Cracking The Code - Season 1 - 1080p & 720p Resolutions

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Added on August 29, 2015 by bluesman101in Other > Tutorials
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Cracking The Code - Season 1 - 1080p & 720p Resolutions (Size: 21.08 GB)
 Ep. 1 - Rock to the Future - 720p.mov867.29 MB
 Ep. 2 - Rise of the Viking - 720p.mov654.14 MB
 Ep. 3 - A Pick and a Hard Place - 720p.mov818.67 MB
 Ep. 4 - Speed Trap - 720p.mov945.52 MB
 Ep. 5 - Los Tres Enemigos - 720p.mov609.12 MB
 Ep. 6 - Punched Out - 720p.mov1.07 GB
 Ep. 7 - Lix et Veritas - 720p.mov1.33 GB
 Ep. 8 - Fast Forward - 720p.mov899.22 MB
 Ep. 1 - Rock to the Future - 1080p.mov1.65 GB
 Ep. 2 - Rise of the Viking - 1080p.mov1.28 GB
 Ep. 3 - A Pick and a Hard Place - 1080p.mov1.55 GB
 Ep. 4 - Speed Trap - 1080p.mov1.83 GB
 Ep. 5 - Los Tres Enemigos - 1080p.mov1.18 GB
 Ep. 6 - Punched Out - 1080p.mov2.15 GB
 Ep. 7 - Lix et Veritas - 1080p.mov2.63 GB
 Ep. 8 - Fast Forward - 1080p.mov1.72 GB


Description

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Season 1 1080p Resolution
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Season 1 720p Resolution
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Season 1 of Cracking the Code is a rocking documentary that recounts the story of virtuoso guitar amid the unprecedented flowering of technique in the ’80s. Across 8 episodes, and nearly 1.5 hours of analysis, it sets out the core technical challenges of the instrument — challenges which we’ll soon surmount in Seasons 2 and 3.

Why is the guitar so difficult? If the question itself wasn’t always so obvious, it’s only because we were too busy being blown away. Eddie Van Halen had stunned the world with the subversive creativity of his tapping. Randy Rhoads had unlocked a centuries-old treasure trove of classical music influences. Then Yngwie Malmsteen elevated picking fluency to incomprehensible heights of mechanized precision.
To us kids, it was all pure sorcery. Nobody knew where the genius came from — we just kept dropping the needles on our vinyl records, gazing into the spiraling grooves like Nostradamus into his lantern. At best, we could hope for a revelation. Mostly, what we got was frustration.
And it turns out, that’s exactly what we needed.

Episode Guide

Episode 1: Rock to the Future
Things were hurtling rapidly forward. We had shaved the mustaches and the sideburns. We were aerobicizing. We were moonwalking. Every garage housed fuel-injected cylinders, and in every living room sat a teenager twisting a Rubik’s Cube and winning at Pitfall. (Or a nice game of chess.) And as our home entertainment was chasing Moore’s Law, so was our guitar technique.
In the ’80s, the relentless pursuit of perfection turned rock guitar into a kind of pre-Wright Brothers scramble for innovation. Eddie Van Halen, the decade’s spiritual mentor, had blasted away convention with his iconoclastic tapping technique. For kids around the world, that was all the cue card we needed. The next breakthrough would come from us.

Episode 2: Rise of the Viking
Our pedals were digital and our headstocks were pointy. But our riffs were another story. They were still stuck in the past. And they were defiant. They hung out at the bar, dancing the hustle, and refused to leave even after the lights were turned on. Someone called security. And it turned out to be a long-distance call: all the way to Sweden.
Yngwie Malmsteen fused advanced technique with classical motifs to a degree few foresaw and fewer still could emulate. That the genesis was Yngwie’s idiosyncratic idolatry of classic rock guitar heroes and vintage gear was ironic, because his technical mastery fit perfectly with the prevailing vision of modernity. In an era of shiny and new, Yngwie had crafted a world of anachronistic fantasy. And overnight, it became the future.

Episode 3: A Pick and a Hard Place
While Eddie’s feats of fretboard wizardry often involved the sly subversion of traditional playing techniques, it was Yngwie’s rigorous and utter domination of them that was so shocking. And when guitarists attempted to match his athleticism, we ran headlong into an old foe: the pick itself.
From the moment that we learned there was life outside the blues, there was trouble. Scales and arpeggios, and devilish mixtures thereof, posed a host of torturous challenges that players in genres as far afield as jazz and bluegrass were already, unfortunately, all too familiar with.

