Week 4: Spain in 19th !
Welcome to the Main Thread for the second week of the "Around the 19th Century Guitar World" challenge!
In the beginning of the 19th century the prevailing compositional style in Spain was similar to other places in Southern Europe. Over the course of the next hundred years through influential figures such as Aguado, Ferrer, and Tarrega, Spanish classical guitar will develop it’s own unique voice that will become the dominant style of classical guitar in the 20th century.
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Okay, well, I'd better put SOMETHING out there for crying out loud!
This is a Prelude from Aguado. The book I'm using, World's Favorite Solos for Classical Guitar, does not have anything else than just the name "Prelude" for it.
I've never played Aguado before, and I think this piece is supposed to be played AT LEAST twice as fast as what I'm playing it, maybe much more. This is as fast as I can play it - for now - without making too many mistakes. (Maybe I should've warmed up with those 4 "easy" pieces Eric posted earlier! )
However, I think there's also a sweetness and many interpretive possibilities by playing it this slow.
Enjoy!
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Aguado - Introduction to Fandango Op 16
I heard this virtuosic and very "Spanish" sounding piece from Aguado yesterday evening while walking the dog. The entire piece is far beyond my technical capacity, but the introduction alone seemed manageable. So ... here it is!
As a side note to anyone who knows Bugs Bunny (a classic American cartoon): Does the little bit around 1:05-1:10 sound familiar?