🎯 The Etude Challenge: Study Pieces, Serious Progress - Week 5
Attention tonebuddies! It's time to embrace the music that was literally designed to make you a better guitarist. Welcome to The Etude Challenge — four weeks dedicated to the art of the etude!
Etudes occupy a unique place in the classical guitar repertoire. They're technical workouts disguised as beautiful music — pieces that sharpen your skills while rewarding you with something genuinely worth performing. From the elegant simplicity of Carcassi and Sor to the rhythmic brilliance of Brouwer's Etudes Simples, the virtuosic fire of Villa-Lobos's 12 Études, and everything in between — there's an etude out there for every player at every level.
This challenge is your chance to pick one (or more!), commit to it, and share your journey with the community.
🎯 Whether you choose to:
- Tackle a classic — Sor Op. 35, Carcassi Op. 60, Giuliani Op. 48
- Go for something bold — Villa-Lobos, Barrios, or Coste
- Explore the modern side — Brouwer, Carlevaro, or Bogdanovic
- Revisit an old friend — Polish a piece you learned before and bring it to a new level
…this is your moment to dig in and grow. This challenge is open to all levels — whether you're working through your very first Sor etude or preparing a Villa-Lobos for the stage, you belong here.
📅 Challenge Dates
Start: February 23
End: April 17
💡 How to Participate
- Pick your etude – Choose one that excites you and challenges you. Not sure where to start? Ask the community for suggestions!
- Share your goal – Tell us what you're working on and what you want to achieve (clean run-through, memorization, performance tempo, etc.)
- Post your progress – Upload short clips, practice notes, or reflections as you go. We want to see the process, not just the polish.
- Engage – Listen to what others are working on, leave encouragement, and trade practice tips!
90 replies
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Hi, everybody... to continue with the Sor articulation and fingering debate we had with ... as I promised, here it is my very first fingering, sight reading and recording of op.44 n°1.
I had to choose between two options which were a) take the actual Andante as a quarter note and play a bit slower than most versions online (not Patrik's) or b) play in 2/2 and play faster than most versions online... I have a clear idea that a 2/2 version would be much more articulated than this one (slow one) because of all the intervalic jumps in the melodie but I ended up choosing the slower one because it gives me the oportunity to demonstrate articulation with mostly legato phrasing instead of heavy non legato or staccato. Still, you'll see there are many choices in fingering that allow to decide with a lot of detail how much and which notes i want to let resonate and when and where to stop the ones I do stop, against the first position chord fingering that would be the "traditional" expected Sor fingering. And quite a lot of vibrato.
I have seen and listened your rendition on Youtube! Kuddos on that! Check this out and let me know how it feels :-)
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Took a break in Giuliani's Etude to improve this Carcassi tremolo study, my focus is increasing tempo, relaxation(no tension) and keeping tremolo steady. Like to get my target at 60 Bpm, this recording is at approx. 55 bpm. Also working on starting and finishing on first take. You'll find a few clams in this recording, but who's counting.
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Here is a fun little sketch/study that I wrote and recorded with Mario Negreiros at his winery in the upper Douro Valley of Portugal last week. It is for guitar and voices.