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(Hope this is the proper subforum!)
I've been working for a while now on William Bay's Prelude #5 (B minor) from his bundle of contemporary preludes, sonatas and nocturnes and there's one spot in particular which doesn't even seem that difficult but which I can't seem to get right the first time:
The main bottleneck here are the last 3 (of 5) notes shown. The entire bundle is written for "plectrum guitar" (aka archtop) but there are some that are interesting enough to incorporate in a CG repertoire. Anyway, this "run" is one of the few places where I think the jazz background of the composer shines through, so I'm using my thumb as if holding a plectrum and I use the same fingering for the last 2 8th note chords:
I use this fingering for those last 5 notes:
3.4.2 - 2 - 3.2.4 - 3.2.4 - 3.4.2
This usually derails on the forelast chord, sometimes only at the last, but sometimes already a chord earlier (Bflat dim? - 2 sharps at the key). Individually those last 2 shifts mostly go right, so I think there's some anticipation play here for not overshooting, keeping the right shape but also making that last fingering change without fail.
I think I've already tried to practice this in just about every manner I can think of, so let me just ask how would you practice this and see what comes upThanks!
BTW: I also asked this on the Delcamp forum, so apologies to those who're also a member (and saw it) there.Last edited by RJVB; 07-21-2023 at 06:35 AM.
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07-20-2023 02:37 PM
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Originally Posted by RJVB
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Originally Posted by pauln
Actually, I linked to the image I'd already uploaded to the Delcamp forum, which worked for me because I am logged in there. The other way round works fine as far as I can tell ...
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I'm not seeing fingering in what I'm looking at... what am I looking at?
The 4112 in the first measure is a fingering?
The "11" of 4112 means playing D and F (different frets in all positions) with the first finger?
Your fingering for the last five don't use your first finger?
The third of your five (" 2 3.2.4") has an extra 2 finger?Last edited by pauln; 07-21-2023 at 09:09 PM.
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Only 1 chord has fingering in that snippet of the (original) score, indeed. Not sure why that one, nor how else you'd finger it but, yes, the "1 1" means a partial barré with the index finger on the 3rd and 2nd strings. (Evidently that finger can also touch the 1st string.)
And yes, thanks, somehow I slipped a rogue '2' in the 3rd fingering indication. Normally I proofread better than that!
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Originally Posted by RJVB
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Originally Posted by pauln
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I played the chord before the single E as xx998x and then played the open E string. The next two are xxx656 and the same shape moved up. Finally xxx 11 12 10. I played those without the fourth finger (pinkie).
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Here's a different fingering that requires only shorter position shifts:
Looking for practice tips for this little "riff" - Classical Guitar
It may actually be helping me to practice the passage with this very different fingering. I still avoid the open E string though but with this fingering I can get it by sliding just the index 2 frets down.
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I'd use 2.1.3, 2.1.3, 2.3.1 for those last 3 chords. Then the 2nd finger is securely sliding.
Dunno how fast it ought to be. If very fast, then yeah, it's athletics.
Would just train jumping from a to b, then from b to c as fast as possible.
More than 1 position change in a row in fast tempo is horrible on guitar - thats a curse.
But also, there is one neat method to smooth up position changes on classical guitar -
break the jump down to 5 actions.
1.play the 1st chord
2.release the tension but keep the fingers still on the chord
3.move with relaxed hand (in the most advanced way - the fingers should not touch the strings while moving to learn to avoid squeaks. Very much needed for classical guitar.)
4.adjust the fingers to the new chord but without tension <--- 3. and 4. can be happening at the same time.
5.play the new chord
Should do it slooowly and the main focus is the release part.
It takes months and more months for the hand to learn it so it becomes an automatic behaviour.
The difference is so subtle and practically "invisible" but surely helps a lot.
I have very rarely needed this for jazz because it's always possible to find a comfy version of a needed chord.
But in written classical pieces - omg. Without learning the relaxed state for that millisecond period while changing
positions between difficult chords can be even harmful in the long run.Last edited by emanresu; 07-22-2023 at 07:24 AM.
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This piece wasn't written with classical guitar in mind, though it does seem more classical than "jazz" - speed is 86bpm which is still plenty fast for 2 8position shifts
Originally Posted by emanresu
BTW, is there any reason this wouldn't be "how you do it" on non-classical guitar?
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Originally Posted by RJVB
But the emphasize was on classical because the trouble is so much more real - cramping, stiff wrist and nasty squeaks,
high string action also worsens it.
On electric guitar with own ways to play, it is all much less problematic. Can get pretty far without any worry.
edit: this is why I switched to electric. Ocasionally I play classical still. Medium pieces. But it gets crazy hard with all sorts of technical
workouts that have very little to do with musicality.Last edited by emanresu; 07-22-2023 at 11:09 AM.
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Ah, right, compared to electric. I only play acoustically, and this piece has a few chords that are definitely easier on nylon strings than on the 13-57 I have on my archtop.
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Originally Posted by RJVB
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Originally Posted by emanresu
(they're silk-and-steel strings btw, so a bit less tension than you might be expecting.)
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Well, I've tried 12... one day and decided that this is not the life I wanted.
11 forever.
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