks for letting me know now back to the basics...
@mer1red27 күн бұрын
I practice only 2 hours a day. I'm advancing slower if I do more. Your brain and muscles need time to digest the optimal dose.
@juanramonsilva106725 күн бұрын
I think it’s not that you advance slower but that your life will become dull and frustrating from practicing when your brain needs to heal, thus it affects the practice when you are supposed to get the most.
@MassimoAngotzi24 күн бұрын
2 hours a day is not bad! You’ll see that the more you play, the more your muscles adjust to your pace. It’s a question of time. Learning new pieces is harder than revising old repertoire, it takes a toll on our brains and hands. Try to find a balance between old and new pieces. My two cents. Keep on my friend.
@adamkubiak193323 күн бұрын
It’s 45-60 minutes for me. Much better than I was playing 2-3 hrs.
@GregDenver30321 күн бұрын
Relatively new guitarist here. 65 years old and begin taking lessons about 16 months ago. Very disciplined (former engineer) and drove myself to practicing 2 hours/day. The discipline was easy but it robbed me of the joy. I now typically practice about one hour a day and if feeling good about my practice, sometimes 90 minutes. Love how Lukas’s Kuropaczewski practices as it encourages me to SLOW DOWN. I’ve finally realized the metronome is not for speeding up, but slowing down.
@FlashRayLaser12 күн бұрын
It's easy to just say that when you've never spent a month playing 8 hours per day because it's funner to believe what's easier is best.
@guitar76713 күн бұрын
Thanks. You gave me an idea👍👍👍
@CotoMadrid17 күн бұрын
Id like to hear about his nails - this can be important for certain playing styles but very hard to find good ones for playing?
@chrisgmurray36223 күн бұрын
During the nineties I spent two years of 2 hour per day practice sessions at four fret, four finger scalar and interval alternate picking ( electric) I hated every minute of it, but decided to persevere in case my lack of self discipline might prevent me from achieving smoother clean lines. To my horror, I was unable to detect any progress or improvement in my pkaying at all. In fact my mind was numbed from any inspiration, and all my improvised passages were pedantic and lacking in any spirit or soul at all. Worst of all, my playing had a hard cold feel that took at least a year to free myself from. Every time I hear some proficient guitarist lauding the benefits of daily disciplined practice, I want to throw something heavy at their head. I'll never again allow myself to lose my musical soul sacrificed on the greedy altar of self obsessed technique achievement.
@michaelcoppola75239 күн бұрын
Amazing lesson
@davidsummerville35114 күн бұрын
Great info so I liked and subscribed.
@QuiqueTrenco-y5t27 күн бұрын
That dude scares me, I wouldn't like to be in the shoes of that guitar.
@kof301727 күн бұрын
😂
@101depech25 күн бұрын
Shoes or a guitar bag 😅
@unclassicfusion21 күн бұрын
But man it seems he cares so much about his guitar
@kof301721 күн бұрын
@@unclassicfusion Thanks for commenting here! I was looking exactly for this video. The notification made me find it!😂😂
@yeeyee201813 күн бұрын
Guitars don’t wear shoes bro cmon. You obviously don’t play🙄
@c.p.15897 күн бұрын
This approach ties in with neuroscience research about learning in general. Check out Cal Newport's books, 'Deep Work', 'How to be a Straight A Student' and others. There's an interesting Huberman podcast interview too. This is a great lesson but I have to say that the straight pointing left hand index finger on the second chord is way too far from the fretboard for efficient economy of movement.
@Harrier_DuBois6 күн бұрын
I think he must be doing that just for the video, to show where his fretted fingers are more clearly. He must know that.
@Bahimo315426 күн бұрын
This is very insightful from this wonderful Man
@McFaulio24014 күн бұрын
What about when you want to play at full speed and you’ve done that for a while on any given piece? Do you slowly bump up the metronome or if you do the 60BPM properly enough you should be able to full speed it?
@jurekwiater18 күн бұрын
Thank you
@nikoo196927 күн бұрын
That is one of the best lessons ever. Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤👍👍👍🙏🙏👏👏🌹
@001sequoia8 күн бұрын
I notice you are playing with acrylic nails on your right hand.. Is this to allow for specific right hand position or an issue maintaining natural nails.. I always struggle to get tone I want with an acrylic.... Thoughts?
@janezimmerman798715 күн бұрын
That's the advice everybody can use to learn to run as fast as Usain Bolt. Good luck.
@johnterpack3940Сағат бұрын
Fundamentally changed how I look at practice.
@mboyer6810 күн бұрын
The statement that people claim Einstein said, "the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." First, there's nothing even remotely close to that attributed to Albert Einstein. More important, doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result is called practice. Musicians and athletes are famous for it. It's what allows us to get better, AKA to expect a different result. So again, if you hear anybody say that, they're not very intelligent, they do not think about the things they say.
@phant0mdummy17 сағат бұрын
You're just misinterpreting the quote. It's implication is that doing the same (wrong) thing leads to failure. If you're practicing with the right technique, then yes. You can improve. The insanity comes from bashing your head against the wall mindlessly and thinking you're going to get where you're going.
@barryweeks622927 күн бұрын
How excellent!
@plawp6915 күн бұрын
Twenty years in and apparently I've never practiced before 😅
@szymonrojek648026 күн бұрын
Hello. Is the 'Tonebase guitar' good for classical beginners? I used to play jazz, fingerstyle - completely different technique of playing. Thank you.
