Practice Studio

W.A. Mozart - Turkish March - Guitar Tab

Sections · Loop · Speed · Metronome

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End of your loop

Speed Control

Speed
100%

Tools

BPM
Key A major
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Amp Settings

Classic Rock

Gain6
Bass6
Mid7
Treble6
Presence5
Master7
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Roll back the gain slightly and pick near the neck for a warmer, more open crunch.

Piano Transcriptions album cover
Piano Transcriptions
1997 3:04
Capo Advisor 0 A major · Original key

About Turkish March


Originally a piano piece by W.A. Mozart, the Turkish March sits in A major and carries a brisk, march-like feel that translates into a genuine finger-workout when arranged for guitar. The melodic lines move quickly and demand clean single-note articulation across multiple positions on the neck, so sloppy fretting hand technique gets exposed immediately. Getting the ornamental figures, the short repeating motifs, and the dynamic contrasts to sit properly all at once is where most players hit a wall. Because so many of those ornaments go by fast at 120 BPM, use the Practice Toolbar to slow a phrase down and loop it until every note speaks cleanly before bringing it back up to tempo. The Classical genre often calls for fingerstyle or hybrid picking to capture the articulation of keyboard lines, and that choice alone will shape how idiomatic the arrangement sounds on guitar.

  • The rapid repeating melodic motifs require precise single-note articulation, making clean left-hand finger placement the primary technical challenge.
  • Fingerstyle technique is the most natural approach for capturing the keyboard-like phrasing and dynamic shaping this arrangement demands.
  • Practise the ornamental figures in isolation at reduced tempo, looping them slowed down, before attempting them in full-speed context.

How to Play Turkish March

Key: A major · Tempo: 120 BPM

Use the section loop to isolate a passage, drop the speed below 100%, and set the metronome to 120 BPM to build it up to tempo.