TOBY WINE

A GUIDE TO CHORD-MELODY JAZZ GUITAR-Toby Wine-CD TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA SPARTITI METODO

A GUIDE TO CHORD-MELODY JAZZ GUITAR. Toby Wine. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE . 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

LIBRO DI ARMONIA. TEORIA, STUDIO, ACCORDI, VOICING. 

Series: Guitar Educational
Publisher: Cherry Lane Music
Format: Softcover with CD
Author:

The world of solo jazz guitar is as vast and limitless as your imagination. “Chord-melody” style harmonizes a song's melodies and solos with full chord voicings and puts every facet of a guitarist's abilities to the test. This book introduces intermediate and advanced players to the chord-melody style. It teaches the requisite skills needed to play and create original arrangements, basic chord forms and inversions, chord substitutions, walking bass lines, and other tricks of the trade. The accompanying CD features recorded demos of the exercises and chord-melody arrangements in the book. Includes eight solo arrangements of: Alfie • Call Me Irresponsible • Come Fly with Me • Come Rain or Come Shine • Misty • My Favorite Things • My Romance • Take the “A” Train.

Song List:
Alfie
Call Me Irresponsible
Come Fly With Me
Come Rain Or Come Shine
Misty
My Favorite Things
My Romance
Take The 'A' Train

80 pagine. 

A Guide to Chord-Melody Jazz Guitar
Series: Guitar Educational
Publisher: Cherry Lane Music
Format: Softcover with CD
Author: Toby Wine

Inventory #HL 02500590
ISBN: 9781575606347
UPC: 073999758153
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
80 pages

Price: €19,99
€19,99

TEXAS BLUES THE ART OF Toby Wine LIBRO CD GUITAR TABLATURE CHITARRA HAL LEONARD CHERRY LANE

TEXAS BLUES, THE ART OF. Wine. CD TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Method
Publisher: Cherry Lane Music
Softcover with CD - TAB
Composer: Toby Wine
 

Another highly influential player to emerge in the 1950s was the immortal Albert Collins.
Born in Leona, Texas, Collins was raised in Houston and spent his teenage years hanging out
with and absorbing the music of T-Bone Walker, John Lee Hooker, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown,
and others. By the late 1950s, he had become a popular local performer and cut his first singles
for the Kangaroo label. Collins' 1962 recording of "Frosty," which would become his trademark
tune, was a smash-hit and helped propel him to wider recognition. He remained in Texas, however,
for the bulk of the 1960s, working day jobs, hitting the club circuit in the evenings, and
recording for small, regional labels. It wasn't until the end of the decade that Albert landed a contract
with Imperial Records and took to the national stage, opening for bands like the Allman
Brothers and reaching the young, white audiences who went crazy for his slashing guitar work
and patented strolls through the crowd. Collins was a true road warrior, touring relentlessly
throughout the 1970s, but did little recording until 1978 when he released Ice Pickin', the first of
seven strong albums for Alligator Records. Albert (along with the Vaughan brothers, Jimmie and
Stevie Ray) helped spearhead the Texas blues revival during the 1980s, but his career was cut
tragically short. Collins fell victim to liver cancer and succumbed in 1993, less than two months
after his 61st birthday.
The great black players of the 1950s helped drive the Texas sound to new heights of
swaggering, head-shaking toughness. Their bravura playing and gunslinger attitudes only served
to strengthen their image as the new cowboys of the Wild West. But the music was changing and
growing all over America. A young white man from Mississippi named Elvis Presley was gaining
national prominence, playing and singing the music of the black masters and, for better or for
worse, introducing it to an entirely new and different audience. The owner of Sun Records, Sam
Phillips, had been working from a rather cynical, if familiar, ideology: A white performer who sang
and moved like the best of the black performers would, potentially, be a huge seller. Phillips of
course was dead-on in his assumption, as Elvis's place in American popular culture is virtually
unmatched, but his impact may have been even wider than Phillips could have dreamed. By playing
the music of the black masters on the national stage, Elvis introduced the world of the blues
to many whites who had never before heard anything like it. There is great controversy over the
value of his contribution, its authenticity, and whether this music was "stolen," appropriated, or
merely re-interpreted, but his enormous success was one major factor in the widening of the
blues audience during the 1950s and 1960s. At the same time, black audiences across the country
continued to embrace the blues and its new, more urban sound. Though the struggle for
equality and civil rights was a still a fledgling movement, blacks did find themselves with relatively
more leisure time and disposable income. Nightclubs and juke joints that featured blues artists
or played blues albums were doing better than ever, and, in Texas, the music was thriving in both
small ensembles and larger, horn-driven groups alike.
The 1960s were years of great tumult in America, and the changes that affected society
as a whole were also felt in the world of the blues. For the first time, the music ceased to grow in
popularity; record sales suffered, or remained, at best, at a status quo. Rock began to capture
the attention and imagination of young audiences, but despite its obvious roots in the blues, did
not cause many younger fans to look further to its source. Two diametrically opposed groups of
blacks-those who sought political upheaval and revolution and those who hoped to achieve
assimilation and financial success in the "white" world-both began to view the blues with scorn.
In the simplest terms, the former group felt that the music was a remnant of slavery and of a time
when the liberty of their people had been trampled and their opportunities denied. The latter
group looked at the blues as something more of an embarrassment, as a representation of their
people as a mostly rural, illiterate, and unskilled group of day laborers and itinerant drunks. This
is not to say that black people had abandoned the blues altogether, but rather that many had
begun to subject the music and its meanings to greater scrutiny than ever before. Some left the
music behind, favoring the infectious sounds of rock and R & B, or caught on to the new movement
in jazz, spearheaded by revolutionary young musicians keenly aware of the struggles for
civil rights and an equal piece of the American pie. Amidst all of this turmoil, the music never
ceased, and a wealth of great blues musicians forged on, spotlight or no. Players like Freddie ...

