Group 1
Improve your tremolo!
Tremolo is one of the defining techniques for classical guitar! Although not used very often in the repertoire, some of the most iconic pieces employ it to create a beautiful singing melody above an accompaniment pattern.
Fellow Participants in Group 1:
Eric Phillips
Blaise Laflamme
peter hancock
Nora Torres-Nagel
joosje
Emma
Rachel Holmes
Bill Young
Carlos Calderon
Brett Gilbert
Robert
Some tonebase productions to get you started
- 8 Steps To A Perfect Tremolo Course by Stephanie Jones
- Scott Tennant - On Tremolo
- Scott Tennant - Recuerdos de la Alhambra
- Thomas Viloteau - On Tremolo
- Artyom Dervoed - Tremolo
How to get the most out of this course
- Start by watching the introduction video and practice the exercises given in the video.
- Write a post with your experiences with tremolo.
- At the same time, start practicing the first eight bars of "Recuerdos de la Alhambra". If you are new to the piece, begin with a chord reduction as presented in Scott's workbook on Recuerdos.
- Share two videos per week and help your course partners through feedback on their submissions!
Zoom Check-In: Friday, May 20th at 8 pm CET (11 am PT)
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Here’s my day 2, with only partial try out of different hand position. My p is not yet comfortable with it. That’s probably why there’s still too much movement in the hand
I realize how important it is to go really really slow motion. After the first few beats my hand tries to go back to its familiar, more perpendicular position and I keep trying to keep it straight. So relaxation is not yet there…. Frustrating. -
I did new recordings today. I am working the relaxing exercises with all the combinations of fingers. Doing it very slowly it works although always with mistakes. I begin to feel the relaxation at this slow tempo more natural or less difficult although I still have to be always concentrated on the task. Now I send 2 combinations, the normal ami and iam as another combination. Then two combinations of dotted rythm as Martin suggested me, at 90 tempo as Martin said, and try to be relax in each beat but it is already too quick to be able to "see" the relaxation. I feel relax....Anyway there are always mistakes either with the fingers or with the music. Finally I have recorded playing the 8 bars of " Recuerdos" thinking in being relax and at a tempo of 95 with metronome. The metronome was running, we can hear it, what maybe is not so good, next time I will do it without metronome. The metronome helps me also to maintain the rythm, what it is not fair....
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This is great! Although I was not able to record during last days due to some "technical" issues (health of camery and of myself) I am following and also practicing a bit, so I am more passive as active at the moment, and it should be vice versa... I hope, my first video will come up tomorrow latest. So far: much more difficult than expected! The relaxation in each finger needs so much concentration, so much focus. It seems that it is not automated, with habits developed in some decades..., so at the moment it is more a concious "movement" backwards. As one wrote here: it does not feel "relaxed"... I am working on that. :-)
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Third practice day after Martins most appreciated advice. It does feel more natural now, though it sounds lousy. I didn’t work on tone quality. I will now do that, and reconsider the nail shape. And rework the other assignments.
I recorded the whole fragment, because I’m not consistent and with the repetitions you will notice variations in the width and speed of attack and bounce . But that’s very detailed . I am more positive than yesterday, although the word ‘frustrating’ was not meant literally. I’m not easily frustrated….