Welcome to the fantastic world of classical guitar. In this site, you will find classical guitar pieces, in midi format, for one and more guitars: actually 5641 MIDI files from 96 composers. Information on how to create midi files and a tutorial on the tablature notation system is presented. Images of ancient guitars provided.
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For the greenfield developer, the lessons are architectural, not technical: learn the separation of layers, but avoid the XML hell. For the legacy developer, this book is a lifeline. It represents a specific era of enterprise software where complexity was a badge of honor, and where Microsoft believed that a single, monolithic communication framework could rule them all. Today, we know that simplicity, HTTP, and open standards win. But we should not forget the cathedral—and this book is its blueprint.
The value of this text is not in teaching best practices for tomorrow, but in documenting the logic of yesterday. It explains why a financial services firm has a GetAllTrades service contract, why their proxy classes are autogenerated, and why their deployment script requires specific Windows firewall rules for port 808. In evaluating the fourth edition, one must judge it by two standards. By the standards of 2015–2018, it was a comprehensive, masterful guide to building resilient, secure, transactional services on the Windows platform. By the standards of 2025 and beyond, it is a eulogy.
In the sprawling ecosystem of enterprise software development, few titles evoke as specific a sense of time and place as WCF Multi-layer Services Development with Entity Framework - Fourth Edition . To the uninitiated, this is merely a technical manual. To the seasoned Windows developer, however, the title reads like a historical artifact—a snapshot of a particular moment when Microsoft’s development stack reached a peak of complexity, power, and, ultimately, fragility. This essay argues that while the fourth edition of this text serves as an exhaustive guide to building robust, SOA-based (Service-Oriented Architecture) applications, it also inadvertently documents the last gasp of a monolithic design philosophy before the industry shifted irrevocably toward simplicity, HTTP-native APIs, and cloud-native patterns. The Cathedral of Code: The Promise of Multi-layer Design At its core, the book champions a noble and necessary goal: separation of concerns. The "multi-layer" architecture—typically comprising a presentation layer, business logic layer (BLL), data access layer (DAL) via Entity Framework (EF), and a service layer via WCF—was the gold standard for enterprise Windows applications for over a decade.
The fourth edition’s focus on Entity Framework suggests a maturation of Microsoft’s ORM (Object-Relational Mapping) tool. By the time of this edition, EF had evolved from an unreliable "black box" (EF v1) into a legitimate tool for modeling complex domain logic. The book likely guides the reader through generating an EDMX (Entity Data Model) file, mapping database tables to C# objects, and managing the notorious "N+1 query problem."
Composers are grouped in 6 pages: A-B;
C-F;
G-L;
M-O;
P-R; S-ZÂ .
J.-S.
Bach , A.
Barrios Mangore , N. Coste
, M. Giuliani , F.
Sor and F.
Tarrega are on their own page
Click here
to listen to 20 great MIDI from the site
Composers in alphabetical order
For the greenfield developer, the lessons are architectural, not technical: learn the separation of layers, but avoid the XML hell. For the legacy developer, this book is a lifeline. It represents a specific era of enterprise software where complexity was a badge of honor, and where Microsoft believed that a single, monolithic communication framework could rule them all. Today, we know that simplicity, HTTP, and open standards win. But we should not forget the cathedral—and this book is its blueprint.
The value of this text is not in teaching best practices for tomorrow, but in documenting the logic of yesterday. It explains why a financial services firm has a GetAllTrades service contract, why their proxy classes are autogenerated, and why their deployment script requires specific Windows firewall rules for port 808. In evaluating the fourth edition, one must judge it by two standards. By the standards of 2015–2018, it was a comprehensive, masterful guide to building resilient, secure, transactional services on the Windows platform. By the standards of 2025 and beyond, it is a eulogy. For the greenfield developer, the lessons are architectural,
In the sprawling ecosystem of enterprise software development, few titles evoke as specific a sense of time and place as WCF Multi-layer Services Development with Entity Framework - Fourth Edition . To the uninitiated, this is merely a technical manual. To the seasoned Windows developer, however, the title reads like a historical artifact—a snapshot of a particular moment when Microsoft’s development stack reached a peak of complexity, power, and, ultimately, fragility. This essay argues that while the fourth edition of this text serves as an exhaustive guide to building robust, SOA-based (Service-Oriented Architecture) applications, it also inadvertently documents the last gasp of a monolithic design philosophy before the industry shifted irrevocably toward simplicity, HTTP-native APIs, and cloud-native patterns. The Cathedral of Code: The Promise of Multi-layer Design At its core, the book champions a noble and necessary goal: separation of concerns. The "multi-layer" architecture—typically comprising a presentation layer, business logic layer (BLL), data access layer (DAL) via Entity Framework (EF), and a service layer via WCF—was the gold standard for enterprise Windows applications for over a decade. Today, we know that simplicity, HTTP, and open standards win
The fourth edition’s focus on Entity Framework suggests a maturation of Microsoft’s ORM (Object-Relational Mapping) tool. By the time of this edition, EF had evolved from an unreliable "black box" (EF v1) into a legitimate tool for modeling complex domain logic. The book likely guides the reader through generating an EDMX (Entity Data Model) file, mapping database tables to C# objects, and managing the notorious "N+1 query problem." It explains why a financial services firm has
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Note to MIDI sequence contributors
Your submissions are welcomed.Â
Please send them by e-mail (end of text). Pieces
should bear the composer's name and be properly identified.(ex.: J.K. Mertz (1806-1856) Nocturne
Op.4 No.2.). The submissions
should bear information on the transcriber or arranger when available. The submitter's name
will appear beside the accepted submission.Â
Â
This site exists primarily to showcase pieces written for the classical
guitar. Established and recognized transcriptions and arrangements (e.g.,
Tarrega, Segovia,..) of pieces written by non-guitar composers will also be given
high priority. Â
New compositions for the classical guitar are also welcomed. New
compositions that meet quality guidelines will be added to the site. For
new contributors, it would be appreciated if you would also submit several
pieces by known composers in addition to your own compositions. This will
help to expand the repertoire of established works for the classical guitar in
addition to expanding the repertoire of new music.Â
Last update: March 8 2026
Copyright François Faucher 1998-2025