Week 1: Etude Entrée!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of "Etude Extravaganza" practice challenge!
- Choose an etude from a composer that captures your interest. It could be a soothing Sor etude, a technical Giuliani masterpiece, a Carcassi finger exercise, a harmonically rich Brouwer composition, or a rhythmically challenging Villa-Lobos piece. You're encouraged to experiment with pieces from composers you're not accustomed to or push your boundaries with a technically demanding work.
- Commit to regular practice and share your journey with the community. Aim to practice daily and upload at least two videos per week to showcase your progress. This will not only aid in keeping you dedicated and motivated but also enables you to share your musical journey with our tonebase family.
- Share your favorite etude or recording that epitomizes the concept of "Etude Extravaganza." Your submission will serve as inspiration for others and construct a vibrant repertoire of potential pieces for fellow members to explore.
↓ Happy Sharing! ↓
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Here is my second recording for this challenge.
Fernando Sor - OP. 60 No. 1
Still need some work to polish up and get a good sound and better flow between the sections but this is a good start.
I will start now working on the no.2 which is a bit longer but i still have plenty of time this month to learn it.
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García de León – Luciérnagas
I think I will make this my final recording of this study for this challenge. It still comes in a little slower than García de León asks it to be, but when I go faster, I am too inconsistent, and to be honest, I think it sounds good at this tempo.
Next, I will try to tackle the etude that inspired this etude, namely Fernando Sor’s Op 31 No 19, which I am finding to be much more difficult than I expected. We’ll see how it goes!
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Decided to do 3 Etudes for the next 3 weeks with the goal of increasing speed without increasing tension. I picked these 3 for the lack of barre's. I am nursing a injured index finger which makes barre's almost impossible without pain. Cause, I suspect tension.
1. Prelude III En Forme D'Etude by Claude Gagnon working on tempo, this piece is in 2/4 cut time with each half note clocking from 88-96, brutal. I will work on 80% of that around 74
2. Emilio Pujol Etude #13, great replacement for doing scales. This is just the first of 3 parts working to get this at 80% of 100
3. Carcassi Op. 60 No. 7 bars 11-17 working on stopping all strings on the slur section hope to get this to 90% of 84
Not a very enthralling video.
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I have studied this etude a long time ago, the EL Abejorro, by Emilio Pujol . Here is a practice session of the first part , at medium speed, pimi.
Maestro Rene Izquierdo has a wonderful class on this etude , I am looking to incorporate some of his teachings in my practice in the next couple of weeks.
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Sor Op 31 No 19 (Segovia #10)
Here is my first recording of this study as a follow-up to the Garcia de Leon study I have posted above. I am playing it VERY slowly. When I practice slowly, I try to be mindful of every single little detail of how I feel, and precisely what movements my fingers/hands/arms need to make.
I have decided to play the repeated figure with p-i alternation. This is Sor's suggested fingering, and it seems to work best for me. One issue I am having with this piece is the way the repeated figure occurs most often on an open string. Open strings feel very different than closed strings, so it is tricky to play it consistently.
Another more isolated issue is found in measures 7-8 in the picture below. At the end of measure 7, Sor adds a chord to the first note in the repeated figure, and then another chord on the downbeat of measure 8. I am not sure what right-hand fingering I should use for this. (In the video, I think I am using pim-i-p-i-pim, but I'm not sure.) Does anyone have any wisdom to share on this?