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Microestudios No.15
It's clear that this particular practice is aimed at refining your slur technique. At first, I found myself making a lot of string noises when playing slurs with horizontal shifts. However, after practicing for about a week, I was able to reduce most of the noise, although not completely. I've found that playing fast with horizontal shifts can be quite challenging when it comes to eliminating string noises.
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Since the Carlevaro forum has been a little quiet lately, I thought it would be a good time to post a couple of Carlearo's early compositions to show the contrast between his modern use of tonality in his more mature works with his more lyrical folkloric pieces he generally wrote for his students. These two compositions date back to the early 1960s. The first is entitled Candombe (an Afra-Latino rhythm popular in Uruguay during Carnivale) and written under the pseudonym Vincente Vallegos. The second is entitled Milongueando written under his own name and is based on the milongo rhythm famous in the Rio de la Plata region.
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Here is the complete Introduccion y Capricho by Abel Carlevaro. This piece was published in 1983 by Chanterelle Publishers. I originally studied this piece with Carlevaro in Montevideo when it was first published. However, I had not played it since then until recently when I began working on it several months ago. While my recording is by no means perfect (there are several areas I still want to work on), I was relatively pleased with it since this piece was a challenge technically for me as well as playing the full seven minutes by memory with no edits. What I like about this piece is Carlevaro's tonal language and his use of harmonic dissonance. Definitely one of Carlevaro's more mature compositions.
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Hi, friends! I want to share with you my recording of Carlevaro's Microestudio 3. The score has annotations from Maestro, which is at Carlevaro's Library of Alfredo Escande (https://bibliotecaabelcarlevaro.blogspot.com/). Best regards!
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Microestudios No.16
Hi everyone, I would also like to share my latest recording of Microestudios, this time is No.16. As I progress through the series, I've noticed that after no.16, the difficulty is becoming higher and higher, hope that I will still be able to finish the whole journey of Microestudios.
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Been a bit quiet on the Carlevaro Forum lately so I thought it would be good to post another one of Carlevaro's masterful estudios. Here is Estudio No. 3 (Bicordes) which was published in the early 1980s and was first performed by Carlevaro in 1983 in San Francisco. Estudio No. 3 is from a set of five estudios which Carlevaro wrote in homage to Villa-Lobos. I posted this earlier as part of the Year-End Challenge but thought it would be good to post here as well. I love both the technical challenge of this estudio as well as Carlevaro's use of bi-chordal progressions and harmonic dissonance. It is definitely a work-out for left-hand!