@LatchesPH: Playing fast can be easy or very difficult. The problem is a lot of people confuse speed with technique. Some things that are slow can be a lot harder to play than music that is faster because it's more complex. It's harder to play complex music at a slower pace than it is to play simple things fast. Musicians like Stochelo are amazing because they can play very complex music at incredible speeds. Django lives! :)
@ChiTown7721 So true. I've been playing 20something nps on an electric, playing Malmsteen, Rusty Cooley, Muris Varajic and pretty much everything from the 80s. Then I turned to Gypsy Jazz, and woahhhh, did I get a huge revelation!
Not only did my forearms die for weeks on end from playing acoustic like an electric guitar. One thing is just following a basic harmonic minor pattern, sweep through a few major/minor arp inversions etc over power chords. THIS is a ridiculously HARDER kinda hard.
Django...I feel...would be so...impressed..amazed..astonished..and delighted with the ongoing fascination for his Great Legacy of Guitar Music...and so should he be..!!
Look at that fat pick. Boy can he use it. Wonder how Django came up with this? Maybe just to prove a point to Segovia that he had what it took? Legend has it that when Segovia heard him play, he asked where the sheet music was, to which Django replied, "How can there be music? I just made it up!"
it was actually when he was recording a record with the quinette. the record label requested that django record 2 solo's, he decided to improvise one and this was the birth of improvization number 1. read this from the book "django" :)
Just think Django was making this piece sound like fingerstyle waaaay before Malmsteen ever figured out how to make his Classical pick style sound like fingerstyle.
Django était un génie, rien de plus à dire (sweeping, tapping, influence espagnol, classique et d'europe de l'Est), tout ça en 2min 57 et avec 2 doigts.
Bref un Mozart, Beethoven à la guitare.
Le passage en tapping à 1min40 est tellement beau, les passages type bourdonnement, pfff qu'est ce qu'il y à dire ??
Tout à fait exact, ce sont des octavados et pas du tapping, la différence je crois, c'est qu'il joue sur les frettes pour faire ressortir les harmoniques.
How did Django do this with two fingers? And I'm not just alluding to the technical prowess, but the phrasing, and sheer creativity, is just beyond my right brain creative abilities. Those lightning fast runs make no sense at all, but when you take it into context with the descending chord patterns it makes all the sense in the world.....genius!
This interpretation of Improvisation n°1 by Stochelo is just awesome!!! I tried to learn this piece for month and I just know that I will never reach this level of playing... Playing fast is easy but playing fast with this sound is just impossible...
Merveilllllleux =D
zzznaviizzz 1 year ago
@LatchesPH: Playing fast can be easy or very difficult. The problem is a lot of people confuse speed with technique. Some things that are slow can be a lot harder to play than music that is faster because it's more complex. It's harder to play complex music at a slower pace than it is to play simple things fast. Musicians like Stochelo are amazing because they can play very complex music at incredible speeds. Django lives! :)
ChiTown7721 1 year ago 2
@ChiTown7721 So true. I've been playing 20something nps on an electric, playing Malmsteen, Rusty Cooley, Muris Varajic and pretty much everything from the 80s. Then I turned to Gypsy Jazz, and woahhhh, did I get a huge revelation!
Not only did my forearms die for weeks on end from playing acoustic like an electric guitar. One thing is just following a basic harmonic minor pattern, sweep through a few major/minor arp inversions etc over power chords. THIS is a ridiculously HARDER kinda hard.
jan1080 1 year ago
Django...I feel...would be so...impressed..amazed..astonished..and delighted with the ongoing fascination for his Great Legacy of Guitar Music...and so should he be..!!
guitarpicka1 2 years ago
Look at that fat pick. Boy can he use it. Wonder how Django came up with this? Maybe just to prove a point to Segovia that he had what it took? Legend has it that when Segovia heard him play, he asked where the sheet music was, to which Django replied, "How can there be music? I just made it up!"
williamanesbitt 2 years ago
it was actually when he was recording a record with the quinette. the record label requested that django record 2 solo's, he decided to improvise one and this was the birth of improvization number 1. read this from the book "django" :)
SamiKun 2 years ago
1:40 ce n'est pas un tapping mais des harmoniques tapées!
cette impro enveloppe de manière générale Django et elle est l'une des plus difficiles à jouer !
DERTYKINDER 2 years ago
Just think Django was making this piece sound like fingerstyle waaaay before Malmsteen ever figured out how to make his Classical pick style sound like fingerstyle.
pokbacsi100 3 years ago 6
@pokbacsi100 Malmsteen is Django's bottom bitch!
dongpingog 1 year ago
wow, wow, and f*****g WOW!
MARTINBENITO 3 years ago 3
Django était un génie, rien de plus à dire (sweeping, tapping, influence espagnol, classique et d'europe de l'Est), tout ça en 2min 57 et avec 2 doigts.
Bref un Mozart, Beethoven à la guitare.
Le passage en tapping à 1min40 est tellement beau, les passages type bourdonnement, pfff qu'est ce qu'il y à dire ??
Rien, juste à Écouter
jphoenix001 3 years ago
le passage dont tu parles a 1min40 c'est pas plutot des harmoniques ? (des octavados ou quelque chose comme ca ...)
super commentaire ! je suis de cet avis la aussi (qui ne l'est pas ? ^^)
Lousticdrummer 3 years ago
Tout à fait exact, ce sont des octavados et pas du tapping, la différence je crois, c'est qu'il joue sur les frettes pour faire ressortir les harmoniques.
Bien vu :)
jphoenix001 3 years ago
Stochelo è sinonimo di classe ed eleganza.
Sampinis 3 years ago 2
How did Django do this with two fingers? And I'm not just alluding to the technical prowess, but the phrasing, and sheer creativity, is just beyond my right brain creative abilities. Those lightning fast runs make no sense at all, but when you take it into context with the descending chord patterns it makes all the sense in the world.....genius!
tinian33 3 years ago
tab for this?
l3t4l 3 years ago
This interpretation of Improvisation n°1 by Stochelo is just awesome!!! I tried to learn this piece for month and I just know that I will never reach this level of playing... Playing fast is easy but playing fast with this sound is just impossible...
See you in hell Stochelo
LatchesPH 4 years ago 14
@LatchesPH me too in my opinion better than django
Topkopsd12 8 months ago
animalllllllllllllllllllllllllll
whatetwat 4 years ago
Stochelo quite young here :) Nice video, good playing.
fr3das 4 years ago
This is Django's improvisation No. 1.
minaees 4 years ago
that's right.. a real masterpiece
shakti9 4 years ago
Bireli and Stochelo are really da shit!
Warmonger0077 4 years ago