What's Inside Flamenco Explained
A complete look at what your membership includes — before you commit to a single dollar.There’s no teaser content, no free preview tier, no algorithm deciding what you see next. It’s a complete library of flamenco guitar education, built and taught by Kai Narezo from Granada, Spain — and organized so you can actually use it.
23 Courses
Structured Coursees
17 Palos
and More Coming
125+ FALSETAS
+PDFs included
Over 900
High Quality Videos And Counting
23 Courses
Structured Courses
17 Palos
and More Coming
125+ Falsetas
+PDFs included
Over 900
High Quality Videos And Counting
The Camino — a guided learning path
When you join, you answer a few questions about where you are as a player. This is just to see where you are on your flamenco journey. Based on your answers, you’re placed into one of six Camino levels:
- Level 1 — Brand new to guitar and to flamenco
- Level 2 — You play guitar (some or a lot), but you’re new to flamenco
- Level 3 — You play some flamenco, but compás isn’t yet solid
- Level 4 — Your compás is solid and you know the common palos
- Level 5 — Ready for advanced material in Seguirillas, Tarantos, Soleá Por Bulerías and more
- Level 6 — Getting you ready to gig and accompany
Your Camino level gives you a recommended starting point and a path forward. You’re never locked in — you can move levels, repeat a level, or skip ahead. And at any Camino level, you have full access to the entire 900+ lesson library. The structure is there when you need it. The freedom is there when you want it.
Prefer to explore on your own terms? The Explorer path skips the guided sequence and lets you navigate by course, palo, or falseta — whatever you want to work on next.
23 structured courses
Each course is a deep dive into a palo, technique, or accompaniment. You’re not just learning patterns — you’re learning how flamenco actually works.
Foundation courses
- Meet Your Guitar
- Introduction to Flamenco
- Cante Explained
- Cante Play-Along
- Technique Bootcamp
Palo courses
- Advanced Soleá
- Soleá — Escobilla Edition
- Soleá por Bulerías Explained
- Bulerías Explained — Level 1
- Bulerías Explained — Level 2
- Bulerías Explained — Level 3
- Alegrías Guitar Explained
- Alegrías Explained
- Tangos Explained
- Tientos Explained
- Seguirillas Explained
- Seguirilla — Escobilla Edition
- Farruca Explained
- Tarantas Explained
- Tarantos Explained
- Traditional Sevillanas
- Advanced Sevillanas — Marchena
- Rondeña Explained
Courses are organized in the Courses section of the platform and also accessible from each Palo page. TABs and music notation are built into their respective playlists — you don’t have to hunt for them separately.
17 palos — each with its own dedicated page
A palo is a style of flamenco — each with its own compás, its own character, its own history. Flamenco Explained covers 17 of them (so far). Every Palo page brings together everything we have on that style in one place:
- Palo Course
- Compás videos — how the rhythm works, with examples
- Falsetas — the full library for that palo (see below)
- Compás Bits — the little stuff that make flamenco personal (a dedicated series)
- Accompaniment — for palos where we have dance/cante accompaniment material
- Más — any additional content that belongs to that palo
The 17 palos
Soleá · Soleá por Bulerías · Bulerías · Alegrías · Tangos · Tientos · Seguirillas · Fandangos de Huelva · Guajira · Tarantas · Tarantos · Sevillanas · Granaína · Rondeña · Colombiana · Farruca · Tanguillos
We add new palos as the community asks for them. Zambra is in production now.
The falsetas library
A falseta is like a little flamenco guitar solo — it’s one of the building blocks of flamenco guitar composition and improvisation. Flamenco Explained has one of the most organized falsetas libraries available for online flamenco guitar study.
Every falseta in the library includes three videos:
- Performance — Kai plays the falseta up to speed, in context
- Tutorial — a full breakdown, explained step by step
- Slow/Loop — played slowly and looped, for practice and ear training
Each falseta also includes a downloadable TAB and notation PDF.
Falseta counts by palo:
- Soleá — 12
- Soleá por Bulerías — 8
- Bulerías — 36
- Alegrías — 17
- Tangos — 21
- Tientos — 4
- Seguirillas — 10
- Fandangos de Huelva — 5
- Guajira — 4
- Tarantas — 4
- Tarantos — 5
- Sevillanas — 8 Solo Guitar Sevillanas
- Granaína — 4
- Rondeña — 4
- Colombiana — 1
- Farruca — 5
- Tanguillos — 1
Falsetas come from Kai Narezo’s own compositions, traditional repertoire, and arrangements of some of Kai’s favorite falsetas by masters including Sabicas, Paco de Lucía, Tomatito, Moraíto, Ramón Montoya, Cañizares, Enrique Melchor, Juan Habichuela, and others.
