Group 4
Are you tired of struggling with the complexities of guitar-playing? Good news – most guitar music relies on a small number of key technical building blocks. This upcoming two-week intensive program will dive into these building blocks and offer a systematic approach to improving your foundational skills on the guitar. By breaking down the technical intricacies of guitar-playing into a handful of essential movements, we’ll be providing exclusive insights and exercises that can help you overcome the most common difficulties. With practice and dedication, these exercises can become an integral part of your regular warm-up routine, unlocking your potential to better express your musical ideas.
Details
- Sign-Up: March 15th
- Course Period: March 20th - March 31st
- Check-In via Zoom: March 23 & March 30, 10am PST
Assignment (week 1)
The video below introduces the course and presents 6 exercises aimed at developing essential 'building blocks' of guitar playing. Aim to practice each every day as part of your warmup routine for 2~4 minutes. This should result in an overall 15~30 min practice block.
The exercises presented are:
exercise 1a - apoyando/tirando alternation of single fingers (i-i-i... m-m-m... a-a-a...)
exercise 1b - tirando alternation of small groups (m-i, i-m, a-m, m-a, a-i, i-a)
exercise 2 - apoyando alternation across first three strings
exercise 3 - 'quasi' slurs
exercise 4 - chromatic scales
exercise 5 - shifting
exercise 6 - extensions
If you aren't able to consistently complete all exercises or if it takes too long, select whichever you think will be the most beneficial ones for you (e.g. 1-4). Remember that it is better to practise shorter but regularly than to practice longer but less frequently. Keep track of your practice! This will allow you to later asses how useful a change to your practice routine has been.
Assignment // Week 1
Assignment // Week 2
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CHECK-IN SESSION // ZOOM LINK // WEEK 2
Thursday 30 March, 2023
6 PM London
10 AM Pacific TimeJoin Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83014964945?pwd=dEM5a0JRbHloZElBamNOZWlSZnJsdz09Meeting ID: 830 1496 4945
Passcode: 992107 -
Hi Emmanuel,
Thanks for these arpeggio exercises.
I had a couple of questions this morning.First one is about arpeggios and specifically starting on anything other than p.
I now recognize , or better said I had an A-HA moment, realizing my morning warm ups were biased to always playing arpeggios starting with p .
Starting with m is fine I am struggling with starting with i.
For me, saying : Ti-ple-let when starting with i keeps it going well but without the little mental note, I always fall back to a p bias . do you have any thoughts on how tot break the p bias , I will keep this is my morning warmups now for sure :-)
Looking back at week 1 , I also realize my left hand has a challenge with 2,3 movement. In isolation, just left hand 2 to 3 chromatic movement , moving up and down the stings does feel weak.
Would you have any thoughts on left hand position or other exercises to target strengthening 2 3 independence movement ? I think I am over thinking this part because they share a common tendon and maybe can resolve it with repetitive practice of week 1 exercises :-) .
Regards,
Larry
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Hi everybody. I attach here my first video with the first week exercises as well Manny's exercises for me. These were the ones that I mainly wanted to show for now, since I don't find too much trouble with chromatic scales, apoyando and shifts, as with these. Would like to know what you think Emmanuel and anyone who'd like to suggest something. Tell me what you think about the 'explosive' return of the fingers, I feel it has been helpful, and I've improved a little on holding the fingers in position. Actually, Mircea a long time ago told me to do something similar but with apoyando playing, and I'm adapting it to the tirando stroke.
Thanks!