🎯 The Etude Challenge: Study Pieces, Serious Progress - Week 6

Attention tonebuddies! It's time to embrace the music that was literally designed to make you a better guitarist. Welcome to The Etude Challenge — four weeks dedicated to the art of the etude!

Etudes occupy a unique place in the classical guitar repertoire. They're technical workouts disguised as beautiful music — pieces that sharpen your skills while rewarding you with something genuinely worth performing. From the elegant simplicity of Carcassi and Sor to the rhythmic brilliance of Brouwer's Etudes Simples, the virtuosic fire of Villa-Lobos's 12 Études, and everything in between — there's an etude out there for every player at every level.

This challenge is your chance to pick one (or more!), commit to it, and share your journey with the community.

🎯 Whether you choose to:

  • Tackle a classic — Sor Op. 35, Carcassi Op. 60, Giuliani Op. 48
  • Go for something bold — Villa-Lobos, Barrios, or Coste
  • Explore the modern side — Brouwer, Carlevaro, or Bogdanovic
  • Revisit an old friend — Polish a piece you learned before and bring it to a new level

…this is your moment to dig in and grow. This challenge is open to all levels — whether you're working through your very first Sor etude or preparing a Villa-Lobos for the stage, you belong here.


📅 Challenge Dates

Start: February 23

End: April 17


💡 How to Participate

  1. Pick your etude – Choose one that excites you and challenges you. Not sure where to start? Ask the community for suggestions!
  2. Share your goal – Tell us what you're working on and what you want to achieve (clean run-through, memorization, performance tempo, etc.)
  3. Post your progress – Upload short clips, practice notes, or reflections as you go. We want to see the process, not just the polish.
  4. Engage – Listen to what others are working on, leave encouragement, and trade practice tips!

102 replies

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    • LIVE
    • martin.3
    • 2 days ago
    • Reported - view

    The Etude Challenge is wrapping up this week with our Watch Party on Thursday — and what a ride it's been. From Sor to Regondi to Brouwer, you all brought incredible performances and pushed each other every week.

    What kind of challenge would you like to see??

    Drop your ideas below. What would get you excited to practice for the next 4-6 weeks?

      • Eric
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       I propose the "Expand Your Horizons" Challenge. Choose a piece that you might not ordinarily play because: it requires a technique you have not yet learned, you think of it as "too easy" (easy pieces can often teach a lot), it is in a musical style or time period you don't often play, it is by a composer unknown or unfamiliar to you, etc. Any reason is fine

      • Eric
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       I have always liked the "Teacher and Student" concept. Choose two composers who had a teacher-student relationship and work on a piece by each of them. Some pairings include: Sor and Coste, Giuliani (Mauro) and Giuliani (Emilia), Pratten and Shand, Arcas and Tarrega, Tarrega and Llobet, Tarrega and Pujol, Pujol and Anido. If transcriptions are chosen, that would give even more possibilities (ex. Haydn and Beethoven).

      • Ron.3
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       I very much like  suggestion of an "Expand Your Horizons" challenge!

      • Amateur guitarist/lutenist
      • David_Krupka
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       Interesting idea! It's a challenge just to name a few teacher-student pairs. Here's a few more to add to your list: Giuliani-Horetzky; Horetzky-Szczepanowski; Giuliani-Bobrowicz; Pelzer-Pratten (father/daughter); Aguado-Cano; Cano-Tarrega (possibly); Tarrega-Prat; Llobet-Prat; Prat-Anido. For baroque guitar, Corbetta-Granata and Corbetta-Medard. For lute, Vincenzo Galilei-Michelagnolo Galilei (father/son); Rene Mesangeau-Ennemond Gaultier; Charles Mouton-Rene Milleran; Charles Mouton-P.F. Le Sage de Richee; S.L Weiss-E.G. Baron.

      • Eric
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       Love it! I figured you would be able to add to my list.

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       Some more:

      Bach / Buxtehude (teacher), Bach and everybody else (students)

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       I really like the "Expand Your Horizon" concept - though not without some trepidation, knowing my propensity to constantly get in over my head.

      • Eric
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       So for you, choose a very short, easy piece, from your beloved Romantic period, by a mediocre guitar composer. Make sure there is practically no counterpoint in it. 🙂

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       Yep, those are the pieces I love!😁

      • Amateur guitarist/lutenist
      • David_Krupka
      • Yesterday
      • Reported - view

       And yet a couple more: Segovia-John Williams (the latter has been composing in recent years); Gary Ryan-Laura Snowdon.

      • Debbie
      • 2 hrs ago
      • Reported - view

       I very much enjoyed watching the watch party. Everyone really played beautifully. Sorry I couldn’t attend live.

      For the next challenge I’d like to suggest a Renaissance challenge. It’s Dowland’s 400 year anniversary this year so I think it would be appropriate! 😄

    • Eric
    • 2 wk ago
    • Reported - view

    Shand - Exercise 68 from Improved Method

    This reminds me of something by Mertz. The tempo marking is adagio, which is just my speed! 🙂

      • Ron.3
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Very nice Eric. I didn't realise you had problems with your right hand, although I think I remember you mentioning avoiding fast arpeggios. Despite that you always manage to play everything so musically with exquisite phrasing. My struggles are with the left hand, ever since I broke my m finger about 9 years ago - I also have no feeling at the tip of the m finger which doesn't help! 

      • Eric
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks, Ron. We are all just a bunch of wounded warriors, aren’t we! It’s quite comforting to remember that we all have our struggles and challenges. Nothing about this is easy for any of us.

      • Dale_Needles
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Nicely and musically played.

      • Robert_Love
      • 9 days ago
      • Reported - view

        So nice Eric. Great reading.Nice touch.

      --Robert

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • 9 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great job, Eric. The A section(and its return) has a nice sense of drama. There is some very interesting harmonic elements in it. I'm afraid Shand kind of loses me in the m middle section. But then I guess that makes the A section return that much nicer.

      • BLaflamme
      • 8 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Speed is spot on, musically more interesting than the previous study while being an exercise!

    • Dale_Needles
    • 2 wk ago
    • Reported - view

    Here is a nice study from Abel Carlevaro's Cuaderno No. 2 for the right hand.

    https://youtu.be/rbrAbKrqi9U?si=dO8kxcxAXgIQwQCI

      • Ron.3
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Interesting study Dale - to my ears it's almost Villa-Lobos like. Well played!

      • Eric
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       I like that a lot! Like Ron said, it’s reminiscent of HVL. I forget which one, but one of his etudes has those repeated chords.

      • Dale_Needles
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

        Thanks. This little chord study does have a bit of HVL feel to it but probably more than anything it is a preparatory study for Carlevaro's Estudio No. 5 Homenaje a HVL. 

      • BLaflamme
      • 8 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great take on this exercise Dale, I also remember working on this many many years ago... I definitely need to revisit all of this!

    • Eric
    • 2 wk ago
    • Reported - view

    Sor - Op 29 No 24 final version (at least for now 😉)

    I think this is about as polished of a version of this that I can make for now. I tried a different process in my video editing, but there are some synchronization problems. Oh well!

Content aside

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