Week 1: Our Unfinished Pieces!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of "Unfinished Business" practice challenge!
- Choose an piece that you have started to practice but never fully commited to finish. It could be a an iconic masterpiece, a technical challenge, a sweet little miniature or a piece that you played a long time ago and always wanted to refresh! 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 piece or recording that you always wanted to learnm but is still "unfinished business". 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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This sounds like such a useful challenge. Useful not only for me, I reckon...
A difficult choice, because, like many of us, I attacked so many beautiful pieces, only to find out it was out of my reach to play them fluently and with enough musical intensity. For this challenge I have decided to stick to 2 pieces: Llobet's El Mestre and Da Milano's La Compagna. Both are quite demanding pieces, so there's work to do in order to make any progress within the timeslot of 4 weeks! I'll see how far I can get. I will be on travel, so, recording with my Samsung phone, hoping for decent wifi connectivity ...
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Clearly, I've got a long way to make this sound like real music, but I'm up for the journey! I'm quite new to classical playing (even using the foot stool is still a bit foreign feeling to me), so feedback of any kind ("try moving your right hand here" or "when you do false harmonics, try this" or "think about holding your right arm differently"... that sort of thing) are welcome!
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Eric Phillips said:
Yes, or maybe even 4’33”!This would be awesome! Can't wait to see Jack's face this whole time!
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I was thinking of skipping the next challenge as I need to limit my playing time due to my injury. But so happens that I'm already working on one unfinished pieces with my teacher. I have 2 pieces that I will always get back to it. They are like my pet projects.
One of them is Sakamoto's Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence and another is the one which I'm currently working on - Arabesque no 1. I had a stab at it early last year, my teacher gave me the fingerings and tips on how to play it but my fingers weren't flexible enough and my ears can't tell what he wanted to explain.
This year I'm taking a stab at it again. Will probably work on it a bit more before leaving it again. I'm pretty close to the end, another 30 bars or so.
Arabesque No 1 -
I still struggle with the polyrhythm especially when it comes out from a 8th note phrase.
Still can't play well shifting in chords. I'm too used to shifting with guide finger and building chord note by note.
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Barrios – País de Abanico
I think I started working on this during the “Music from Latin America” challenge over a year ago. I was really getting into some Barrios, but this one is just at the very edge of my ability, and I left it incomplete. So … here it goes again!
The structure is ABA (with a coda). In this video, I am just playing the A section, in D major. The most challenging parts are:
- Measures 21-23 that have a really big stretch.
- Measures 25-28 that go way up into 14th position (and me with no raised fretboard or cutaway!).
The B section still looms. It’s in Bb major (such an easy key for the guitar ), and some of the stretches border on preposterous, at least for my hands. We’ll see how it goes.
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Great topic for a Challenge. I have been working this year on one of Carlevaro's major guitar works, "Introduccion y Capricho." I posted the "Introduccion" on a previous challenge but continue to struggle with the "Capricho." It is definitely one of the longer, more complex and technically challenging of Carlevaro's compositions. Therefore, I hope that this Challenge will motivate me to get it over the top. Let's see how it goes. In any case, here is my recording once again of the "Introduccion" in order to reacquaint you with the piece. As for the Capricho, I plan over the next several weeks to break it into parts and then post it in its entirety by the end of the Challenge.