Group 4
This Two Week Intensives will cover the essential techniques of staccato, portato, and legato for guitar players. Staccato involves playing notes in a short, detached manner, while legato involves playing notes smoothly and connected. Portato is a style that falls between staccato and legato, with slightly detached but still connected notes. The class will also delve into the development of left-hand technique that you need for proper articulation!
Sanel Redžić is one of the most promising and virtuoso guitarists of the younger
generation, who has created an important name on the international scene, having a wide
repertoire from baroque to modern music.
Sanel currently teaches at the Franz Liszt Music Academy in Weimar and at
the University of Erfurt in Germany. He is also artistic director and founder of Tuzla Guitar
Week in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Repertoire:
- Scales (major with parallel melodic minor scares)
- Leo Brouwer - Etude Nr. 1
- Agustin Barrios - Mangore - 3rd movement of La Catedral
- Fernando Sor - Etude Op. 35, No. 22 (Segovia No. 5)
- Any other example by participants
Assignment Videos
I compiled a playlist with 5 Videos! More Videos will come :)
- Video 1: Intro
- Video 2: C Major scale with i-m
- Video 3: C Major scale with p
- Video 4: Arpeggios
- Video 5: Brouwer no.1
Assignment:
- Submit a video containing either one or several of the exercises. For example, start with a simple C major scale playing once as legato as possible, repeat with portamento and then one last time with staccato. Please tell us what articulation you were aiming for!
- Feel free to apply the learnings to either Brouwer Etude no.1 or your own repertoire!
Feel free to ask questions in a written reply and/or add them to your video!
Assignment Week 2:
- Read and play through the piece provided by Sanel and play the basses staccato and the upper voices legato!
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I wanted to clarify the staccato fingering in my own mind so I’ve written out below what I believe Sanel plays for the C major scale ascending and descending.
(5th)C-i (stop m)/ D-m (stop i)
(4th)E-m (stop i) / F-i (stop m) / G-m (stop i)
(3rd) A-m (stop i) / B-i (stop m) / C-m (stop i) / D-i (stop m)
(2nd)E-i (stop m) / F-m (stop i) / G-i (stop m)
(1st)A-i (stop m) / B-m (stop i) / C-i (stop m) / B-m (stop i) / A-i (stop m)
(2nd)G-i (stop m) / F-m (stop i) / E-i (stop m)
(3rd)D-i (stop m) / C-m(stop i) / B-i (stop m) / A-m (stop i)
(4th)G-m (stop i) / F-i (stop m) / E-m (stop i)
(5th)D-m (stop i) / C-i (stop m)
Sanel Redzic would be grateful if you could confirm if this is correct?
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Hello Sanel and all participants,
I was practicing the exercises of Sanel, which are not easy for me specially the arpegios but also all the other aspects of articulation.
Video Scales : I play the scales slow to focus myself on the subject we are dealing with. I "think" I have kept my normal fingering beginning with i (imimim). I have tried to maintain the tempo, but in the portato (I am not sure) I think it was not so even. With "p" I mean thumb. Indeed it was strange to go with the thumb to the first string and to maintain the hand relax. I still do the movement of staccato with tension ..I need to practice longer to reach the wished relaxation.
Video Arpegio with 1 thumb. This was difficult and impossible to play in only 4 days without mistakes. I would need a longer time , to get the desired automatismus of the right hand and relaxation ...but I am not unhappy with the feeling and the behaviour of my hand because in some bars the RH was quite confortable with the movement. I have the impression it is a matter of practice that I could play it more relax and an evenly tempo, without stops. I could not get the exercise with 2 thumbs today. I hope tomorrow!!!, It need even more practice for that.
Video V4 Giuliani op107. I have chosen a part of the Variation N.4 of the "Variations of a theme of Händel" from Giuliani to apply the use of different articulations. The variation is with 16ths and pauses that require to mude the sound almost of each note or accord . I play it in a short portato, almost staccato but not so far. In the video I play it once in portato, as usually , than in staccatto and finally what I had never played before. The staccato sound very nice also and I accentuate one bass playing it louder and longer...may be this is more a rubato (????) (a C sharp in 5 string about 3 bars before the end). The sound of my thumb is not nice, I do not have nail there...
Let'see what Sanel and you guys think....
Thanks for listening!!!
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hello to you all. I present here a rough impression of me trying to play the Brouwer study with the articulation suggested by Sanel. Only the opening measures. Sorry, I dont have much time to polish the video or sound quality. This is just to indicate the work Im doing.
Btw I noticed it is difficult to keep the accompanying i and m finger relaxed and stable when the thumb is playing staccato.
I do practice the scale exercise daily and even the arpeggio exercise - which I'm not very fond of, but it is useful, so....
Nice to know: my surname is Brouwer (but this is one of the most common surnames in the Netherlands...)
As for my repertoire: I will try to record tomorrow parts of one or two Sor studies: op.31, XIX (Segovia 10) and op.35, XVI (Segovia 15)
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Hello again Nora here .
The last 2 videos for this week with the exercises using 2 thumbs in the arpegio.
Portato. Very difficult, but with more time I will manage this. For some unknown reason the arpegio with the D in 4 string tends to be the more "sensible" to the mistake...I have forgotten to mude the second D a lot of times, also with the last A ...
Staccato. Also very difficult but at this speed I have the impression to get the feeling inside easier than with the portato. I have to think a lot in keeping the hand relax...tendency to tension...also tendency to mude also the 2.string when playing 6 . and 2. together for instance...sooo to separate the behaviour of m and p.
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Dear Sanel, this is what I could achieve in these 4 days, I wish it was better and with more contrast. My main difficulty was in the staccato, mixing the right and left hand to mute the notes, in not a conscious decision sometimes. Also I notice that the staccato in the base is more noticeable that in the accompaniment. I will keep practicing
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Hello Sanel and everyone,
Here is my attempt on the exercise.
I have attempted all the exercises in Exercise 1 and 2 below in the following order:
a Legato using i and m
b Portato
c Staccato using the left hand
d Staccato using the I and m fingers
e Staccato using the thumb
I find it difficult to maintain legato when shifting position. I guess this is down to practice.
Below is the arpeggio exercise.
I find this difficult to do. After many hours of practice, I think I am getting some passable results. I can do the majority of the staccatos, and many I missed particularly when the thumb has to make a large movement, e.g. moving from D string to the E string, then I sometime missed stopping the D string.
I have not posted my attempt on Brouwer Etude no 1 as find it very difficult to play it with staccato bass note. My difficulty is that my other finger automatically come to stop the other strings when I come to stop the bass note with my thumb. I am trying to figure out how to overcome this.
Vincent