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PARCRET-MW.part1.rar

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.

Version française  

PARCRET-MW.part1.rar

New Sequences by François Faucher

Now working on: G.F. Carulli's Gran Sonata Op.25


New.gif (284 octets) G.F.Handel's Sonata 2. Allegro 3.Adagio HWV368New.gif (284 octets)


New.gif (284 octets) .J.S. Bach's  Sonata largo BWV1079 New.gif (284 octets)

New.gif (284 octets) F. Carulli's Two Russian Airs with variations Op.110New.gif (284 octets)

New.gif (284 octets) .W.A.Mozart's Symphony No.41 (Jupiter) KWV551

.New.gif (284 octets) J.S. Bach's .Sonata 2. Fugue  BWV964 New.gif (284 octets)

.New.gif (284 octets) W.A. Mozart's Theme and variations on: "La belle Françoise" K353 New.gif (284 octets)

New.gif (284 octets) W.A. Mozart's .Rondo K.511 New.gif (284 octets)


Today, Elias’s computer remains on, the progress bar for an unknown upload forever stuck at 0%. He is still seen in forums, posting only a single line of hex code, waiting for someone to provide the missing piece of the archive.

The digital artifact known as has become something of an internet ghost story, often appearing in the dark corners of file-sharing forums and obscure archive sites.

As the progress bar crawled toward 99%, his monitor began to flicker with a strange, rhythmic pulse—not a glitch, but a pattern. It looked like a waveform, but when he listened through his headphones, there was no sound. Instead, he felt a localized pressure in his temples, a sensation like a word he couldn't quite remember. The Content

Elias was a veteran of the scene. He knew that finding a "Part 1" without a "Part 2" was the ultimate archivist's frustration. He downloaded it anyway, expecting a corrupted game rip or a dead Linux distro. The Extraction

Beneath the text was a string of hexadecimal code that changed every time he refreshed the window. Elias realized the file wasn't just data; it was a "placeholder" program designed to wait for a specific connection. The Haunting

In the days following the download, Elias noticed subtle changes. His smart home devices would trigger at odd intervals, always in that same rhythmic pulse. His search history began filling with queries he didn't remember typing—technical specifications for long-obsolete radio transmitters and coordinates for a decommissioned bunker in the Ural Mountains.

To the uninitiated, the filename looks like a standard split archive—a piece of a larger software package or a compressed media collection. However, for those who track digital anomalies, "PARCRET" is whispered to be an acronym for a forgotten experimental project from the late 90s, while "MW" is rumored to stand for "Mind-Ware." The Discovery

The legend of PARCRET-MW.part1.rar persists because no one has ever publicly claimed to find . Some say Part 2 isn't a file at all, but a sequence of biological data that can only be "downloaded" through a specific neural interface.


Composers are grouped in 6 pages: A-B; C-F; G-L; M-O; P-R; S-Z . 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

Parcret-mw.part1.rar (2025)

Today, Elias’s computer remains on, the progress bar for an unknown upload forever stuck at 0%. He is still seen in forums, posting only a single line of hex code, waiting for someone to provide the missing piece of the archive.

The digital artifact known as has become something of an internet ghost story, often appearing in the dark corners of file-sharing forums and obscure archive sites.

As the progress bar crawled toward 99%, his monitor began to flicker with a strange, rhythmic pulse—not a glitch, but a pattern. It looked like a waveform, but when he listened through his headphones, there was no sound. Instead, he felt a localized pressure in his temples, a sensation like a word he couldn't quite remember. The Content PARCRET-MW.part1.rar

Elias was a veteran of the scene. He knew that finding a "Part 1" without a "Part 2" was the ultimate archivist's frustration. He downloaded it anyway, expecting a corrupted game rip or a dead Linux distro. The Extraction

Beneath the text was a string of hexadecimal code that changed every time he refreshed the window. Elias realized the file wasn't just data; it was a "placeholder" program designed to wait for a specific connection. The Haunting Today, Elias’s computer remains on, the progress bar

In the days following the download, Elias noticed subtle changes. His smart home devices would trigger at odd intervals, always in that same rhythmic pulse. His search history began filling with queries he didn't remember typing—technical specifications for long-obsolete radio transmitters and coordinates for a decommissioned bunker in the Ural Mountains.

To the uninitiated, the filename looks like a standard split archive—a piece of a larger software package or a compressed media collection. However, for those who track digital anomalies, "PARCRET" is whispered to be an acronym for a forgotten experimental project from the late 90s, while "MW" is rumored to stand for "Mind-Ware." The Discovery As the progress bar crawled toward 99%, his

The legend of PARCRET-MW.part1.rar persists because no one has ever publicly claimed to find . Some say Part 2 isn't a file at all, but a sequence of biological data that can only be "downloaded" through a specific neural interface.

 

 

FLAMENCO

Paco de Lucia  ; Sabicas 

 


Note to MIDI sequence contributors

Your submissions are welcomed.  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.   

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.  

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. 

 

Last update: March 8 2026

Copyright François Faucher 1998-2025

INDEX OF COMPOSERS

COMPOSERS TIMELINE

VIDEOS

TABLATURE SYSTEM

TABLATURE SAMPLES

MIDI HISTORY

SUBMIT

LINKS

ANCIENT GUITARS