Ihr Einkaufswagen ist leer.
Wenn Sie schon ein Konto haben,
melden Sie sich bitte an.
Einloggen mit
Ihr Einkaufswagen ist leer.
If you are a classical guitarist looking for a mountain to climb that offers a breathtaking view of modern music, open Volume I of Sergio Assad’s 24 Studies . Just be prepared to never listen to a Carcassi etude the same way again. Difficulty Rating: 8/10 (Advanced) Primary Publisher: Editions Henry Lemoine (France) Recommended listening: Odair Assad – Sergio Assad: 24 Studies (GHA Records)
When you play these studies, you are not just fixing your slurs or improving your arpeggio speed. You are learning to feel rhythm in your chest. You are learning that the guitar is not just a small orchestra, but a small Brazil—full of longing ( saudade ), percussive joy, and relentless forward motion.
Enter —Brazilian guitarist, composer, and arranger of legendary status (one half of the Assad brothers duo). His 24 Studies for Solo Guitar (completed in 2014) is not merely a pedagogical toolbox; it is a compendium of 21st-century guitar thinking. It is an encyclopedia of rhythm, harmony, and texture dressed in the guise of an exercise book. The Brazilian Blueprint Unlike Sor’s systematic, almost architectural approach, Assad’s studies are rooted in the rhythmic DNA of Brazil. While each study focuses on a specific technical hurdle (arpeggios, scales, slurs, leaps), the musical content is joyously indigenous. You will hear the sway of the choro , the syncopation of the samba , and the harmonic lushness of bossa nova .
For over two centuries, the guitar etude has lived in the shadow of a single monumental work: Heitor Villa-Lobos’s 12 Studies (1929). While Villa-Lobos expanded the guitar’s color palette, and earlier masters like Fernando Sor and Matteo Carcassi focused on classical decorum, the modern guitarist has often lacked a bridge between raw technique and contemporary musical languages.
Villa-Lobos’s studies often treat the left hand as the problem-solver and the right hand as the articulator. Assad constantly subverts this. In Study No. 14 (E minor), the right hand must play a steady p-i-m-a arpeggio while the left hand executes complex hammer-ons and pull-offs that change the harmony within the arpeggio. It requires a split consciousness that is terrifying for intermediate players but revelatory for professionals.