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Hi, everybody!
Mh,... it's a difficult question because i dedicate myself mostly to music from 1900s to today, specially with my quartet Nuntempe.
I have played many weird and fun stuff both with classical & electric guitar but these two pieces were a surprise to me, early on when i was starting my path in contemporary music:
The first is Ko-tha by italian composer Giacinto Scelsi. It's really unusual in the sense that the guitar is turned into a percussion instrument. https://youtu.be/-PsP57gM41c?feature=shared
The second is Salut fur Caudwell by Helmut Lachenmann, a masterpiece and the first to surprise me with, among other things, spoken parts while playing. https://youtu.be/aMTB7ctffNE?feature=shared
Since i discovered these two 25 years ago, many new things have found their place on my stand but the first surprise is already muted under the amount of pieces.
An unusual piece from the musical point of view would be the Nocturnal by Britten. It's unusually well composed, unusually deep in spirit and unusual in the way that is one of the few pieces of the traditional repertoire written for guitar by an incredibly important non guitarist composer! I love the Nocturnal and you can listen my rendition, if you wish, here: https://open.spotify.com/album/0Iel4khTjVW6p37QgCnl8F?si=yg5Kb67TSESVoMdpe8TjdQ
Another surprise for me was when i first heard Angelo Gilardino's 2nd Sonata (also in my cd in the link above). I was in a summer course in Italy and from somewhere the melodies and harmonies surged and it became a hunt to discover who was playing that amazing music and who was the composer and the name of the piece. It had a surprising impact on my soul. All of Angelo's music, i think, has contributed to make the guitar a different instrument.
So, that's it. Four unusual and surprising pieces for different reasons.
And here is, for your own amusment, a playlist of some of my quartet's recordings (both guitars). Very unusual music for sure :-)
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/47urgV1RskX78PKKiOdYR5?si=8DzlxcqxQpGmGCXclWGisA&pi=hD43WehRStuFe
I hope you'll find the links interesting and thanks a lot for listening!!
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At my senior recital in college (over thirty years ago), I played Richard Rodney Bennett’s Impromptus, why are pretty out there. I also played a bizarre piece that I wrote for tape and guitar, full of all kinds of strange noises I found by splicing reel-to-reel tape fragments together, playing them at different speeds, etc. The guitar part was half written out and half improvised. I never played it at all after the recital. That feels like a lifetime ago!
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I have attempted (unsuccessfully at this point) a couple of pieces that (sort of) fits the bill. Gilardino's Prelude from the Tambeau de Ravel (studio #24) It has a structure that is fairly recognizable that has very dissonant harmonies disjointed melodic phrases that all seem to work. BTW Gilardino has an impressive, and massive, body of works in a wide range of styles.
Another of my thwarted attempts was Mario Lavista's Natarayah. This is structured with alternating segments of music, a muted irregular ostinato pattern with a melodic/ harmonic fragments that map out an extended melodic structure throughout the piece.
A couple other pieces that I find interesting for different reasons.
Bartok Roumanian Folk Dances #3 Pe Loc Emre Sabuncuoglu. Sabuncuoglu transcribed this work for guitar using a bottleneck in a very effective way.
Le Gibet de Ravel (12 Studies for Guitar: No. 10) Tilman Hoppstock. This is essentially a recomposing of Ravel's 2nd movement of Gaspard de la Nuit. It is a stunning and haunting work (both this version and Ravel's originial). It depicts a hanging with chilling effect. Hoppstock is able to translate this piece wonderfully. His use of harmonics is amazing.
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I have not played this piece, but really would like to. There is a popular song. "Alfonsina y el Mar"; based on the suicide of Argentinian poet Alfonsina Storni. She was born in Switzerland, but grew up in Argentina. She was recognized along Gabriela Mistral, and Juana Ibarbourou as the great poets of the modern epoch. Some say she had terminal cancer, others that she suffered from depression, or that there was a forbidden love. She committed suicide by walking into the sea. A gentleman composed a poem to honor her, and that is the popular song "Alfonsina y el Mar". The lyrics are sad, but beautiful. Now I believe somebody has composed a classical guitar piece based on that melody. The first line "Te vas Alfonsina con tu soledad, que poemas nuevos fuiste a buscar?..." sets the tone. Does anybody has the classical guitar piece, and let me know where I can get it? Thanks, José
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Thanks Ariel, you know the story of Alfonsina better than I do. I was able to download the arrangement by Ariel Ramirez and Cesar Luna, with the score and tablature. I cannot read music sightseen, but I can do it slowly, so I use both the score and the tablature. This one is only missing the lyrics, that I have separate. I am a beginner at my 80 yrs, so it takes me a while to learn a piece. On this one the lyrics are just phenomenal, I am going to give it a try.
I am from Puerto Rico and know "Argentina, Mexico, Cuba y Puerto Rico son grandes centros de la música latinoamericana". Desde los tangos de Gardel, hasta las Milongas de Borges me encanta la música Argentina.
Saludos y Gracias
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Long time ago, in conservatory in Bonn, Germany, I played a composition by Wolfram Fuerstenau, a German 20th century composer. The piece was Homage a Jean Cocteau, published 1970 by the Dutch Van Teeseling music publisher. It's a great piece, perhaps someone will have heard of it? I cannot find a recording on YouTube....
Peter