Week 2: "Brazilian Rhythms Rendezvous"
Welcome to the Main Thread for the second week of "Villa-Lobos Voyage" practice challenge!
Select a mesmerizing piece from Villa-Lobos or a composer connected to his Brazilian heritage. Whether it's a soulful Villa-Lobos composition, a rhythmic Brazilian-inspired work, or a piece by another artist inspired by the Brazilian musical tradition, the choice is yours!
Commit to regular practice and share your progress with the community. Strive to practice daily and upload at least two videos per week to showcase your musical voyage. This not only keeps you motivated but also allows you to share your artistic journey with our tonebase family.
Share your favorite performance or recording that captures the spirit of the "Villa-Lobos-Voyage Challenge." Your submission will inspire others and create a vibrant collection of potential pieces for fellow members to explore.
↓ Happy Sharing! ↓
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HVL Prelude 2 B section full speed (Aug 14)
Since my last post, many of you have told me that you think I do not need to make the B section any faster (I had it going around 87 bpm). Well, I decided to ignore you all (I say that with the deepest respect and humility).
It just seems to me that the section needs to go at a pretty good clip to be effective. So, in my impatience, I decided just to go for it at full speed. I found that, if I let my right hand just go into a kind of "auto-pilot, spring loaded mode" (I really don't know how to describe it), that I could play it up to speed. I also had to worry about the squeaks only on the really big shifts - the little shifts I just let squeak away. Anyway, here is a video with the result.
I know this still needs work for me to get it under better control. That said, I think it sounds much better than playing it slowly.
Let me know what you think. Am I deluding myself and this really sounds awful? Or have I found a path toward a good musical result?
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Here is HVL Prelude #4. I have not played this Prelude for many years, so it was fun to relearn it. This Prelude is not too difficult, the challenge being playing the B section arpeggios smoothly and with as little string noise as possible. You will also notice the use of the tambor technique in the last section. This is something that Carlevaro used when playing this Prelude.
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The last stronghold!
I've been able to memorize this whole piece, except for the first half of the B section...until now.
This section presents numerous challenges - including off-beat rhythms that keep changing patterns, as well as really brutal chord voicing changes happening constantly.
In this example I am playing very slowly, because that's the only way I can get through the whole thing without mistakes, but I finally did it from memory!
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HVL Etude #5 1st half Very Rough Draft
I am finally beginning to get a grip on this, though it may not seem so on this posting. I am nor consistent yet, but I can play the first half with fairly decent control and voice separation. It is difficult to hold together but I can play any particular section reasonably well.
It took me a long time to separate out the voices.
The fingering was a real challenge. Watched Blanco TB lesson this however, I have a lot of fingerings that are different than his. Generally his sustain the note value better than my but, at this point, I can't manage them.
There are many sections that are a real challenge to play in context, especially when it goes into the upper registers and walks down.
So now I start the 2nd half while still trying to refine the 1st. There is still more than 2 weeks to go. So, maybe?