Episode 4: Speed Trap
Over the course of the twentieth century, the wolf DNA of the blues diversified into myriad new forms of musical expression. The essential nature of rock as a vast recombinant conversation became only more apparent as recording media were developed which could capture its subtle evolution for the future.
But modern guitarists, with our rewinding tape decks, still had trouble copping solos note-for-note. The inherent imperfection of deciphering someone else’s rapid playing was actually a default source of creativity, as ideas were inadvertently transformed from one ear to the next. So what would happen, then, if you found a way to instantly freeze everything you heard?

Episode 5: The Three Enemigos
As the decade drew to a close, the pages of guitar magazines swelled with an eclectic palette of colors: heavy metal heroes and prog fantasists were now joined by the hometown hues of country and bluegrass. David Lee Roth built an MTV juggernaut around a music school alumnus. And an instrumental guitar solo by an underground fusion artist from Texas would eventually score a top-5 billboard hit and a Grammy. The limelight was as bright as ever, but the set design was no longer neon.
Somewhere in the distance, beyond the smoke machines and the flaming gongs, we felt the first muted tremors of change. The message was clear: adapt.

Episode 6: Punched Out
The path of discovery is less a gradual slog than a punctuated equilibrium of sudden insights. A chance meeting of CPU and sound had turned a toy synthesizer into the ultimate musical x-ray. Like a glass-bottom boat, it opened a window on a world that had existed only in imagination.
But as the pile of data grew, so did the frustration. Peeling back the armor of the guitar colossi only revealed even more complex rigging underneath. Rock videos and record collections had failed to provide all the answers. And this felt like a defeat. But that’s only because they had taken us as far as they could go. What we really needed now was a change of scenery.

Episode 7: Lix et Veritas
We sat in the front row. We took good notes. We did the readings. We had good class participation. We even aced the midterm. But none of it would matter: They cancelled the course.
If the ’80s had arrived like a vortex, instantly dispersing the sweaty haze of disco and decadence, their sudden, unheralded departure was all the more striking. The wholesale abandonment of fretboard frippery was so swift, that by the turn of the decade, any recording featuring two-handed tapping may as well have been delivered directly to a sandy sarcophagus. The search for clues to the mystery of guitar mastery could no longer take place on pop radio. But that only made it that much more urgent.

Episode 8: Fast Forward
If the secret sauce of a liberal education could be boiled down to one ingredient, it wouldn’t be humanities, and it wouldn’t even be beer. (Though a case could be made for sweatpants.) No, the ultimate enabler of the examined life would have to be none other than the singular catalyst of all great ideas since Pythagoras quit his day job at Dairy Queen: free time.
In the summer of 1991, Professor Malmsteen brought his medieval music appreciation class to VCRs everywhere. While pre-med students were busy pipetting their titrations, language majors, with only verbs to conjugate and almost no papers to write, were glued to their cathode ray tubes in an effort to deduce just what the good professor was trying to say.

Content Runtime: 1hr 59mins 03secs

WEBRip Format : MOV Video codec : MOV Audio codec : AAC Video : Video: MOV Video (MOV) 30fps Audio : Audio: AAC 48000Hz stereo

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Cracking The Code - Season 1 - 1080p & 720p Resolutions

All Comments

Thanks!
Spent the afternoon vegging in bed (that's where the big ass TV is) watching the whole thing. Pretty fun flashback down memory lane.

G
arent these all on youtube?
Yes. You are correct megaguitar. But, youtube weighs in at a whopping 480p whereas these are higher quality. So, if your a newcomer to the series, and want to enjoy them in 1080p this is the way to go. But, nothing wrong with going to youtube and enjoying them there. I, personally, converted them to .mp4 @ 1080p and burned them to DVD so I can enjoy them through my Playstation 4 on my 55" LCD. Maximizing the experience. They look awesome.
Cracking The Code. it is guitar lesson?
yes tis a guitar video
mr.bluesman more truefire pls.thank u verry much
THANK YOU!!! Great Series Of Lessons!!
Have a great day!!
thanks man do you have his rusty cooley lick ?
This was my request! thank you very much man! great work
Nice! This is awesome! Thank you.