
The Dance Challenge Week Two

Let’s dance!
In this community-driven challenge, we will be playing dance music. So, choose a piece from any time period, location, or culture that is set to a dance rhythm. Whether it be an Italian Saltarello, an Argentinian Tango, or something in between, let’s get our toes tapping and our fingers dancing across the guitar strings.
This challenge will last four weeks, until Saturday, June 7th. A new thread will be posted each week.
In week one, we had music from Tansman, Stachak, J.S. Bach, Lauro and Aguado. Let’s keep it going!
If there are any beginners looking for suggested pieces, please feel free to ask the community.
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Lauro's La Negra and Aguado's Waltz Op 8 No 2
I tried a new approach here to the Lauro. The first time through the A section, I am going very slowly and freely. Then I come in a tempo (or at least a MY tempo) on the repeat.
The D section of the Aguado waltz has some interesting harmonies that seem a bit ahead of his time.
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BWV 996 Courante
I posted this back in the February 2023 Challenge and have just revived it. I believe this is a better version (except for the stumble/memory lapse in the repeat of the 'B' section). I still have work to be done on this but I feel pretty good about the technical aspects. I am slowly chipping away it the full BWV 996 Suite.
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Decided to join the challenge and not wait till the last week…
I plan to make regular recordings of short pieces every week, to get myself more accustomed to the mics and video stress. And not care too much about recording quality in this phase.
This is the first short dance: an Allemande named ‘fortune helas pourquois’, bij Nicolaes Vallet. A French born lutist and composer who moved to the Northern Netherlands around 1600. he lived , teached and composed in Amsterdam. He was self employed, which was quite exceptional in those days. He was also his own editor and sold his songs and dances from his house.
It was my first teacher who adapted a few pieces for guitar, and I remember I really liked playing them.
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Another of Alexandre Tansman's short pieces for guitar, this time his Sicilienne.
I knew he was born in Poland, then became a French citizen, but I didn't realize that because of his Jewish heritage, he made Joseph Goebbels "Blacklist" and was forced to flee to the US. He ended up in Hollywood writing scores for films and was nominated for an Oscar for "Paris Underground" in 1946. (That has nothing to do with this piece, but I thought it was interesting.)