Week 2: Vienna in 19th !
Welcome to the Main Thread for the second week of the "Around the 19th Century Guitar World" challenge!
Vienna was a hub for all classical music in the 19th century. Home to Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert, among others, the classical guitar was alive and well in the 19th century. In Vienna in the 19th century classical guitar composers were heavily influenced by orchestral composers and had relationships with them; Giuliani played cello in the premiere of Beethoven’s 7th symphony and Mertz arranged Schubert’s Songs for Piano and Voice on guitar.
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Matiegka - Sonata IV Allegro Moderato Update July 20
I'm now playing the entire large A section, measures 1-67 (pages 1 and 2 in the edition Hannah sent us). In order to be able to play the arpeggios in measures 52-62, I needed to bring the tempo down from what I was playing yesterday. This is at about 80bpm, and the goal tempo would be more like 116bpm.
This is obviously going to take me more than this week to get through, as I'm only halfway through the piece, and at a tempo that's too slow. I'm not sure what I'll do. Maybe for next week, I could just play some really easy Paganini, Legnani, and Regondi. (That's a joke. They wrote nothing easy, especially Regondi.) We'll see.
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Well, this feels like some kind of a speed date challenge. I was just about to dive into Giuliani and Matiegka and here were are moving on to the Italian Virtuoso guys, like Regondi and Legnani!
it’s not that this music is easy, it needs practice and understanding of the style. Matiegka will have to grow. But here is the Allegro Hannah suggested. I expected to hear some recordings of the piece in this forum.
Since it’ is one of the op. 50 Papillons (Eric submitted one of the more advanced ones) I decided to record the allegro (nr 13, in a minor) together with no. 12 in C.
after that I recorded a piece from the op. 100, “etudes instructives“ dedicated to the (Galician) princess Catherine de Menschikoff). But this is actually a first reading. I was interested by the harmonic structure, a bit more daring than his usual, C-G, Am- E.