Play Spanish Guitar Music

Play Spanish Guitar Music

In spite of being a greatly simplified version of Asturias, even to being set in a different key (the original is high up the neck of the guitar), this piece makes a satisfying and exciting first solo for students wanting to start classical guitar. It sounds more difficult than it really is. 

This boy plays a shortened version of this piece, much more like what I have offered on this page,  with a couple of added chords. Notice how nicely he extends his thumb: 

Understanding

The arrangement below is a study or homework version, so my beginners can figure out the tablature and get more familiar with regular notereading.  

Easy Spanish Guitar Tabs: An Essential Guide To Playing Spanish Guitar

How? We compare each note to the tab for it in the Tablature-Staff Note-reading guide , take a pencil, and write it into the empty tablature.  See page 1 (three pages altogether).

Here is a complete version all on one page, with tiny notes and very little in the way of finger markings. It is handy to use once you have the basic idea of the piece:

For a correct classical hand position, be sure the thumb plucks off to the side of the hand, so it doesn't meet the fingers. (I recommend purchasing a book such as Frederick Noad's Solo Guitar Playing, which has photographs to help students position their hands and bodies correctly... or find a teacher with a classical background!)

Spanish Guitar Strumming Techniques: Book And Video Lessons By Edina Balczó — Kickstarter

The left hand 2 will be placed on A, the 2nd fret of the G string, and stay there for the remainder of the piece.

If you are not familiar with reading staff notation, listen to one of the videos on this page (not Asturias, but Spanish Study, below) and notice where the rhythm changes from a feeling of 1-2, 1-2, 1-2, 1-2, 1-2, 1-2, to a feeling of 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3.

A good way to practice this study is to leave off the high E (string 1) and play the thumb melody alone. This is very helpful for struggling note-readers.

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Preparatory to starting this piece, it is a good idea to have your guitar students play short scales on each string, using each fret up to fret 5. Starting at string 6 (Low E), that would sound like:

Open E, F (fret one), F sharp (fret two), G, G sharp, A. Next string: open A, A sharp, B, C, C sharp, D... Next string: open D, etc.

I like to do this next to a piano so kids can see that there are no black notes between B and C, and E and F. Otherwise we use a paper keyboard .

Play Solos In Spanish And Flamenco Guitar

Unless they understand that the distance between notes is not always the same, they will always be baffled by note-reading on the guitar.

The two-page version below is just the same,  but it has finger markings on more measures and large notes to make it easy to see! 

Notice in measure 9 that the B is fingered with a 1, even though it is a 2nd-fret note; this is to facilitate playing, since the 2nd finger just played an E (and should stay there through the next measure). 0, of course, means open string.

Spanish Guitar Chords To Master

Just before measure 17, the left hand plays the B with a 1 finger again, because in measure 17 finger 2 must quickly snap down on an A.

In the second half of the piece, some of the notes are fingered differently than in the first half, because the 2 finger is busy keeping the A note pressed down on the G string for the entire second half. 

Keep it pressed down! In measure 20, we meet a B note again, once again fingered with a 1 even though the C in the next fret is fingered with a 3. 

Easy

Learn Flamenco Guitar

For kids breaking into classical guitar, going cold turkey off of tablature may be very scary. I like to help them out with just the first few measures written in tab along with standard notation. 

After playing entirely through this lovely piece, you can figure out why it is called a study or etude - all the right hand fingers get their turn to be part of a pattern, and it is tiring until your hand builds up strength.  

Don't overdo it at first!  I mean it - you must be cautious with the small muscles of your arms and fingers.

Spanish Guitar Chill Out, Acoustic Chill Out, Acoustic Guitar Music

Here is a final version of Asturias, played by guitarist John Williams. He gives an informative introduction and history to this piece:

Tells the riveting story of the time when  Jews in ancient Persia faced a foe named Haman, and how a  brave young queen risked her life to save her people.

This book is available as a digital download  from this site.  Visit this page to see some free examples from the book.

