The Twelve Études by Heitor Villa-Lobos occupy a place in the guitar's repertoire analogous to Chopin's études for the piano: they address virtually every core technique of the instrument while also functioning as fully realised artistic compositions. Composed in 1929 and dedicated to Andrés Segovia, they have been central to classical guitar education and concert programming for nearly a century.
Technique as Art
Each étude targets a specific technical challenge — right-hand arpeggios, left-hand slurs, counterpoint, scale runs, chord balance — yet never sacrifices its identity as composed music. Étude No. 1 places perpetual-motion arpeggios over barre chords; No. 3 combines slurs with block chords; No. 5 builds a counterpoint of pedal notes against a broken-third melody; No. 12 demands full-fretboard position shifts and repeated chords. But in every case, the technical exercise is also a musical statement. Villa-Lobos's Brazilian musical world — modal harmonies, rhythmic drive, lush harmonic colour — runs through all twelve, giving them a coherent voice despite their diversity.
Segovia's Advocacy
Segovia described the études as containing formulas of surprising effectiveness for both hands, while also carrying musical beauties that transcend the purely pedagogical. It was through his championship — playing individual études in concert, teaching them to students across the world — that they became the cornerstone of the advanced guitar syllabus. They were published by Max Eschig in Paris in 1953.
Performed at Siccas Guitars
Playing it
The Études span from advanced to virtuosic level. Even experienced players typically work through them one or two at a time rather than as a complete set. The notation appears deceptively simple; finding optimal fingering and executing the technical patterns at performance tempo is what makes them genuinely difficult.
See the full Villa-Lobos guide and the Five Préludes.