Falsetas are accessible two ways: from the Falsetas section (organized by palo as a browsable library) and from each individual Palo page.
Community
The community is built into the platform — not a separate Discord or Facebook group. Members can post, comment, DM each other (if they choose to make their profiles public), and see who’s online.
There are the five Spaces:
- Where in the world are you? — share your location and maybe even organize a local meetup
- Updates — announcements from Kai and Tara
- Guitars — nerd out on the guitars themselves
- Show & Tell — share your playing and ask for feedback
- Your Questions — ask Kai and the community
Kai and Tara are active in the community. Posts can be pinned. There are currently 550+ members, with dozens online at any given time.
Kai is also hosting regular live sessions — a chance to ask questions, hear feedback, and connect with the community directly.
Resources
The Resources section organizes supplemental material that doesn’t belong to a single course or palo:
- Theory — 26 video lessons (3h 47m) covering Phrygian harmony, scales, and how flamenco tonality actually works
- Palmas — 9 video lessons on flamenco palmas, including palo-specific palmas tutorials
- Accompaniment — how to play with dancers and singers, including terminology, transposing, and palo-specific guidance
- Technique — warmups, exercises, and the Technique Bootcamp
- Glossary — 23 video definitions of essential flamenco guitar terms (Alzapúa, Compás, Arpeggio, Picado, and more)
What membership doesn’t include
To be straightforward about what’s not in the membership:
- Private lessons with Kai (available separately at $100/hour)
- In-person workshop attendance (the July and October Granada workshops are separate)
- The book videos — those are located here and are free
iOS and Android apps
The Flamenco Explained app mirrors the full platform on your phone or tablet.
Your library, your Camino, your community — all available on the go. Use My List to save and organize content across devices.
How it works
Choose your plan, enter your email, and you’re ready to start.
Monthly or Yearly — your choice
Monthly is flexible and easy to cancel.
Yearly includes two months free plus a private online check-in with Kai (optional, scheduled at your convenience).
Try it risk-free
If Flamenco Explained isn’t right for you, let us know within 14 days for a full refund.
No pressure. No stress.
Simple pricing
14-day money-back guarantee.
Try Flamenco Explained risk-free.
Frequently asked questions
Who runs Flamenco Explained?
Flamenco Explained is built and run by two people — Kai Narezo (guitarist, instructor, audio engineer) and Tara Narezo (platform, production, everything else). When you contact us, you’re talking to one of us.
Do I need to already play guitar to join?
No. The Meet Your Guitar course in Camino Level 1 is designed for complete beginners. If you’ve never touched a guitar, we have you covered.
What if I already play flamenco?
Tell us where you are in the onboarding and you’ll be placed at the right Camino level. Advanced players go straight to Levels 4 or 5, or skip The Camino entirely and explore freely.
Is this for solo guitar or accompaniment?
Both. The core content is solo guitar, but we have dedicated accompaniment material for playing with dancers and singers, including Cante Explained, Cante Play-Along, and palo-specific accompaniment lessons.
What kind of guitar do I need?
A flamenco guitar or a classical guitar both work for most of the material. Kai plays and teaches on a traditional Spanish flamenco guitar, but the techniques and repertoire are learnable on any nylon string guitar.
What is a falseta?
Falsetas are like little flamenco guitar solos, and they’re the main building blocks of solo flamenco guitar. Learning falsetas is how flamenco guitarists build vocabulary — you learn a phrase, internalize it, and eventually use it (or something inspired by it) in your own playing.
What is compás?
Compás is the rhythmic pulse and feel of flamenco — not just the time signature, but the groove. Every palo has its own compás. Learning to feel it, play it, and stay in it is one of the most important things a flamenco guitarist learns.
What does Flamenco Explained membership include?
The membership includes 900+ video lessons, 23 structured courses, 17 palos (so far) with dedicated lesson pages, a falsetas library organized by palo (each falseta with three videos and a downloadable TAB), The Camino guided learning path, a resource library covering theory, technique, accompaniment and palmas, a community of 550+ members and growing, and iOS and Android apps.
How is Flamenco Explained different from other online flamenco schools?
Kai Narezo is the instructor, and the platform is built around him and his unique teaching philosphy — not a roster of rotating teachers. The three-video falseta system (performance, tutorial, slow loop) is a specific pedagogical choice designed to serve different stages of learning the same piece. The Camino gives structure to players who need it; the Explorer path gives freedom to players who don’t.