Week 3
Attention all tonebuddies! Are you ready to embark on a journey of musical creativity and exploration? Join our Arrangement & Transcription Challenge and discover the joy of reimagining music for the classical guitar!
Over the next four weeks, we’ll celebrate the art of transforming works from other instruments, ensembles, or even genres into stunning guitar performances. From Albéniz and Granados to Piazzolla, Bach, Scarlatti, or even your own favorite songs — everything goes!
🎯 Whether you choose to:
Work on a well-known transcription (Albéniz’s Asturias, Granados’s Danza Española, Piazzolla’s Libertango)
Create your own arrangement from scratch
Compare different versions and share your insights
…this is your chance to dive deep into the creative process and share your journey with the tonebase community.
This challenge is open to all levels — from curious beginners discovering their first transcription to experienced players refining their own arrangements. Let’s celebrate the versatility and expressive power of the guitar together!
📅 Challenge Dates
Start: November 11
End: December 11
👉 Join anytime by introducing your project in the comments below!
💡 How to Participate
Pick your piece – Choose an arrangement or transcription that excites you.
Share your goal – Are you learning, arranging, or refining?
Post your progress – Upload short clips, notes, or reflections as you go.
Engage – Encourage others, ask questions, and exchange arranging tips!
🎥 Watch Party Reminder
The Watch Party on December 11 will feature recorded submissions from this challenge!
So make sure to submit your final performance videos and showcase your creative work!
80 replies
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Here's a complete take of the Dowland Prelude and another piece I've been working on, a sonata by Domenico Scarlatti, K34/L7. I didn't play the repeats, and I'm still trying to figure out ornaments, since I've played very little music that called for them. Any feedback is appreciated.
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Scarlatti K34
I hope you don't mind, , but since listening to you play this yesterday, I just fell in love with it and wanted to play it myself. Like you and Aniello Desiderio (thanks ), I decided to play it quite slowly.
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I’m late in this challenge. And this is the shorter version of a song Jacinta Chiclana, on a poem by Jorge Luis Borges. Piazzolla wrote a set of those songs for his ensemble with solo voice.
the transcription for solo guitar is by Pino Enriquez, dedicated to Roberto Aussel, who made a brilliant recording.
I will do my best to give it a few more tries coming week, and play more secure, especially the bass rhythm.