Week 1: Composing Etudes: Kickoff!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of the composition challenge!
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the kickoff livestream to get ideas on how to write etudes
New prompt (!)
Follow these steps for this week:
- Post one aspect of your playing you would like to improve (your etude prompt)
- Choose one etude prompt that somebody else posted
- Begin writing a sketch focusing on the prompt you've chosen
- In preparation for week 2, post any sketches you would like to receive feedback on in the week 2 livestream here (<- click)
- (Optional) Along with your submission for week 2's live stream, provide questions or problems you've encountered while writing that you would like me to address specifically
Don't worry, this will all make sense once you watch the kickoff livestream!
↓ Reply below with your updates and questions! ↓
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Chord voicing etude : Los Tres Amigos
In response to prompt from Ron to create an etude where the melody moves between 3 note chords, I realized a few things while creating this:
- It's actually quite challenging (for me anyway) to play 3 note chords and bring out the voice properly, so Ron had a great idea!
- I created this slowly one chord at a time, and realized I don't have the technique yet (without a lot of practice) to actually play it. Ron, I don't know your level but hopefully you might find this playable?
- I wasn't sure how to indicate which voice to bring out in each chord so in the score I uploaded the voices have different colors and the "main" voice is in black in tablature (unfortunately the 2nd voice in green doesn't appear well when printed). Without the tab it's kind of hard to read actually so not sure how this could be written with just notation.
- I put an indication of H, M, or L above the notes as an aid to indicate which voice has the "melody".
- As I don't really have time to learn/play this properly I made a video of GuitarPro playing it where I tried to change dynamics so the melody (voice 1) is louder. This is not ideal because of course it sounds very mechanical but gives an idea of what I was going for.
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DON'T FORGET: for TOMORROW's livestream, post the sketches you would like feedback on in Week 2's thread HERE (<- click)