Villa-Lobos Prelude No.1!

Welcome to our next Study Group — a collaborative, peer-led dive into one of the most iconic pieces in the guitar repertoire.
This time, we’re immersing ourselves in the soulful beauty of Villa-Lobos’ Prelude No. 1!
This is not a course or a class — it’s a space for mutual exploration, discussion, and shared progress. I’ll be learning the piece alongside you (it’s always full of new discoveries!), and I’m excited to go deep into this masterpiece together.
🗓️ What to expect:
Starting September 1st, we'll focus on:
🎯 Left-hand shapes and stretches in the opening section
🎯 Rhythmic flow and rubato in the arpeggio passages
🎯 Tone production and balance between voices
🎯 Interpretation, phrasing, and expressive choices
🎯 Your own questions, insights, and perspectives!
We’ll also meet for two live Zoom sessions to share progress, exchange ideas, and nerd out over all things Villa-Lobos.
✅ How to participate:
- Sign up through the Forum
- Grab your score of Villa-Lobos Prelude No. 1
- Introduce yourself below!
- Join the prompts and discussions!
- Share your thoughts, ideas, or a clip of your playing!
📅 Zoom Call #1 – September 5th, 8am PST 📅 Zoom Call #2 – September 12, 8am PST
84 replies
-
And to your question
said:
btw, does my right hand /wrist look a little straighter, better aligned ergonomically, (as you previous noticed and questioned in an earlier post)?I don't exactly remember the video regarding which I suggested that so I cannot exactly compare. I can tell you this: This piece is not the place to look for a staight wrist because the "apoyado" thumb actually requires a wrist bent upwards. Your sound is nice and full so I must say you are doing a good job. Your ima knuckles still look a little bit far away from the first strings tome and sometimes it looks like you are playing a bit too much from the more further falanges of ima instead of from the knuckles. Still you mastered that thumb jump to second string really well so, maybe it's a matter of angle of the video? I'll watch more of your videos and see about it and answer with more background. What I can say is that it sounds really nice, so your right hand must be doing things in the right direction.
-
said:
and I have to look in the mirrorThis is best. Watching the mirror and also wondering if you'd hold that position without the guitar are a great rule of thumb.
-
said:
not well trained in tonal color changes while remaining in the same position-- that is, I still need to "move" hand towards the bridge (Ponticello) or soundhole (tasto).I can easyly point you in the right direction with a few exercises, asap. Fluidity in changes is actually complex, heavily affected the more variables you introduce. So I always recommend to try just one by one.