DAILY UPDATES (Click Me!) Main Thread - Where the magic happens!
Welcome, one and all, to the Main Thread for this challenge!
This is where the magic happens - the thread where we'll all be posting our daily updates.
Make sure you've read the rules before replying (<- click)
Every day between December 6th and 19th, we are hoping to read your daily updates in this very thread right here!
Please use the following format when commenting (feel free to copy & paste!):
- Landslag you worked on:
- One thing you found easy:
- One thing you found difficult:
- (Optional): a video of you performing it!
Sample daily update:
- Landslag you worked on: Landslag no. 1: dark sand dunes with some moss
- One thing you found easy: The first bar was the hardest one for me to learn, although it looked easy enough on my first try.
- One thing you found difficult: I liked that it was a single line; it allowed me to focus on every note and it was much easier to read than most pieces I play.
Feel free to make these updates as short or long as you wish!
Download the full score (click ↓):
Gulli's Lessons for each individual Landslag:
- Landslag no. 1, Landslag no. 2, Landslag no. 3, Landslag no. 4, Landslag no. 5, Landslag no. 6, Landslag no. 7, Landslag no. 8, Landslag no. 9, Landslag no. 10, Landslag no. 11.
Dedicated discussion threads for each Landslag:
- Landslag 1: dark sand dunes with some moss (<- click)
(More dedicated threads will be created as we progress throughout the challenge)
↓ Let's do this! Post your daily updates below ↓
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- Landslag you worked on: Landslag II. – leira í botni fjarðar - littoral mud in the bottom of a fjord
- One thing you found easy: Transitioning from the chords to the melodic part! Bar 16 and 17 are crucial for establishing the meter and tempo for the next part, but I felt that it had a nice flow despite the vertical choral structure in the beginning!
- One thing you found difficult: Definitely finding a way to balance and connect the chords! In the end I embraced what I couldn't change, the planting of my fingers in order to prepare the chords created a subtle pulse that helped to carry me through the first 16 bars! Another thing was to get the guitar resonate in the low register while playing soft, different right hand fingerings and register helped a lot there.
I hope you like my red/blue lighting setup for compositions from a land of ice and fire! (didn't have a funny blue hat though 🧊)
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- Landslag you worked on: Landslag III. – grjóti þakin háslétta - rock covered plateau
- One thing you found easy: following the dynamics of the piece, especially the the subito piano is very enjoyable (so much that I pushed back the tempo a little bit there)
- One thing you found difficult: Getting the bass to sing and not let the open strings cover up the melody! I'm pretty sure I didn't succeed throughout the piece but I REEAALLY wanted to catch up with my recording, so I pushed through this piece! The scratchiness of old strings really didn't help to create a plateau-like airiness.
I recorded my latest uploads for this community challenge with a stereo mic setup with two omni capsules and added a hint of reverb, hope you liked that! The gods of flat impulse responses of Sennheiser were with me, so the scratchiness doesn't get emphasized by the closeness of the mics! 🧊
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- Landslag you worked on: Landslag IV. – lækjarsprænur í grænum dal - river creeks in a green valley
- One thing you found easy: feeling the subtle groove makes distinguishing the different voices pretty easy and quite recognizable!
- One thing you found difficult: I really really wanted to keep all the arpeggi parts on different strings, so I dug into left fingerings quite a lot, so the piece would probably need a little bit more time to settle hin. Right now, I think I am just able to play it, but I don't really shape it musically. Oh, and I needed a little break at 1:40 to think, haha!
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Before anyone asks: Yes, my latest 4 uploads are a daily update, I was suuuper busy the last days, so I made my Saturday morning really count and pushed through Landslög 2 to 5! Those pieces definitely deserve more time than I am currently able to spend, but I wanted to share my experiences with them with you anyway :) I'm looking forward to the next landslög!
- Landslag you worked on: Landslag V. – birkikjarr í fjallshlíð - birch shrubs in a mountain slope
- One thing you found easy: I liked this piece so much and I am sure it's very easy to do some colorful magic with sounds (if my strings weren't so damn old), that's why I am even more embarrassed about the wrong note in bar thirteen-ish. Although the piece looks like a couple of unconnected dots, there is an inner drama that holds everything togehter. Loved this one!
- One thing you found difficult: I wasn't too sure about the acciacatura, I just did it ... somehow, really didn't put too much thought into it. The last bars right before the harmonics were quite hard for me, I didn't really find a solution that makes sense.
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Week 1 update: I didn't manage to practice every day, but I did find time for two good sessions of about 90 minutes each, one on Monday morning, the other Friday evening. The first I devoted to working out specific problems in various pieces: the polyrhythms in no.8,; the meter shifts in no.7; the awkward (because of the high position) passage near the end of no.9; and the general craziness of no.11. I also spent about thirty minutes on no.4, mostly trying out alternate fingerings. Last night's session was devoted to the first four pieces. I'm feeling fairly good about these now, although I need to pay more attention the dynamic structure or 1 and 3. I'm hoping to have time on the weekend to get through 5, 6 and (possibly) 7.
I also want to say that I'm really impressed by how many here have taken up this challenge, and how well people are doing with the pieces. Thanks to all those who are posting videos! (I do hope to record something myself before the two weeks is up.) And thanks to Martin and Mircea for not only sharing their own masterful interpretations, but for their many useful (and encouraging) comments as well.
OK, now it's time for some serious work!
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I worked on landslag 7 but no recording yet. It’s a very difficult exercise for me and very much reminds me of Leo Brouwer compositions. Changing meter, stretch to the annular finger in right hand patterns, changing of timbre in the right hand gradually and observing dynamics all at the same time. Very challenging for me. I guess the only easier aspect for me would be the repetitive nature