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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It was difficult to find an appropiate angle for the camera, but it is definitively better than yesterday. Also the Assignement 1 it is working slowly slowly....I believe you Martin that this is very important for a lot of situations playing and I was today also applying this relaxation or trying in other arpegios I was working on. Sometimes my hand jumps a little, what reflexes tension...I think... I am working on this also. The finger i tends to be more difficult to relax or at least stays sometimes slightly back. In general I move my fingers very near to the position of the attack...I do not see big displacements....I can hardly see the movement sometimes...let's continue...
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Today I didn’t record myself but practiced in front of the mirror. I practiced the relaxation in my scales, block chords and then the tremolo. I realised that the R hand looks more open, and less in a grip, it also helps me to play from the phalanx closest to the palm, and I could feel the relaxation once the finger bounced back (the bouncing was active but then the hand was relaxed) I could feel what Martin said that playing slow without relaxing adds to the strain because the finger stays closed and felt the relaxation.
Still difficult to prepare as it must not be staccato and the preparation is not simultaneous to the relaxation of the previous finger. Tomorrow more practice and try to record myself.
Then I practiced my studios and pieces like that, slow and relaxing, it took for ages and didn’t sound that good, but I think this can profoundly change the way I play. I will continue trying
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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.