Week 1 - Technical Foundation // May 3
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of the virtuosity challenge! This is the place to discuss the Week 1 livestream and post your Week 1 practice updates.
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the kickoff livestream for help with the first section!
Download the sheet music: in this first week, we will be working with materials from my right-hand technique workshop. Download them here:
Right-hand exercise book (<- click)
See the pinned post below for a specific practice guide featuring all the exercises we talked about during today's livestream!
Since this challenge is all about virtuosity, video updates are more highly encouraged than usual. Feel free to upload the video in the reply OR simply link to your YouTube video.
YouTube video submissions CAN be unlisted. Just make sure they're not set on "private", so we can actually see them.
If you want to describe your process, feel free to use the following template.
- Exercise(s) you have been working on:
- Things you found easy:
- Things you found difficult:
↓ Reply below with your submissions and questions! ↓
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Mircea and @ everybody first of all thank you for correcting me as much as you can, you will have to fast fwd in places, also I taped myself in 2 positions for some exercises. Apologies and thank you!
The easiest thing after a week of daily practice is still the preparation, it feels very natural to me
The most difficult: left hand seems to slow me down more in the arpeggios, while the right hand seems to slow me down more in the scales. In the apoyando scales I still produce a noise, just when my finger touches de string (bzz) to plug and kill the previous note....
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Hello everyone! Hope you're doing well and practicing a lot. Well, I haven't got too much time to practice these past three days, but before I was focusing mostly on the arpeggios exercises and not so much in all the apoyando ones. But still, I have improved a bit my apoyando technique, as well as my arpeggios, Mircea's guidance has been really helpfull!
- Things you've found easy: mostly, the preparation, it did my life so much easier
- Things you've found difficult: during the rests strokes I used to get my i finger oftenly caught on the string, so when speeding up the notes it didn't were so even, but today I lowered my nails and it sounded like it might were fixed, but still, I have to keep practicing to ensure . I think I tense a bit sometimes when going to the next string during rest stroke.
In the video I play exercises 2A, 2B, and 3B. I'm not so happy with my tone
By the way, if you are wondering what my guitar "rest" is, it's a tool given to kids that do swimming, specifically for a swimming style. It does a bit its duty haha have a nice practice!
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First of all, well done to everyone who has posted videos and updates. It's really wonderful to see how many talented musicians are taking part in these challenges (myself excluded).
Exercises I have been working on: 1a, 2a, 2b, 4e, 3a, 3b, 3c, 5b. I have been doing a number of Mircea's exercises for a long time now (since his first livestream on Facebook) as part of my daily routine (1a, 2b, 2c, 4a, 4b and 2a) and I alternate between 3c and 5b but recently I have done these with m,a instead of i,m. I also do some other scale exercises and Scott Tennant's daily workout for the left hand. It would be interesting to hear Mircea's comments as I am probably just perfecting my bad habits.
What I found easy. The arpeggios I think I am OK with and planting
What I found hard: Increaing the spped and playing with the metronome in 3a and 3b
Some videos below
https://youtu.be/mJA9dA1_MX0 - exercise 3a
https://youtu.be/Tu8eH-mLFgw -exercise 3b
https://youtu.be/oYXiY-J-szE - exercise 5b part 1 - run out of time to do the rest
https://youtu.be/pDw3zxA0jm8 - arpeggio exercises
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Well done to everyone who's posted exercises this week. I will try to watch as many as I can before tomorrow's live stream. It's been an eventful week for me and I haven't had as much time as I would like to practice. However, I have been through all the exercises enough to highlight where I need to work!
I found the arpeggios quiet easy - at least at slow speed - as I've used planting for many years.
My struggle with them and with the rest stroke scales is the tension that builds up as I increase the speed. On the rare occasions I manage to relax I can certainly tell the differences, but I find most times the tension just creeps up on me almost unnoticed, until I realise it's become a block to making progress. Any tips on how to practice relaxation/avoid tensions would be very welcome!
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Hey Guys, Sorry for the late submission (trouble with DaVinci) and length of this video, since It includes all the exercises we discussed. I'm not accustomed to doing string preparation like this, so these exercises are great to develop this skill. The challenge of coordinating this with both hands is apparent and I certainly need to continue working on this stuff. I believe the scale exercises and cross string alternation patterns are important for me to develop further to achieve greater speed and accuracy in scale passages. As you can see from the video, I need to continue these exercises to improve technique. ( I should probably memorize the patterns, so I can focus more carefully on execution - too many mistakes from loss of concentration).
Mircea, Thank you for providing us with these focused exercises for technique development and warm up routines. I believe they will yield significant results when practiced consistently.