Roni's Regondi Etude No. 6
I've been trying to learn this piece for a little while now since I discovered it a few months ago, maybe a practice diary might help me do it properly.
Why I'm learning it:
- I want to expand my repertoire to good pieces I haven't heard before or not everyone plays (as far as I know)
- I like it, I'm surprised I haven't heard much Regondi before, probably because pretty much all of his music is technically more challenging than other famous guitar composers, but I find it quite on a par with many pieces by Chopin for example, and better than any Sor, Giuliani, Carcassi, Carulli...
- It's challenging, but not toooo much.
- Regondi without a GED is Roni . It's fate that I should play this music.
What I'm learning:
- This is really musically sensitive music, which means it's making me really explore everything the guitar can do and is broadening my technique in a musical rather than technical way. I'm therefore finding new things I need to work on through the piece. I'm also finding it interesting to really play with phrasing and tempi, and the music seems to beckon real flexibility in this area, sometimes faster, sometimes much slower, sometimes pausing, sometimes building momentum without hesitation...
- I'm also learning a lot about how he uses the instrument and composes for it. Although it's hard, I find it to be very idiomatic guitar writing, and so it's good music to study.
To get the ball rolling here's a video of me messing up. I've more or less learnt the whole thing, but don't want to do yet another take... 'scuse my language by the way...
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This is SO beautiful, Roni! I remember trying some Regondi after hearing Tariq Harb play something by him. Once I saw how hard it is, though, I put it into my ever-growing pile of music to get to "someday". Hearing you play this so beautifully, though, is making me want to try again. I can't wait to hear you play it after you work on it more.
BTW, I'd love some hummus!
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Thank you to all of you for your encouragement! It means a lot and is very motivating.
Just thought I'd post a quick update, that after Emmanuel 's live stream about learning music quickly, I'm giving David Russell's learning-a-piece-from-the-end system another go. I never really liked it because it didn't really lend itself to organising the structure of the piece clearly in my mind, but at the moment it seems to help me focus on the technical aspects better, and prevent boredom of the music by not playing it too much. And if Mani say's it's good, it must be good. Never mind what David Russell says...
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Some notes on the backwards learning technique:
- REALLY GOOD POINT: as I play through the piece in real time, I find I'm progressing through bits I'm more and more confident in because I've inevitably practised them more. This, as opposed to working from the beginning, where I often find I'm playing through the piece with a sense of things getting more and more difficult.
- There is less boredom of hearing the same bits over and over again, keeping the music fresher.
- There is more focus on getting the technical aspects down because my attention isn't so easily taken away by enjoying the music.
Overall, quite effective. :)