Week 4: The Flow of Practice: Bringing It Together
End of the Year Challenge: "Finish Strong!"
As the year comes to a close, it's the perfect time to look back on your guitar journey, celebrate your progress, and set the stage for a powerful finish! Whether you've been steadily refining a piece all year, revisiting past favorites, or holding onto that "one day" project, now’s the time to bring it to life. Let’s wrap up this year with a final push, together!
Challenge Theme: Complete, Conquer, and Celebrate!
Goal:
Choose one guitar piece or project that has been on your list this year. This might be a piece you’ve been working on in lessons, something you’ve always wanted to learn but never started, or a performance you’d like to polish. Dedicate the final weeks of the year to bringing it to completion—whatever "finished" means for you!
Challenge Options:
Complete a Piece: If you’ve been working on a piece throughout the year, let’s aim to bring it to the finish line. Focus on refining tricky sections, memorizing it, or even recording it as a performance!
Start & Finish a New Piece: Is there a piece that’s been sitting on your "someday" list? Dive in! Start fresh, put in dedicated practice time, and see how far you can get by the end of the year.
Polish for Performance: Got a piece you can already play but want to perfect? Use this time to iron out the details and maybe even perform it for friends, family, or the tonebase community!
Challenge Guidelines:
Set Your Goals: Decide on the piece or project and set a few concrete goals (e.g., "play smoothly at tempo," "record a full video," or "memorize all sections").
Share Your Journey: Post your progress, questions, and reflections with the community! Let us know what you're working on, why you chose it, and any hurdles you’re overcoming.
Celebrate the Wins: At the end of the challenge, share your "finished" version! Whether it’s a recording, a progress update, or simply sharing your reflections, let’s celebrate together.
Dates:
This challenge runs from now until December 30th. Finish the year with a sense of accomplishment and the motivation to take on new pieces in the coming year!
Why Join?
This isn’t just about completing a piece; it’s about proving to yourself what you can achieve with focus and support. Join us for a fun, collaborative way to end the year on a high note.
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Schumann Winterzeit II op. 68.39 update somewhat better
This is a better recording, though complete with blunders and dogs. The second section is still tricky but at least the repeats are generally pretty clean. One of my dogs barked towards the end and it took me a bit to recover. I should be able to get a good recording soon and a recording with both Winterzeit I & II.
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Schumann Winterzeit I & II op. 68.38-39
I finally managed a decent recording of both Winterzeit I & II in a single take (no small feat for me!) This still needs refinement but it is mostly there. I need to work on my tone control and phrasing, especially the transitions. I have a couple of places that still present challenges but are manageable.
Eric had requested a bit more information on these pieces. I will summarize my response to him here. These pieces are towards the end of Schumann's 'Album fur die Jugend', which is a graded collection of pieces for beginners and / or young pianists. I have recently developed an appreciation for Schumann's work, at least his shorter character pieces. I still have less interest in the longer works of most Romantic composers. I have a collection of Schumann transcriptions, 'Das Schumann Buch fur Gitarre' (I also have 2 books of Bach in the same series). I should note that these are available but google them - they are much cheaper from the UK, though shipping might make up the difference.
These pieces were included in the Schumann Book, but the Winterzeit II had several errors/ alterations that lost some of the wonderful chromaticism and harmonies of the original. I decided to make my own transcriptions of both pieces. My Winterzeit I transcription did not differ in any meaningful way from the one in the book but I did have several different alterations for the Winterzeit II.
Note: this is more a rambling extension rather than a summary - sorry.
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hello to all,
I´ve been working on the Fernando Sor´s Andante Largo, ( Im working on it for some months already ). The piece is more dificult and longuer than I expected, the tipical Fernando Sor composition with clear three layers, dificult to enhance. The 6th string is tuned to D, and likewise other pices it has first a D mayor part, D minor and repetition of D mayor.....I hope you like it .....I´ll try to upload another piece before end of the year. Greetings