WEEK 3: What We've Challenged!!!
WELCOME TO THE MAIN THREAD FOR THE THIRD WEEK OF "End of the Year" PRACTICE CHALLENGE!
- Select Your Piece(s): Choose one or more pieces that you've learned this year. It could be something you've practiced through our live streams, a personal favorite, or a challenging piece you've conquered.
- Record Your Performance: Film yourself playing your selected piece(s). Quality doesn't have to be professional – it's all about sharing your progress and passion.
- Share Your Journey: Post your video in our community forum under the "End of the Year Challenge" thread. Include a brief write-up about your experience learning the piece – what challenges you faced, how you overcame them, and what this piece means to you. If you don't want to record yourself, show us a video of a piece you plan to take on in the next year!
- Engage with Others: Watch, comment, and encourage your fellow community members. Share your feedback, experiences, and celebrate each other's progress.
↓ Happy Sharing! ↓
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Hi to all, one of the pieces I´ve coquered this year is the Carcassi´s study 24th from the opus 60. This collection of melodic progressive studies are a very good collection......study 24 is among the most advanced ones and under my view the most concertistic ( does this word exist in english??) one.....I hope you like it
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Sor Etudes Op. 6.8, op. 31.18 and op. 31.20
These are 3 of 4 Sor Etudes that I will post here. I posted these recently in the Sor mini challenge. My intention for these was to present them in a single recording, however, it was just beyond me to make a decent continuous recording. I find it really difficult to achieve that final refinement in order to perform a piece.
My ambition for this challenge was to revive several works (like 9 - 10 ). I figure I would work backwards since the latest ones would still be fresh and need less work to get them to a decent level ( - stop it, you're killing me). Obviously, those objectives will require some serious reconsideration. After I record the next etude. I will move on to the BWV 1009 Prelude. Then we will see.