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Friday Falseta - Alegrias Slur Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
Here’s a short but tricky Alegrias falseta that will really work both your left hand and your compás. In addition to some 16th note slurs that include a lot of pinky action, the phrases don’t quite resolve where we would expect them to. Once you’ve learned the notes, make sure you’re really comfo...
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Friday Falseta - Alegrias Escobilla Variation by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
Here’s a fun fasleta that’s relatively straightforward and will add variety to your Escobilla por Alegrias. The right hand is all P-M-A and the melody is mostly scale wise motion, using an E Major scale in the 6th position. It’s almost all triplets, so once you have the right hand down it’s all a...
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Friday Falseta - Alegrias Slur Falseta by Kai Narezo - SLOW / LOOP
Played slow and looped: a short but tricky Alegrias falseta that will really work both your left hand and your compás. In addition to some 16th note slurs that include a lot of pinky action, the phrases don’t quite resolve where we would expect them to. Once you’ve learned the notes, make sure yo...
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Friday Falseta - Alegrias Escobilla Variation by Kai Narezo - SLOW/LOOP
Here’s a fun fasleta that’s relatively straightforward and will add variety to your Escobilla por Alegrias. The right hand is all P-M-A and the melody is mostly scale wise motion, using an E Major scale in the 6th position. It’s almost all triplets, so once you have the right hand down it’s all a...
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Friday Falseta - Alegrias Slur Falseta by Kai Narezo - PERFORMANCE
Here’s a short but tricky Alegrias falseta that will really work both your left hand and your compás. In addition to some 16th note slurs that include a lot of pinky action, the phrases don’t quite resolve where we would expect them to. Once you’ve learned the notes, make sure you’re really comfo...
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Friday Falseta -Alegrias Escobilla Variation Falseta by Kai Narezo - PERFORMANCE
Here’s a fun fasleta that’s relatively straightforward and will add variety to your Escobilla por Alegrias. The right hand is all P-M-A and the melody is mostly scale wise motion, using an E Major scale in the 6th position. It’s almost all triplets, so once you have the right hand down it’s all a...
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Bulerias Explained - Phrasing Bulerías in Sixes - Discussion and Demonstration
Kai and percussionist Kassandra Kocoshis look at the two-feel and the three-feel in Bulerias - how they work together and against one another in real life. This videos is more of a discussion/demonstration than a tutorial, but should be helpful in showing how you can be more free in your use of r...
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Bulerias Explained - Level 1 - The Four Elements of Bulerias Compás- TUTORIAL
We look at a new way to organize your thinking about Bulerías compás that makes it easier to stay in compás no matter what.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 1 - Starting on 1 - TUTORIAL
How to start your Bulerías compás on beat 1, outside of the context of an intro or a Llamada. We look at a way of changing the first half of the compás while using the variations we’ve already learned for the second half.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - Remate by Vicente Amigo - TUTORIAL
While perhaps not technically a falseta (there’s no real definition that I know of, but this feels like a bit less than a falseta), this is a great little bit to throw in between falsetas or after the singer has finished a letra. Check out the way the melody connects to the 10-11-12 phrase that p...
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - Thumb Falseta by Paco de Lucia - TUTORIAL
We had to include at least on Paco de Lucia falseta in the course, and this one seems to have been one of Paco’s favorites, given how often he played it. There’s a lot going on, both rhythmically and technically, so take this one slow and make sure you understand where each phrase starts and stop...
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - ArpegScaleThumb Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
This Bulerías falseta starts out with a Major 7 sound (the Vicente Amigo influence) that combines arpeggio and picado, but it ends with a driving thumb figure that changes the energy of the falseta - and that can also be used on its own.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - Picado Falseta by Moraíto - TUTORIAL
Not only is this a great-sounding Bulerías falseta, it’s also a fantastic picado burst exercise. It also features some interesting phrasing and syncopation, so stay focused!
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - Good For Intro Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
This Bulerías Falseta combines arpeggio, picado, thumb and some left-hand stretches into a somewhat longer falseta than we’ve seen. It can be used as an introduction but also works anywhere else you’d play a falseta.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - Picado Falseta by Enrique Melchor - TUTORIAL
This picado falseta by Enrique Melchor features both the symmetric diminished scale, which is a staple of modern flamenco, and diminished arpeggios, which are somewhat more traditional. You may find you disagree with the fingerings given, which is fine if you find an easier way for you to play th...
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Bulerias Explained - Level 3 - A Minor Falseta by Sabicas - TUTORIAL
Sabicas was famous for his minor Bulerías, and this may be his most famous falseta of all. It’s almost all picado in eight notes, and the phrases start on beat 1 and 7 instead of the more common beats 12 and 6.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 1 & 2 - Incorporating Falsetas - TUTORIAL
In this crucial video for practicing to stay in compás as you add falsetas to your Bulerías repertoire, we break it down and look at a simple exercise for reinforcing good compás.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 2 - Arpeggio Falseta by Viejín - TUTORIAL
This arpeggio falseta features some beautiful chords - and melodies within each chord - as well as some tricky syncopated anticipations of the downbeat of each phrase. You can also play the chord progression with rasgueados rather than arpeggios, or you can do both, as we do here.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 2 - Syncopated Falseta by Kai Narezo- TUTORIAL
Probably the most jubilant falseta in the whole Bulerías course, this one has some interesting staccato syncopation at the beginning, and continues to some syncopated versions of otherwise traditional phrasing.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 2 - Thumb Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
This Bulerías falseta - which can also be thrown in as a “detalle” (literally a detail, this can be a short flourish or something less than a falseta that you throw in somewhere) - features a great thumb and index technique that’s unique to flamenco, as well as a different kind of 6-beat phrase.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 2 - Thumb & Slur Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
This Bulerías falseta starts on 11 and then goes on to a phrase that’s one and a half compáses long. The repeat features an extended ending with a very syncopated rhythm, and the falseta ends on 10.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 2 - Picado Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
A picado falseta that is traditionally phrased with 8th notes.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 1 - Arpeggio Falseta by Kai Narezo - TUTORIAL
A relatively simple falseta that is traditionally phrased with 8th notes starting on beat 12 and ending on beat 6, until the final longer phrase which starts on 12 and end on beat 6 of the next compás.
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Bulerias Explained - Level 1 - Alzapua Falseta Traditional - TUTORIAL
This Alzapua falseta is relatively simple but has one new feature, which is that rather than start on beat 12 it starts on beat 11. Thinking of beat 11 as a pickup to a downbeat on beat 12 can help make this feel more natural.