
The Women Composers Challenge Week Three

Welcome to week three of our community-driven challenge on women composers! In week two, we heard some wonderful music by Sofia Gubaidulina, Emilie Mayer, Tatiana Stachak, Angela Mair, and Catharina Josepha Pratten. Let's keep it going into week three!
So, the goal is to choose a piece (or several pieces), and to work on it throughout the course of the challenge, posting videos or audio files of your progress along the way.
Or maybe you are a woman composer, and you would like to take this opportunity to share some of your work with the community.
The challenge will last for four weeks, ending on Saturday, May 3rd. A new discussion thread will be posted for each week of the challenge.
If you are looking for a place to start your search and pique your interest, Candice Mowbray has an excellent website on the subject. Here is a link.
If any beginners would like some suggestions for your playing level, feel free to ask the community by posting a message here.
-
I am sorry that I never got the chance to do anything for this member challenge. I just got hung up with my own repertoire and all of the pieces I have to play for the upcoming concert for the NYC Classical Guitar Orchestra.
I thought that this might be interesting. I found this list of pieces by women composers in the booklet for the guitar department at the Manhattan School of Music.
* Emilia Giuliani–Guglielmi Preludes, Op. 46
* Fernande Peyrot–Theme and Variations
* Maria Luisa–Anido Preludos Nostálgicos
* Clarice Assad–Complete Works
* Jana Obrovska–Hommage á Bela Bartók, Due Musici,
* Japanese Pictures
* Ida Presti–Complete Works
* Joan Tower–Clocks, Snow Dreams
* Barbara Kolb–Umbrian Colors, Three Lullabies
* Marilyn Ziffrin–Rhapsody
* Sofia Gubaidulina–Serenade, Toccata
* Katherine Hoover-Canyon Echoes
* Thea Musgrave–Postcard from Morocco, Sonata for Three
* Kaija Saariaho–Adjö
* Caroline Shaw–Anni’s Constant, Come Again (Again)
* Vahda Olcott Bickford–Method for Guitar
* Ursula Mamlok–Five Intermezzi
* Vivian Fine–Canciones y Danzas
* Ester Mägi – Cadenza and Theme, Three Miniatures, Cantus, A due, Processus, Whoops, A tre -
Ida Presti - Etudes II and III
I love Ida Presti's music, but of her pieces for solo guitar (that I can find) these are the only two that are anywhere near my playing level.
I have played Etude II before, about a year ago, so I am dusting it off here. It is high on my list of favorite pieces. There is a section about three-quarters of the way in (halfway down page 2) that is marked metallique and staccato. I do play it ponticello, but I cannot really get the staccato going.
Etude III is a real left-hand breaker. I also find it hard to get a feel for its musical sense, despite Presti's many markings in the score. While some of the phrasing is obvious enough, there are other sections that are very unclear to me. There are several measures marked as triple forte, which just seems a bit over-the-top to me. In fact, there is a three-measure section (measures 40-42) in which the first measure is marked fff, then the next measure says crescendo (really?), and then the third measure is again fff.