WEEK ONE Updates: Main Thread - Where the magic happens!
Hello and welcome to the WEEK ONE Main Thread for this challenge!
Since Week 1 is over, this thread is now closed for update submissions
Feel free to continue replying to people's existing submissions, but if you would like to post an update, use the current Week 2 thread.
Alright my friends - this is the thread where we'll all be posting our daily updates.
Make sure you've read the rules before replying (<- click)
Twice a week between January 28th and February 19th, I hope to be reading your daily updates in this very thread right here!
Download the music:
- Exercises 1 - 12 (← click)
- Exercises 13 - 24 (← click)
Please use the following format when commenting (feel free to copy & paste!):
- Etude you worked on:
- One thing you found easy:
- One thing you found difficult:
- (Optional): a video of you performing it!
Sample daily update:
- Etude you worked on: No. 1
- One thing you found easy: The polyphony between bass and treble flowed very naturally, I had an easy time playing each line like it belonged to its own voice.
- One thing you found difficult: I had a hard time creating enough variety throughout the repeated measures.
Feel free to make these updates as short or long as you wish!
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Hi!
Amazing idea! Please do more of that!
Now, back to the topic. :) As a beginner, almost everything is new, so I never even heard these studies (only number 22, which I find REALLY beautiful), and my idea was to try to play it from the score without having an audible reference. After I was able to play the correct notes, I went to Youtube to listen to some recordings. And that
- Etude you worked on: No. 1
- One thing you found easy: I was able to play the correct notes/tempo without much trouble. I was able to separate melody and bass nicely using the rule of note pointing up = melody, note pointing down = bass
- One thing you found difficult: The score says Andante, so I was thinking about a tempo about 60/70, but the recordings that I heard play it much, much faster. How was I supposed to find the correct tempo? On the measures that have 3 Gs in sequence, I was playing it like it belonged to the melody, but from the recordings that I found, that's not the case. Again, what information do I have on the score to tell me that?
I'll try to make it like the recordings that I found and record it for the next update in a few days! :)
Thanks!
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Estudio number 2. I found easy the reading, and the postures. The difficult part was the recording, I hardly ever record myself or play in public (other than my family), so I froze and did not sound as musical as I thought! But there you are, this is the challenge for me sharing my music, thank you ... I also used this study to practice the preparation of the left hand that Mircea was teaching us. This skill is new to me and although I did not need it I used it in the last two measures (hitting in many occasions the note that I was preparing...), so this was another difficulty.
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- Etude you worked on: Nos 1 & 17
- One thing you found easy: Instead of diving straight in and inspired by Giulia's workshop I decide just to work on voicing and phrasing of both today. Really interesting to do as it shapes approach to learning and fingering
- One thing you found difficult: As Walter said, with etude #1, in measures with 3 G's they look like melody notes but recordings I've got don't appear to treat them as such.
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- Etude you worked on: No. 1
- One thing you found easy: easy to sight read
- One thing you found difficult: The last 8 measures seem like they should be a repeat of the first 8 (possibly with some cadential material) but the addition of the E in measure 26 threw me off a bit and I struggled to get that note in while also getting the G in the melody at the same time. I have no idea why it is hard there, it just is for me.
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Hi Mircea
Posted my update in the wrong thread - put it in the q & a for some reason (rushing again). Here it is again.
Great idea this. I used to play numbers 4 and 8 worked on 22 but don't think any of the others (unless in the din and distant past).
Sightvreading was fairly easy. Probably hardest was because it is easy to sight read not putting enough thought into the performance.
Recording has a bit of eq and reverb as recommended by Martin in his recording academy
Thanks Derek