Week 2

Attention all tonebuddies! Are you ready to embark on a journey of musical creativity and exploration? Join our Arrangement & Transcription Challenge and discover the joy of reimagining music for the classical guitar!

Over the next four weeks, we’ll celebrate the art of transforming works from other instruments, ensembles, or even genres into stunning guitar performances. From Albéniz and Granados to Piazzolla, Bach, Scarlatti, or even your own favorite songs — everything goes!

🎯 Whether you choose to:

  • Work on a well-known transcription (Albéniz’s Asturias, Granados’s Danza Española, Piazzolla’s Libertango)

  • Create your own arrangement from scratch

  • Compare different versions and share your insights

…this is your chance to dive deep into the creative process and share your journey with the tonebase community.

This challenge is open to all levels — from curious beginners discovering their first transcription to experienced players refining their own arrangements. Let’s celebrate the versatility and expressive power of the guitar together!


📅 Challenge Dates

Start: November 11
End: December 11
👉 Join anytime by introducing your project in the comments below!


💡 How to Participate

  1. Pick your piece – Choose an arrangement or transcription that excites you.

  2. Share your goal – Are you learning, arranging, or refining?

  3. Post your progress – Upload short clips, notes, or reflections as you go.

  4. Engage – Encourage others, ask questions, and exchange arranging tips!


🎥 Watch Party Reminder

The Watch Party on December 11 will feature recorded submissions from this challenge!
So make sure to submit your final performance videos and showcase your creative work!

39 replies

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    • Steve_Price
    • 2 wk ago
    • Reported - view

    The first part of John Dowland's Prelude, P98, from the "Margaret Board Lute Book." I've only recently begun to appreciate Renaissance music, and this is one of my favorites. After this, he includes some great runs, so that will take more time to get down. 

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Great start, Steve. Thanks for reminding me how much I like Dowland's music. This is a new one to me (or maybe I just forgot). It has been several years since I played any Renaissance music. I have a severe aversion to scordatura. I need to get over that because there is so much beautiful Renaissance music.

      • Steve_Price
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks a lot, Jack. I'm definitely not a fan of alternate tunings, and especially don't want to mess with my third string, which is half wonky most of the time anyway. I could only find this in 3=F#, but I was able to tweak it a little and make it work in standard tuning without making anything too awkward. I usually end up changing them anyway to work with my hands. I've messed with a few others, and some seem to work and others don't. To me, it's worth the effort of not retuning. 

      • Retired
      • Jack_Stewart
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       That's been my experience as well. I usually try to play the pieces without retuning,  but that can create some rather awkward fingerings. That is why I have let my Renaissance repertoire slide. Actually one of reasons - memory being the other.

      • Dale_Needles
      • 2 wk ago
      • Reported - view

       Very nice start. Nice to hear some Dowland, such a great composer. 

      • Ron.3
      • 13 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Great start. I'm also a fan of Downland's music, although I haven't played any for years. I must revisit!

      • matt.1
      • 13 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Thanks for posting this! You've inspired me to try some renaissance again too.  

      • Eric
      • 13 days ago
      • Reported - view

      So cool, Steve! It has a real improvisatory character to it.

      • joosje
      • 7 days ago
      • Reported - view

      this is a really beautiful piece. You made a good start. The sphere is there . The sound is really good. Looking forward to the updates.

    • matt.1
    • 13 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Here's my week 2 of Dedicatoria.  I'm still in the survival mode phase, all of my attention is just trying to remember where it goes and make it to the end without any train wrecks. It's coming along though. 

      • Eric
      • 13 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Sounds great, Matt! It’s such a beautiful melody.

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

      This is coming along really well, Matt. Your tone and phrasing are excellent. Great job.

      • Dale_Needles
      • 11 days ago
      • Reported - view

      Coming along very well!

      • Steve_Price
      • 10 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Really nice, Matt. That is such a pretty piece. 

      • Reinhard
      • 10 days ago
      • Reported - view

       it's a lovely piece. Actually i only knew the guitar version. Thanks to your contribution I checked out the piano version. Well played. 

      • joosje
      • 7 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I missed the first week. This is really sounding very nice. Great piece and you play it so well. Nice phrasing and good sound. Thank you for sharing this.

    • Eric
    • 13 days ago
    • Reported - view

    La Paloma

    Here is a fun one I thought might work well for this challenge. The song was written by Sebastian Yradier in the mid-nineteenth century. I was able to find several transcriptions of it, but I really think Tarrega’s works best, which is what I am playing here, although with a few minor embellishments in the style of Pepe Romero.

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

       You have down a great job capturing the playfulness of this piece, Eric. Well done. 

      • Dale_Needles
      • 11 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Lovely and fun piece. It takes me back to Spain, strolling through one of those beautiful Spanish plazas. You play it very well. 

      • JUAN_ALONSO
      • 10 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Really beatifull.....La Paloma its a very famous "habanera" in Spain.....the Tarrega arrangement its really beatifull and you play it very well....i like it  very much ....

      • Reinhard
      • 10 days ago
      • Reported - view

       very nice. Like how you keep the tempo steady for most of piece. It has some "groove" for me.

      • joosje
      • 7 days ago
      • Reported - view

      beautiful. As said here, so playful and musical.  Great submission!

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

    Schumann op. 68.38-9 Winterzeit 1 & 2

    This from a transcription I did the last time we had a Transcription Challenge. It is from Schumann's Album for the Young. I wanted to refine this from the previous posting. I do think this is better but I find it difficult to nail down the performance. I will probably move on to another previous posting. I would like to present a new piece but I am not sure I can actually get something by the end of the challenge.

    I have played these pieces so much the dogs couldn't get away fast enough.

      • Dale_Needles
      • 11 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Your transcriptions of these beautiful pieces are excellent. They work so well on the guitar. Congrats.  

      • Eric
      • 10 days ago
      • Reported - view

       You really do have the transcription gift, Jack! Did you have the benefit of seeing other guitar transcriptions, or did you just go from the piano score alone?

Content aside

  • 4 days agoLast active
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