
-
Sudan army says retakes Khartoum-area market from paramilitaries
-
Eze leads Crystal Palace into FA Cup semi-finals
-
Guinea ex-dictator freed from jail after 2009 massacre pardon: junta
-
Martinez punishment 'out of Flick's hands' as Barca focus on title
-
Hundreds of thousands join Istanbul protest rally
-
Australian sprinting prodigy Gout Gout upstaged in 200m
-
'We need aid': rescuers in quake-hit Myanmar city plead for help
-
Are women allowed their own dreams, wonders Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
-
Deadly earthquake forces Thai patients into sports hall
-
'Everyone was screaming': quake shocks Thailand tourists
-
Rallies grow in South Korea as court weighs president's fate
-
Scientists explain why Myanmar quake was so deadly
-
Turkey opposition calls mass rally in Istanbul
-
French chefs quake as Michelin prepares new guide
-
Mike Leigh on the 'hard truths' of film, happiness and World War III
-
Lights out: Bali guards protect island's day of silence
-
UK gallery to return Nazi-looted painting to heirs of Jewish collector
-
UK dreams of US trade deal before Trump tariffs
-
'Blink of an eye': survivor tells of Bangkok skyscraper collapse horror
-
The hand of GOAT, Mensik wins with Messi touch
-
Partial solar eclipse to cross swathe of Northern Hemisphere
-
Tunisian startup turns olive waste into clean energy
-
Guinea ex-dictator sentenced for 2009 massacre pardoned: junta
-
Chapman ton lifts New Zealand to 344-9 in first Pakistan ODI
-
Myanmar quake: what we know
-
Vu fires 64 to seize lead at LPGA Ford Championship
-
Resurgent Liu wins women's figure skating world title
-
Rescuers dig for survivors after huge quake hits Myanmar, Thailand
-
South Korea firefighters deploy helicopters as wildfires reignite
-
'Defiant' Canada autoworkers vow to fight tariff layoffs
-
Performance, museums, history: Trump's cultural power grab
-
Russian-born 12-ranked Kasatkina says to play for Australia tennis
-
Wallabies back Jorgensen suffers serious ankle injury
-
UN rights chief demands end to 'horrific suffering' in Ukraine
-
Djokovic oozing confidence ahead of century bid
-
US regulators to investigate Disney diversity efforts
-
Elon Musk says xAI startup buying X platform
-
'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate
-
Leverkusen beat Bochum to stay hot on Bayern's heels
-
Dorival Junior sacked as Brazil coach after Argentina humiliation
-
Djokovic cruises past Dimitrov into Miami Open final
-
No.1 Scheffler ties Houston Open record with 62 to grab lead
-
Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade
-
Vance says Denmark has 'under invested' in Greenland
-
Green light for Winter Olympics bobsleigh slope
-
Musk's DOGE team emerges from the shadows
-
Film stars blast Academy for 'failing to defend' Palestinian filmmaker
-
Record fine for UK university renews free speech row
-
Grizzlies fire head coach Jenkins: team
-
Table-topping Bengaluru thrash Chennai by 50 runs in IPL

Marcin: a guitarist so good, he's accused of faking it
Polish guitar prodigy Marcin, whose virtuoso performances have won celebrity fans and been viewed millions of times online, has a technique so fast and complex that he is regularly accused of tricking listeners.
"I'm a little bit annoyed that some people think it's fake... but it's good that there's a discussion," the 24-year-old told AFP in Paris last week as he began a European and North American tour with around 40 dates.
Whether performing Chopin, Nirvana, Dr. Dre or Stevie Wonder, Marcin Patrzalek has perfected a technique that creates the sound of a full band with just his acoustic Ibanez guitar.
He strikes the body with his right palm to create the bass drum sound, and raps it with his finely filed nails, flamenco-style, for other percussion.
At the same time, his fingers race across the strings, producing bass, rhythm and lead guitar in a whirlwind of movement.
After studying under Spanish flamenco guitar master Carlos Pinana, the wonder from Kielce, southeastern Poland, decided to take his own path.
"I didn't want to mimic anyone, I didn't want to be like anyone else. So I was trying to do something unique," he explained.
On Instagram, his videos almost always surpass a million views, while clips with an incredulous Wyclef Jean of The Fugees — "That's amazing!" -- and actor Will Smith have far more.
Smith was so impressed that he ended up featuring Marcin on his recent track "First Love".
- The dilemma -
"Guitar has always been very natural and fun," added Marcin, who does not come from a family of musicians and only picked up the instrument for the first time at around age 10.
As a teenager, he won Mam Talent!, the Polish version of America's Got Talent, and a few years later, in 2019, he reached the semifinals of the US edition after moving there for his studies.
Today, the show-off techniques that made him famous remain a powerful magnet for clicks online -- but they can also be a trap.
"For many people, the technique is a good way of impressing them," he explained. "If you're scrolling on your phone or you're going through Spotify or something and you hear something that's like: 'Wow, how is this possible?', of course, you want to learn more.
"But the problem is that eventually it gets too repetitive. You don't want everything to be super fast and super technical."
This presents a dilemma: "On the one hand if I post something online I want it to be seen by millions of people. On the other hand, I want to post new things all the time and change."
On his latest album, "Dragon in Harmony", released in September, a more stripped-down classical style emerges at times -- less "Instagrammable" but coexisting with his signature spectacular tracks.
"Classical music is the core of all music," Marcin stressed.
At La Maroquinerie, the venue in Paris where he started his tour, Chopin's Nocturnes and Bach's Toccata featured alongside a Nirvana cover.
"The fact that it (my music) reaches many people who don't usually listen to classical music is a lucky accident," he said. "I just want to play music I like and do it in my own way."
O.Salvador--PC