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2004-06-04
2003-11-28
2003-08-21
2003-08-21
2003-01-08While I feel that the book deserves five stars, it is not without problems, specifically:
1. It is extraordinarily difficult to keep the book
open to the desired pages when it is on a music
stand; spiral-binding would have solved this. This
may seem like nit-picking, but it's an important
shortcoming given the purpose of the book.
2. Right-hand fingerings are given for only a few of
the pieces; in many cases, choice of the proper
right-hand pattern can make a huge difference in
the ease of performing a piece.
3. While Noad gives full left-hand fingerings, he
does not give diagrams of hand-positions to adopt
for a passage, with fingers in place for the next
few notes.
Even taking these into account, however, it remains, in my opinion, the best book of exercises available to any but the most advanced classical guitarist.
A Great Resource
2007-12-06
This collection of studies by 19th century guitar composers Sor, Giuliani and Carcassi is a great resource for study and repertoire pieces aimed at the intermediate and advanced guitarist. As a note of caution, only 4-5 pieces are suitable for the first year guitarist. The studies have been selected and graded by noted guitar teacher and performer Frederick Noad, who has included a brief paragraph with each study describing its primary developmental objective. This book is a very useful addition to the classical guitarist's library.
100 Graded Classical Guitar Studies
2007-11-03
I've had this book for nearly a year now and I still love to pull it out and learn a new piece. It's hard to keep it open on the music stand without using wooden clothes pins but I usually make a copy of the piece I'm studying so I can write in my own notes. I like that Mr. Noad give a little helpful information at the beginning of piece, but I would have liked even more information. A couple of my favorite pieces I enjoy playing are:
"Study 63: M. Giuliani Op. 51 No. 15" - simple looking at first glance, but has some nice left-hand technical challenges and sounds wonderful, and "Study 26: M. Carcassi Op. 60 No.1" - a lovely scale study which is very, very musical and fun to play. This book is loaded with fantastic music from three of the greatest guitarists, teachers and composers who ever lived. I will never have time to get to every piece, but luckily I can play those I love the most.
If you are weak in understanding musical notation you will most likely become frustrated with most of the material in this book. This is for serious classical guitarists and students of guitar who truly want to improve their playing ability. These pieces are called "studies" for a very good reason - their purpose is to teach various technical skills while learning the piece. I teach classical guitar and will pull out one of these studies for my more advanced students. I really love this book and it is one of the best I have. Good left hand fingering suggestions are given although I will sometimes change them to suit my needs, but usually they are right on. I always have to write in the right hand fingerings for my students (and myself sometimes) which is something I thing Mr. Noad could have already done in some circumstances. For instance, Study #26 has no right hand fingerings (p,i,m,a) and if you are not a trained classical guitarist you may have a difficult time with how to play the right hand. That's my only complaint which kept me from giving the book 5 stars.
I would also like to add that even though it was not normal practice for the right hand fingerings to be included in compositions basically before the 20th century, I see no conflict of interest in people such as Mr. Noad including them in this book. A compilation book of pieces from the past is fairly easy to create, but to take the time to personally go through each piece and include right hand fingering suggestions is, in my humble opinion, a very nice gift to us. Just because it was not the standard practice of the time period does not mean that it should not be standard practice in the present. I don't particularly like taking the time to write in the right hand fingerings but will do so because I want my students to play as fluidly as possible.
All You Really Need
2007-04-26
This is a really one of a kind great collection of classical guitar studies.
Some reviewers have complained unreasonably:
1. "It lacks a spiral binding" Most guitar collections lack this. So what? Go to Kinkos and get it bound for 4 bucks if it's an issue. It's no harder to use than any other book. Geeze.
2. "It lacks fingerings." This is not true. It has the fingerings the composers wrote with the piece. If a composer didn't write fingerings, it doesn't add them. This is a collection of the great guitar studies AS THEY WERE WRITTEN. Usually the fingering is obvious anyway.
3."Lacks Chord diagrams." Hello! This is classical guitar, not a rock fake book!
DO NOT heed these complaints. This is a great book and you will improve immeasurably as a guitarist by playing them in order. I did.
Good collection
2007-03-13
This is a good collection of studies, well graded, and a lot of music for the price.
Could use a little updating, but still very good..
2007-03-03
I've noticed that since Noad produced this book, about 20 years ago now, a lot of the Sor studies in it have appeared in facsimile via Tecla or other sources, and some of the tempos are not the same as the originals..this is also true of Segovia's famous 20 Sor studies, but generally this is not a major issue. Noad's selections are very good, and his editorial fingerings can be helpful. He does add right-hand fingerings for clarification in some cases too, but of course this is editorial advice, not necessarily the way Sor or Giuliani might have played a particular piece. 19th century guitarists tended to use the thumb more than most classical guitarists do now, for instance. Noad also does the student the favor of pointing out the basic purpose of each study to concentrate your efforts, something the composers didn't always do.