@ahamefulehenry845524 күн бұрын
This is painfully slow. But I can imagine that it's super effective. I find it difficult to play slow, but my progress is slow....so I guess I now know my issue...or I always knew
@anandaurora21 күн бұрын
Excellent
@oswinhull42034 күн бұрын
THIS IS MY GUITAR. THERE ARE MANY LIKE IT BUT THIS ONE’S MINE. MY GUITAR IS MY BEST FRIEND. IT IS MY LIFE. I MUST MASTER IT AS I MUST MASTER MY LIFE. WITHOUT ME, MY GUITAR IS USELESS. WITHOUT MY GUITAR, I AM USELESS. I MUST PLAY MY GUITAR PRECISELY. I MUST PLAY CLEANER THAN EVER BEFORE. I WILL! BEFORE GOD, I SWEAR THIS CREED. MY GUITAR AND MYSELF ARE ONE. WE ARE THE MASTERS OF MUSIC. SO BE IT, UNTIL THERE IS NO RIFF I CANNOT PLAY. AMEN!
@avibortnick14 күн бұрын
At what point do you move from super slow practice to proper tempo?
@baddayFlo16 күн бұрын
Very interesting to watch, but can someone explain to me why he uses its pinky to do the bare at the first chord and not the Ring Finger like in a powechord and the second chord is without the Index Finger? I am self trained, so I may miss a crucial point.
@adhoc3715 күн бұрын
This may, or may not, suit you as a method. But... there are things in here we can all take away. Very interesting.
@Mark_13523 күн бұрын
So helpful and practical. Wish he is my neighbour.
@epiphanydrums542726 күн бұрын
Pure wisdom
@bradking153611 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing 🎉 hope you are well God loves you deeply shalom 🤗🐼♥️✝️💐 Philippians 4:8
@mmenjic15 күн бұрын
This La pastoreta souds 700 times better slowed down like this than original, and when you do listen to original after this video it will sound like it is playing at 4x warp speed :) I know most of the serious musicians will not agree with me on this, but really this slowed down version sounds awesome to me at least :) How or why his guitar sounds like this, almost like it is not a guitar but some smaller instrument which I don't know the names of, sorry ?
@Legendoftherock18 күн бұрын
I wonder if this is the same for bluegrass playing (improv with constant fluid lines). Scales, arps, and licks, guys and gals!
@milesgrooms734316 күн бұрын
I think you could use this technique. You could take one chord within the standard bluegrass progression (put it on a loop) and play slowly with as much accuracy possible, working through every note or “lick”/ideas as possible over each chord in the progression, in isolation. Then possibly looping the whole progression (slowly as well) and attempting to put all the licks and ideas together. You don’t get to think like this while playing or improvising!! Or take your favorite solo or chord playing (both!) and finding the tab (or learn by ear) and slow down the notes to a snails pace…..keeping your hands relaxed, accurate, with the least amount energy used for each note and hand position. I understand how it would be strange for improvised music but if you’re able to work through notes, licks, ideas slowly, bringing them up to speed and improvising should feel more comfortable. Or ensure you learn all the notes on the fretboard without any hesitation. Then learn all triad shapes and forms and be able to play them up and done the fretboard (once again, extremely slowly so you hade no doubts!) this would help immensely with improvising and crafting your on solos!!
@66szary27 күн бұрын
I wish he was around available for lessons... Przyjedź do Szkocji Łukasz...
@thesaw561413 күн бұрын
Where can I find like this teacher 😢
@CanadianDivergent13 күн бұрын
dude reminds me of UFC fighter.! awesome lesson!!
@andreaszeug369227 күн бұрын
pinky is not the weakest....it is the ringfinger
@federicoparatcha862327 күн бұрын
Depende bastante de cada persona
@Omega-wj8vf26 күн бұрын
I’m pretty he was talking about the left hand when saying that
@MassimoAngotzi24 күн бұрын
They depend on each other. When the pinky becomes stronger; the ring finger becomes nimbler. Have faith!
@Baerrock23 күн бұрын
Pinky is weak… and the Ringfinger is Slow… thats why many people think Ringfinger is weak
@bruncher1120 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/h4nRn4Knrax6hLM What the film (at least watch it from 18:00 min on) does not explain: You cannot move your ringfinger independently at the same precision than toe other fingers, and it even worsens on the deeper strings (due to the hand joint angle, it is easier over E4 than over E2). Ringfinger and pinkie even share the same flexor tendon. This tendon bifurcates shortly before its - then two - branches insert into the two fingers. Ringfinger and pinkie are a functional pair). Thus moving the ringfinger PRECISELY is more difficult than positioning the other fingers, including pinky. We take a lot of practice time daring not to move middlefinger or pinkies TOO FAR when we try to move our ringfingers. This holds for left and right hand, because their anatomy is the same. I am one of those 50+ years electric guitar students who are good in short, unfocused practicing.
@ClassicalGuitaristWannabe10 күн бұрын
Question is... are you practicing or giving yourself a performance?
@kateb686627 күн бұрын
how get one get in touch with this teacher for private tutoring ? I tried to find something through on the internet but to no avail...
@AnthonyClegg-d2v22 күн бұрын
A bit at a time is best.❤🎸.
@davpat21123 күн бұрын
Great lesson, hey are those artificial nails? They sound great and I am never able to get artificial to sound good, what's your secret? Thanks very much!
@michalwalenciak24789 күн бұрын
I loved when after two minutes I got annoyed and switched this shi.t. off 😂😂😂😂 I loved 😍🤩
@chadrew613 күн бұрын
I’ve practiced eight hours a day for decades and I did all sorts of things. It wasn’t a joke. The joke is that you don’t think practicing is any different from playing. Sure practicing does involve playing, but it also involves a lot of other things. Educate yourself.
@KrwiomoczBogurodzicy27 күн бұрын
[03:01] Mind-finger control [03:45] Economy [05:54] Demo [10:13] Actual demo
@ViajealduendeКүн бұрын
Paco de Lucia practiced 8 to 12 hours a day as do most of the greatest flamenco guitar players.