Revitalizing Your Classical Guitar Journey: Mastering the Fundamentals with Dr. Daniel de Arakal!
Join Dr. Daniel de Arakal, renowned Director of Guitar Studies at Chapman University and host of the tonebase Beginning Guitar Course, for an enlightening live stream that dives back into the core principles of classical guitar. Whether you're just starting out or have been playing for years, Daniel will delve into timeless concepts that fortify your musical journey and deepen your appreciation of the classical guitar and its rich repertoire.
In the heat of mastering a challenging piece or exploring a novel technique, these vital principles can sometimes be left in the shadows. Topics span from optimizing your sitting position, alleviating tension, refining tone production, to strategies for engaging with new repertoire, and beyond.
Perfect for players at every stage, this session promises to reinvigorate your approach to the classical guitar.
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Do you have suggestions for favorite studies/ex for training proprioception of the hands, coordinating motion horizontally across stings? In polyphonic passages, where I have to skip over strings and place the RH and LH fingers on new strings, I often loose track of the position of RH/LH fingers. I feel getting better mastery of knowing where my hands are in space with respect to the strings without looking would go a long way to helping in such cases.
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Let's talk about memorization if Daniel and Martin are game! I think it's, for the most part, a macho stunt in the guitar world. Non-guitarists (except for solo pianists), especially musicians who play in orchestras, bands, wind ensembles, and chamber groups etc., read 100% of the time; string quartets that play from memory are rare.
Kevin Loh just won 2nd prize at the GFA and he read the set piece - which in my opinion took a lot of confidence because playing from the score is frowned on by classical guitarists. To continue, memorization often results in the performer presenting a false version of the score without dynamics, phrase markings, awareness of form and harmonic structure, articulations etc. - can you write the memorized score out with all of the dynamics, articulation, fingerings etc.? I think that very few of us can do this. As a concrete example. try this with the first Brouwer Estudio sencillo and focus just on the dynamics of which there are many!
I find that having the score in front of me frees me to try different ideas on the fly that I wouldn't come up with playing from memory. At the same time, you memorize the piece in a relaxed way without really trying, and I find I can look away from the score and play long sections from memory if I feel confident doing so.
Don't feel compelled to memorize a composition you're performing - reading isn't a crutch or cheating. Playing in public from memory is a recent practice that began with Liszt and Clara Wieck Schumann in the mid 19th century, and contemporary audiences were scandalized when they did so.
What do the other community members think about memorization - pro, con and neutral?
Joel
Raleigh NC (USA) -
Hi Daniel, thank you so much for the livestream and for taking time out to take additional questions. I'm trying to improve my tremolo (as a beginner). My I finger doesn't align with M and A fingers. What I mean is while my M and A fingers are curved, my I finger remains straighter, strays a bit further away from A and M and hits the string at a somewhat acute angle. I'm noticing a gap between the movement from M to I. I'M USING THE TRADITIONAL PAMI FOR TREMOLO.
Strangely, if I do a two finger tremolo (PIMI), or even PAMA it's much more uniform. What do you think could be the problem? I'd really love any advice/suggestions from everyone.
Thanks