Week 1: In the Salons of 19th Century Paris!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of the "Around the 19th Century Guitar World" challenge!
Pick a piece from the 19th century and feel free to share it! Tell us what you love about it, how long you've been playing it, what you're struggling with! Let us into your practice room
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the kickoff livestream! (<- click)
↓ Happy Sharing! ↓
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I’m taking this opportunity to familiarize myself with the Carulli pieces I never learned in the beginner book “A Modern Approach to Classical Guitar - Part One” by Charles Duncan.
Man, you can always learn something, even from the “simplest” of pieces! What I like about working on these pieces is that it gives you an opportunity to focus on so many more layers - instead of trying to just “hang on for dear life” to get the notes right.
What I found most challenging, especially from “Andante Grazioso”, was getting the right hand fingering right.
Also, because of so much repetition, it challenges you to come up with dynamic ways to keep it interesting.
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Coste - Andante Menuet Op 51 No 12
Okay, I promise this will be my last Coste post (at least until I post another one ). I love the dramatic third section of this piece, culminating with the high E on the first string. Then, when the A section repeats at the end, the energy is pulled back, like I'm exhausted from playing the previous section (which, of course, I am). Great stuff!
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Carcassi - Moderato con espressione Op 26 No 3
This comes from a set of six caprices by Carcassi. They are all quite fast and virtuosic, except for this one (which is why I picked it). This piece is all about right-hand arpeggios, and I am not too good at those. I have a tendency to miss a lot of the inner voice notes, especially with my i finger. In an effort to play them quietly, I often miss them completely (he swings ... he misses ... ).
I think I will make this my last post for this week one from Paris. The challenge now moves on to much less familiar ground for me in the next two weeks.