Week 4: Etude Extravaganza!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the forth 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 another chord study, Estudio #5 Homenaje a Villa-Lobos by Abel Carlevaro. This Estudio is part of a set of five Estudios in homage to Villa-Lobos. I like to pair Carlevaro's Estudio #5 with Villa-Lobos' Etude #6 which I posted earlier. You can definitely see in this study the influence that Villa-Lobos had on Carlevaro. As I have noted in previous posts, Carlevaro studied with Villa-Lobos in Brazil when Carlevaro was a young man.
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HVL 8 (June 30 update)
Today, I mostly worked on page 2 of the Eschig edition. (See attached score if you wish. I come in at the second measure of the document, on the C# with the fermata.)
Here's my breakdown:
- Measures 33-39 are mostly a big scalar passage. I was trying to do an accelarando through the ascending portion, and a allargando through the descending portion. Very dramatic!
- Measures 40-45 are pretty straightforward. Nice singing melody.
- Measures 46-49 I have re-fingered from yesterday. I think this works a lot better.
- Measures 50-55 I have re-fingered in the right hand so that the accented beats are played with the thumb. Makes much more sense. I am also cutting down on the number of thumb rasgueados I was using (over-using) yesterday.
- Measures 56-58 are another scalar passage.
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Microestudios 13 - Abel Carlevaro
This piece has a lot of double-stop passages. While I've been able to play them pretty smoothly at times, there are still some spots where I can't quite eliminate the string noises. Bars 22-28 are especially tricky because of the horizontally shifting double-stop passage.
After recording No. 13, I started practicing No. 14 and found that I really enjoyed playing pieces No. 12, 13, and 14, despite the challenges.
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Sor Study in D, Opus 35, No. 17 - Final Submission
I regret that I haven't been able to be more involved in this challenge. The last couple weeks have been insanely busy, and I will be leaving again tomorrow for vacation. I will have several hours on the road tomorrow where I plan to listen to and comment on the many recordings here. I will be on the road when we have the watch party as well, so I most likely won't be able to make that.
For now, I have a recording of the Sor study I've been working on. I managed to get a couple minutes to play while at my mother-in-laws place recently. (Thus the dolls in the background)
What I discovered just now, as I was listening to some other recordings on YouTube, is that many people play a D#, instead of a D natural as I've played it, on beat one in the third to last measure - as well as an A instead of a B on the "and" of beat 2, making it a B7 chord instead of a B minor chord. Does anyone have a copy of the original score from Sor? I'd like to see what the original intention was.