Spanish Guitar Stock Videos And Royalty Free Footage

And when they start reading white-key notes on the staff, this is a fun easy resource to say each week, Choose a new black-key song at home this week and figure it out to show me next lesson!  They will be spending more time at the piano.

The Adventures of Tonsta highlight the travels of a very young boy with a good heart, who goes about helping folk in trouble.  

How

With a red cap on his head and a sack of tools slung over his shoulder, Tonsta seems to meet people in distress wherever he goes.

The First Step: How To Play The Spanish Guitar By A.f. Cramer And Geoffrey Sisley: Good Soft Cover (1962) Second Edition.

Thank you for a most excellent site. I am a classical guitar teacher, who endeavors to cover chords and fingerstyle as well. I especially liked the printable Celtic music, as some of my teenage students enjoy it! Thank you, again.

Matt: THIS SITE IS AMAZING!! I've been teaching guitar for about 5 years now, and I've only just found your website! (I could really have used it 5 years ago) :-)  

I teach at primary schools every week day for about 4 hours, so the beginner tabs you have are ideal. Thank you so much for your hard work getting these on the web, you have made many children very happy!!

Young Woman Sits In A Guitar Shop Ready To Play Stock Photo

Do you have a story or a question about teaching guitar? Do you think it is a hard instrument for beginners, or easy? What have been your challenges?

Please note that all comments are moderated, and will not appear until I have approved them. Also, IF YOU ARE ASKING FOR MUSIC THAT IS NOT IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN, YOUR REQUEST WILL BE IGNORED. That's pretty much any music written in the last 75 years...

Like some of you, I've been playing the piano since early childhood, and have added a few other instruments along the way, plus an interest in arranging and composing music.Initially, flamenco guitar music was just used as part of the rhythm given to the cantaor and the bailaor. Both were the main characters of the performance and the music was secondary.

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) started to be considered indispensable. As time went by and artists’ professionalism rose, guitarists performed solo as well, proving to the audience that musicians could also be virtuosos in the flamenco world.

Easy

The flamenco guitar is slightly different than the classical guitar. It is lighter and it produces a very particular sound, more percussive and austere than the classical guitar.

A flamenco guitar typically has a thinner top and less internal bracing than a classical guitar. It also features what is known as a tap plate, similar to a pickguard, which protects the guitar body from the rhythmic finger taps of the player.

How Classical Guitar Arrived In Spain And Then The Rest Of The World

(capo) – a device that clamps down across the fingerboard at a particular fret on a guitar. This helps to raise the pitch of a guitar, making its sound sharper. It also allows to change the key of the guitar to match the singer’s vocal range

Remember that flamenco is all about improvisation and tradition. So traditional flamenco music is rarely written down. Instead, it is passed down from generation to generation.

Flamenco guitarists hold their instruments differently than classical guitarists. Rather than supporting the guitar on the right leg and at an incline, they usually cross their legs and place the neck of the guitar parallel to the floor. This position allows for better leverage of the instrument, and eases the player’s ability to switch quickly between different

Music Performances — Stephen Bond

The way of playing it also includes a mixture of different percussive and rhythmic techniques. It is common for eighth note triplets to be mixed with sixteenth note runs in a single bar. Finger taps (

Therefore, the guitarist or tocaor (from the Spanish verb tocar, meaning to touch or to play) combines techniques from the classical school, flamenco unique patterns and, finally, improvisation.

In order to acquire these techniques and to develop the art of improvisation, the guitarist spends endless hours learning routines, practicing and listening to others. It’s the only way to follow the cantaor – who’s the real leader of the cuadro, with the same spontaneity, instinct and ability than the cantaor‘s one.

Amazon.com:

The Spanish Guitar: Albums, Songs, Playlists

Nowadays, flamenco guitar music can be combined with other music resources: clapping hands, the cajón and the castañuelas. Nevertheless, a long time ago the espectáculos flamencos were performed without a guitar or any other instrument. The cantaores were the soul, music and words of the show.

Actually,

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