CANdYRAT: Antoine Dufour Transcriptions Review

by Greg

CANdYRAT Records, specializing in acoustic guitar music across a variety of genres (blues, jazz, vocal, modern) seems to have made something of a splash on YouTube, with artists Antoine Dufour and Andy McKee, among others, racking up hundreds of thousands of views of their performances. One of the company’s particular strengths is knowing how to leverage free or easily implemented Web technologies in the marketing of their comparatively low-tech recording and artist preferences. In that sense the company is fairly progressive, despite a rootsy feel to their brand. This, coupled with high-quality, very reasonably priced products, lends a feeling that the company is genuinely in love with its work and even likes its customers — a feeling I haven’t gotten from a record company in, well, forever.

Granted, I’m not exactly immersed in the scene, or any scene for that matter, but I’ve found CANdYRAT’s approach to be accessible and inspiring.

This is CANdYRAT artist Antoine Dufour, playing “Song for Stephen”:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgsB_xA2G0I

So motivated was I by this video, and others by Dufour and Andy McKee, that I clicked on over to the CANdYRAT site and purchased a download of Dufour’s transcriptions.

“Transcriptions Set 5″, snagged for $14.95 USD, turned out to be a great buy. The download includes three transcriptions in standard notation and tablature, provided both in Adobe PDF and Guitar-Pro formats. Also included are the three songs in MP3 format. The songs in this download were “Song for Stephen“, “30 Minutes in London“, and “Reality“. Because these performances are available on YouTube for viewing, they serve as amazing tools for learning some of the more involved techniques which seem easy — but aren’t — at the hands of a fingerstyle master like Dufour.

The transcriptions are very high quality and I haven’t, so far, discovered any inaccuracies or glaring errors. They’re doing a good job of helping the songs get under my fingers.

Caveat: These transcriptions are not tutorials and if you’re still working on a smooth C to G transition, you’re going to be bummed when trying to pick up Andy McKee’s Rylynn or his take on Toto’s Africa — these aren’t made-easy versions.

But if you’ve got some experience and a little patience, the transcriptions do offer a wonderful opportunity to learn some new tunes, especially when paired with the YouTube videos, which can clear up any questions about fingering or phrasing.

Artists Andrew White, Craig D’Andrea, Peter Ciluzzi (who plays music because he needs to, according to his brief bio, which has got to be the cheesiest ever), also have transcriptions available.

Nice stuff. Highly recommended.