WEEK 2: La Guitarra Espanola!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the second week of our musical Journey to Spain!! This is the place to share submissions of the second week!
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the kickoff livestream for help with the first section!
If you want to describe your process (optional), feel free to use the following template.
- Things you found easy:
- Things you found difficult:
- (Optional): a video of you performing it!
- (Optional:) questions
↓ HAPPY PRACTICING, HAPPY SHARING ↓
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I thought I had posted this a couple of hours ago but I can't have hit the send button. This is a piece by Gaspar Sanz that I started a couple of days ago. I have been studying a book about performing baroque music on the classical guitar, need to put it into practice now I've almost got my fingers round this. It's from a set of pieces arranged by Karl Scheit.
I have a Shadow undersaddle pick up on my guitar and I recorded directly from this into my smartphone. I didn't play the repeats.
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Dear Community, the time is running and I also want to upload a piece, but I am still practicing .... you postet so great music - wow - insane .
I will upload a renaissance piece after Martins Martin great " how to make a video" advice ...
( Don`t know the correct title at the moment - I mean the workshop tomorrow evening ).
Tonebase is so cool - but for me the really hardest thing is to decide, on what pieces to work and on what challenge or livestream to participate.....
And also the language is a problem !
I can only write clumsy, simple sentences - that is the reason I do not write very much !!! I would write more - really !!!... But that would take so much time - and this is the time I need to practice
Best Regards
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A slow and majestic interpretation of the Gaspar Sanz piece "Pavanas". There were a few clams towards the beginning, but I felt this take was worth keeping, as I think there were some beautiful moments that I felt captured the essence of the piece.
I added quite a bit of reverb, as I thought that's how it would sound being played in a cathedral in Spain.
Gaspar Sanz was a composer, guitarist and priest that went to the University of Salamanca in Salamanca Spain. I found a picture of the Cathedral in Salamanca and looked at while rehearsing. It totally changed how I interpret the piece - giving more space at the end of the phrases for the sounds to reverberate throughout a cathedral.
A couple challenges I found with this piece -
- The trill in measure 2 is really difficult to pull off (literally) without hitting, and therefore muting, the open B string.
- The intonation in the ascending C, D, E and F chords towards the end is really bad. After recording this I decided to leave out the doubled octave note, which doesn't seem necessary and is causing the problem.