Week 2 - Practicing Passages // May 10
Hello and welcome to the Main Thread for Week 2 of the virtuosity challenge! This is the place to discuss the Week 2 stream and post your Week 2 practice updates.
- Make sure you've read the guidelines before replying (<- click)
- Watch the Week 2 livestream here for help with this week's exercises!
Download the sheet music: in this second week, we will be working with different excerpts from my right-hand technique workshop, as well as some new materials.
Download them both here:
-
Right-hand exercise book (<- click)
-
Download additional sheet music here (now with fingerings!)
Video updates are encouraged due to the technical aspect of this challenge Feel free to upload videos into your replies OR simply link to YouTube. YouTube video submissions CAN be unlisted. Just make sure they're not set on "private", so we can all see them.
If you want to describe your process, feel free to use the following template.
- Exercise(s) you have been working on:
- Things you found easy:
- Things you found difficult:
↓ Reply below with your submissions and questions! ↓
-
Hi everyone!
This week I´ve been working on Villalobos etude 3 and "El Colibrí" by Sagreras. In the the video I´m playing the last part of "El Colibrí".
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aUDzVEYyWund8jAbq2p3ILIZFIpVAqxd/view?usp=sharing
Easy: fingerings, preparing and so on. I´ve been practising Mircea´s exercises and this "cuban style" for months and now they feel natural.
Hard: there´s always a point in wich my body (even the legs) starts tensing. Then I can´t keep playing faster without blundering. I´ve been reviewing some livestreams by Martin, who always puts relaxation in the first place.
Now, this is my question for Mircea (and you guys): I´ve noticed that my ability to play fast increases noticeably after a long period of focused SLOW practice (be it tremolo, escales, whatever), instead of fighting against the metronome. So: do you think one could aim for speed by working mainly on relaxation?
Thank you all! HAVE FUN.
-
I’ve been continuing with the warm ups from week one. For the excerpts I’ve been doing El Abejorro. Would be fun to try the complete piece if I can locate the sheet music. David Russell’s rendition is pretty cool! The Leyenda excerpt is fine. THAT’s not the part of Leyenda I struggle with. It’s the L hand in the next section I cannot master...yet! I’m on vacation so I’m not spending as much time as I normally would but here are two recordings of Brouwer #1. The first one I recorded two weeks ago in my home studio. This is the way I would normally play it without A planted. Today I did a quick video on my phone with the A planted. The challenge with A planted is:
1) changing position smoothly from near the bridge to sul tasto.
2) changing position of the thumb for different attack.
3) tension that goes up the arm and makes the right side of the hand tingle and numb. Not a good sign. I normally plant for arpeggios but this keeping A on the first string is very challenging and if the tension continues I will have to abandon the idea. It didn’t bother me in any of the other pieces but on the Brouwer it does. Weird?