Week 1: A Continent Full of Music!
Welcome to the Main Thread for the first week of the "Music from Latin America" challenge!
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What do you connect with Music from Latin America?
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Antonio Lauro loved Venezuelan children's songs. Here are five short little arrangements he made of the following Canciónes Infantiles Venezolanas: Palomita Blanca, La Barca, El Trompo, El Cocherito, and Palomita. The first photo is of Lauro as a child. He is the one on the far left. The second photo is Lauro with his son Leonardo and daughter Natalia, who he dedicated his most famous Valse.
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Barrios – Oración (Apr 9 Update)
I was able to practice this some more today, so I'm posting an update. One thing that I noticed in my first video of this piece is how there was not a clear distinction between the melody and accompaniment (and, yes, I heard Emmanuel's voice telling me ). I tried to improve that here. Let me know if you think it is better.
Here are some of the things causing me trouble in this piece:
- I am having a good deal of left hand pain, in the muscles at the base of my thumb and between my thumb and first finger. There are quite a few barres and stretches in this piece, and it is rather long. By the end of it, my hand really hurts.
- Measures 25-26 (see picture below): I mess up these measures almost every time I play them, despite practicing them a lot. The fingerings are just so difficult, but I see no other solution.
- Measures 37-43 (see picture below): I know this is a lot measures, but each one is very challenging for me.
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First attempt for this challenge. El Negrito by Lauro. It's a fairly simple piece but fun to play. The start of the second section is a bit tricky to get the chord shape (there is a slight pause - too long to pass off as rubato! - in the first time through). Needs a bity more work I think - the pull offs at the start of the first section are a bit weak.