【返回首页/索引页】

   The classical guitar has the amazing ability to produce expressive melodies, complex chords, flowing arpeggios, and multiple, independent parts simultaneously - all with just six strings. It offers an incredible range of tonal possibilities as well, and it's able to create a broad range of colors and textures, from driving percussive rhythms to sweetly lyrical melodies - and everything in between.

此部分共[9]页:  1>>  2>>  3>>  4>>  5>>  6>>  7>>  8>>  9>>
〖 Classical.Guitar.Dummies by Michael Pilhofer and Holly Day (古典吉他入门)〗 
What You're Not to Read
  If you're the type who wants to start playing immediately, this section is for you, because we tell you what you can avoid reading - or at least what you don't have to read right away. For example, feel free to skip over any paragraph flagged with a Technical Stuff icon. Although this text offers in-depth information about the topic at hand, it isn't required reading and won't affect your ability to understand the concept fully or to play the music correctly. Similarly, sidebars - those gray boxes filled with text - are entertaining (we think) and offer something extra, but they don't contain vital information you're likely to miss.
  If you're really itching to play some music and want to just play through the written examples in the book, you can do that, too, and we won't be offended. If you decide to follow that course, we recommend that you at least read the paragraph immediately preceding the example - the one that references the figure number within the text. By reading the paragraph that introduces the figure, you won't miss any instructions that directly pertain to the written exercise or piece.
此部分共[9]页:  1>>  2>>  3>>  4>>  5>>  6>>  7>>  8>>  9>>
〖 Classical.Guitar.Dummies by Michael Pilhofer and Holly Day (古典吉他入门)〗 


Copyright:www.guitardyg.com@2009-2018