Learn to play the blues Texas-style! This book/CD pack contains a complete history of the Texas blues style, common blues techniques and ideas for both lead and rhythm guitar, solos by the masters, recorded demos of every example, a suggested reading and listening list, and more! Also includes 10 songs that personify this unique genre:

Be Careful With A Fool
Change It
Dirty Pool
Hide Away
Long Way From Home
(They Call It) Stormy Monday (Stormy Monday Blues)
T-Bone Shuffle
Telephone Song
Tightrope
Wall Of Denial

64 pages

Price: €24,99
€24,99

BLUES MASTERS BY THE BAR. Toby Wine CD TABLATURE

BLUES MASTERS BY THE BAR. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar Educational
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Toby Wine
Learn from the masters themselves in Blues Masters by the Bar! If you're a blues guitarist who wants to know how the legends build their solos, then this book is for you. Blues Masters by the Bar gives you over 140 cool riffs that sound great over each portion of the blues progression. They're presented in two-measure chunks organized by where they fall in a standard 12-bar progression so you can enrich your blues vocabulary and assemble your own solos with actual riffs played by 16 of the greats! Every lick is authentic, and played by such blues masters as Duane Allman, Dickie Betts, Eric Clapton, Albert Collins, Warren Haynes, Albert King, B.B. King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, T-Bone Walker, Zakk Wylde, and more! The CD features recorded demonstrations of every example, plus two jam tracks so you can play your solos over a full rhythm section.
(They Call It) Stormy Monday (Stormy Monday Blues). 88 pages.

Price: €19,95
€19,95

150 COOL BLUES LICKS IN TABLATURE TOBY WINE. CD TABLATURE

 

150 COOL BLUES LICKS IN TAB presents a wide selection of riffs in a variety of styles, just waiting to be used in your solos!

The riffs are organized by blues style and by placement within the standard 12-bar format (first, second, and final four measures) so you can assemble your solos easily, section by section.

This is the ultimate resource for beginning and intermediate blues guitarists seeking a straighforward route to solo-building, as well as for seasoned professionals who want to further stock their arsenals.

 

The ultimate resouce for constructing blues solos!

Includes licks from Delta, Chicago, Texas, Jump, Rock, and Funk styles.

CD features recorded demostrations of every lick.

 

Series: Guitar Educational

Publisher: Cherry Lane Music
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Toby Wine
Artist: Various

This cool book/CD pack presents a wide selection of riffs in a variety of styles, just waiting to be used in your solos! The riffs are organized by blues style and by placement within the standard 12-bar format (first, second and final four measures) so you can assemble your solos easily, section by section. This is the ultimate resource for beginning and intermediate blues guitarists seeking a straightforward route to solo-building, as well as for seasoned pros who want to further stock their arsensals. Includes a CD with recorded demos of every lick! 56 pages

 

Introduction

About the Author

Price: €15,95
€15,95
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