Vanessa,
You never cease to amaze me. Every video you post shows your skill. All I can say is keep them coming! Your efforts, along with everyone else's keeps me inspired to keep plugging away and try to improve.
Thanks,
Dave
nesh16041972 learning to play Bourree in Em acoustic guitar
Vanessa, that was done amazingly well! I was most impressed with your left hand and how you seemed to have perfected the relaxed, minimal motion required to play something this challenging. It's really obvious that you've played this song a lot and that your muscle memory is working well.
I attempted Bourree about a year ago which I think was before I was really ready to play something that challenging. Someday I hope to re-learn it and get it right.
-Tom
I attempted Bourree about a year ago which I think was before I was really ready to play something that challenging. Someday I hope to re-learn it and get it right.
-Tom
Very well done, Vanessa, as always! Seeing this song posted twice this week really makes me want to have a go at it sometime. I also seem to remember Marc posting a very nice version of it a while back.
Thanks for sharing- I really enjoyed it!
Suzi
Thanks for sharing- I really enjoyed it!
Suzi
That was absolutely stunning, Vanessa -- one of the most amazing performances I've seen on TG. Normally after seeing such a terrific job done on a song, I get the urge to learn the song. But that one looks way too difficult for me to tackle, so I'm just going to appreciate your version over and over.
Ness,
Neil called it a "classical mordent". I looked that up, see below.
I just watch the B2 video section again and realized that I was playing it wrong anyway, haha.
As for suggestions for your next post, surprise us. I am going with one of Hector's lessons I think.
http://www.totallyguitars.com/target-so ... .html#song
From Wikipedia:
In music, a mordent is an ornament indicating that the note is to be played with a single rapid alternation with the note above or below. Like trills, they can be chromatically modified by a small flat, sharp or natural accidental. The term comes from the Latin mordere, meaning "to bite." The upper mordent is indicated by a short squiggle; the lower mordent is the same with a short vertical line through it:
MattMassachusetts