Week 1: Setting Sails!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of the "Music YOU Love" practice challenge!
↓ Happy Sharing! ↓
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Sons de Carrilhões
One of the first composers that came to my mind when thinking of music of the world was the Brazillian jazz guitarist Carlos Barbosa-Lima (no relation to the Barbosa from Pirates of the Caribbean ).
I looked up some of his music on YouTube and I found a video where he was playing a bunch of his favorites. He started playing this song, and I thought, man, that sounds really fun - and familiar. Turns out it was the classic song Sons de Carrilhões by another Brazillian composer/guitarist João Pernambuco.
I thought, what the heck? Let's give it a try! What could possibly go wrong?
Anyhow, here's my first recording of just the A section at a slower tempo to make sure I don't screw up too much...
(And, yes, I'm aware that there is a lesson on it here in Tonebase.)
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Hi Everyone! I would love to join the challenge this time and share some folk songs from my country, Indonesia. The arrangements are by Iwan Tanzil, an Indonesian guitarist who lives in Berlin.
I've been playing his arrangements of Indonesian folk songs over the years, and in the process of recording 12 of them into an album.For a start, I thought I will share a YouTube video that I made 2 months ago, but would surely upload new videos of the pieces I am still learning to this challenge.
This song is from my home town, Jakarta and it's titled Kicir-Kicir.
Kicir Kicir is a traditional song of Betawi people from Jakarta. The lyrics of the song actually consists of poems that have rhymes at the end of each sentence (similar to limericks). Each of these poems contains advice or consolation with a sense of humor, a very typical character of Betawi people.
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Lars Owe Walter – Int å begripe
Here is a piece of music from Sweden that I found in one of my books. The composer (b. 1946) teaches guitar at Musikhögskolan Ingesund in Sweden. The title means, ‘not to understand’ and is inspired by a Swedish poem of the same name. I guess the idea is that you don’t have to understand, just feel.