This thread is for the discussion of music in the Western classical tradition.
>How do I get into classical? This link has resources including audio courses, textbooks and selections of recordings to help you start to understand and appreciate classical music: pastebin.com/NBEp2VFh
Classical guitar is based Pieces written for it sound nice and are very cool to play in public Arrangements of pieces not written for it are probably based and teach you a lot but i'm too much of a scrub to learn them at the moment. youtube.com/watch?v=a1j_m2n7950
Evan Perez
The god that is my consciousness is very real and powerful.
Luke Kelly
Please explain in your own words the emotions this piece is trying to convey.
Jonathan Hughes
do a trick always late romantic guitar, though, where my Giuliani bois at
Blake Turner
i would answer but i think you're just trying to make some smartass point so i'm gonna ask you why do you want to know
Owen Sanders
hopeful nostalgia, the feeling of returning, pleasant restlessness, and also it's basically flamenco so, that
Jaxon Green
Because every musical piece has it's purpose. >basically flamenco so not classical
Lincoln Rogers
>Because every musical piece has it's purpose. yes: pleasure >not classical I guess Haydn's settings of folksong aren't classical either, or anything that anyone's ever written based on folksong, from Weber to Grieg to Dvorak to Bartok, huh you retarded turdpile
>Because every musical piece has it's purpose. Hmmm no? I don't really think so, music has to evoke something but that thing doesn't need to be so concrete that it can be summarized to a human emotion or a story or a person. These things are too precise for music. As long as there are no lyrics involved, such things should only be a suggestion, lest the piece become cheap, and its goals low hanging fruit.
As for El Albaicin, for me it evokes pretty much what the composer intented, spain, andalusia, the arid climate, the architecture (arab, like elements of spanish music), flamenco, that sort of thing. Andalusia: The Song.
Christopher Jenkins
the purpose is pleasure, this has been already established, ignore the pseud