
General Live Stream Suggestions! (Megathread)
Hi everyone-
This is Mircea, head of live content at tonebase!
Let's use this thread as a place for any general live stream suggestions you might have that don't warrant an entirely new thread.
Examples may include:
- topics we should cover in future live streams
- new live stream format ideas
- people we should try to bring on as guests
- anything else you would like to see on tonebase LIVE!
If you'd rather start a new thread for an individual person or topic suggestion, feel free to do that too!
We will use this thread as a place to centralize suggestions, but feel free to suggested these in individual threads, if you prefer.
Happy posting!
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Either a topic in a livestream, or maybe a captive topic, but would be great to see in real time “learn a new piece”. I know Thomas Viloteau has a lesson on this, but it’s working with a piece he already knew somewhat. Would be good to see how the sausage is made so to speak ina professional kitchen
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A few suggestions for topics not directly related to practicing/playing the guitar:
(i) interview with a luthier about how guitars are made, why some guitars sound better than others, character of different tone woods, and so on.
(ii) biographical overview (possibly with a historical specialist) of some famous guitarist of the past - i.e. Bryan Jeffrey on Sor, Thomas Heck on Giuliani, Graham Wade on Segovia.
(iii) discussion from the perspective of psychology on music and performance: how does musical memory work; why do so many of us get nervous on stage (or in front of a videocamera)?
(iv) organological account of the development of the guitar from its emergence in the renaissance to its arrival in the early twentieth century in the form we know today. (Something similar to what Brandon presented, but restricted to the guitar family, and with more detail.)
(v) Another idea for Brandon, for those interested in historical instruments: "Getting started in Early Music" - where to begin (which instrument?); how to find a luthier (and later a teacher); taking the first steps using a modern guitar.
(vi) overview of online guitar resources: how to find legal scores on the net (IMSLP, Boije, etc.); where to find high quality performance videos (GSI, Siccas, Partita Studio, etc.); where to ask questions or join discussions (apart from here!): (Delcamp, earlyguitar.ning, etc.).
(vii) a couple of guitarists I would enjoy hearing interviewed: Marcin Dylla and Petra Polackova (to name just two of many!).
Sorry, that's a lot of suggestions! I'm just 'thinking out loud' ...
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I think about Paco de Lucia and all the flamenco forums and YouTube videos with guitarists claiming they understand the secret to his picado--and it's all filled with disagreement. As far as I know, no one ever sat down with the master himself and had him detail in his own words the mechanics of his picado. On the classical guitar side of this, the only person who seems to have anything close to this status is Manuel Barrueco. There are so many players who consider his technique to be the perfect example, and yet, like PDL, no one has sat down with him and discussed in great detail the mechanics of his technique. It's almost like interviewers are afraid to bore the master with trivial questions about technique, but I think it would be a real shame if it never happens. Once they are gone, there's no going back. How great would it be to have a video of Ida Presti or Django Reinhardt or Segovia, telling us about their technique? So, that is my recommendation for a workshop, Manuel Barrueco, but I'd also like to suggest more workshops with other players who will not be around forever and have a lot of insight about the guitar and its history. John Williams or Oscar Ghiglia or ?
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Mircea I't would be good to have advice on creating a repertoire. There are a lot of excellent courses on individual pieces on the site now, and it would be good to have guidance on selecting a set to learn at each ability level. For example an intermediate set that would cover phrasing, articulation, speed improvements, baroque, classical, modern etc.
Follow on events could perhaps focus in more detail on individual aspect of the chosen repertoires. Personally, I like being told what to learn :)
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Mircea How about a live stream on "El Decamerón Negro"?
I seem to remember you saying on the live stream with Steve Goss that it's one of those pieces you can play at any stage of the party no matter how drunk you are...
I could imagine a few of us would be interested, Jaime probably. Your maestro's lesson on Tonebase is nice, but I'd like to go into a bit more detail.