CHITARRA - GUITAR

GYPSY JAZZ JAM FRANK VIGNOLA DVD Besame Mucho-Dark Eyes-Tico Tico-Nuages-Limehouse Blues

GYPSY JAZZ JAM, F. VIGNOLA. DVD

This footage is a backstage look at what Frank Vignola and his friends do best: Jam. Some of the world’s foremost gypsy jazz guitarists let it all hang out on this very special DVD.

01) Warm-Ups 1-3
02) Pent-Up House - Sonny Rollins
03) Besame Mucho - Consuelo Velazquez
04) Exactly Like You - Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields
05) Tico Tico - Zequinha Abreu
06) Czardus
07) Nuages - Django Reinhardt
08) Besame Mucho - Consuelo Velazquez
09) It Don't Mean A Thing - Duke Ellington and Irving Mills
10) Endless Love - Josef Myrow
11) Gypsy Traditional Waltz
12) Limehouse Blues - Philip Braham and Douglas Furber
13) Dark Eyes
14) Credits

 

Product Number: 20087DVD

Format: DVD
UPC: 796279097246
Series: Mel Bay Records
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.
Date Published: 6/16/2004 

Price: €29,00
€29,00

JAZZ GUITAR CHORD MELODIES Hal Leonard CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

JAZZ GUITAR CHORD MELODIES. CD TAB.
12 Titoli: body and soul -black Orpheus -satin doll -all the things you are -bluesette -how insensitive (insensatez) moonlight in Vermont -my foolish heart -my one and only love -my romance -once I loved (amor em paz) -there will never be another you.

This book/CD pack includes complete solo performances of 12 terrific standards. The arrangements are performance level and range in difficulty from intermediate to advanced. 64 pages

Table of contents
All The Things You Are
Black Orpheus
Bluesette
Body And Soul
How Insensitive (Insensatez)
Moonlight In Vermont
My Foolish Heart
My One And Only Love
My Romance
Once I Loved (Amor Em Paz) (Love In Peace)
Satin Doll
There Will Never Be Another You

Price: €25,99
€25,99

HENDERSON SCOTT JAZZ GUITAR CHORD SYSTEM essential guide jazz chord voicing & substitutions

HENDERSON SCOTT, JAZZ GUITAR CHORD SYSTEM, voicing and substitutions. Da una lezione di Henderson. Per chi quel giorno li, non si trovava in California: 500 differenti voicing, sistema con codici a colori, inversioni, estensioni, alterazioni, sostituzioni, altro.

Scott Henderson
Publisher: Musicians Institute Press

The essential guide to jazz chord voicings and substitutions, complete with a color-coded method for over 500 essential voicings. Players will understand chord functions and their harmonic possibilities better than ever before, as well as inversions, extensions, alterations, and substitutions. Players will also be able to increase their harmonic vocabulary for accompaniment, composing and chord-melody playing.

Price: €18,99
€18,99

JAZZ GUITAR FAVORITES LIBRO CD TABLATURE CHITARRA-All The Things You Are-Hank Garland-KESSEL

JAZZ GUITAR FAVORITES. 6 titoli: All The Things You Are, Hank Garland -I Hear A Rhapsody, Howard Roberts -Oleo, Pat Martino -Speak Low, Barney Kessel -When Sunny Gets Blue, George Barnes -Yesterdays, Wes Montgomery. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar Collection
Medium: Softcover with CD
Arranger: Jack Grassel

Guitar transcriptions for these standards: All The Things You Are/Hank Garland - I Hear a Rhapsody/Howard Roberts - Oleo/Pat Martino - Speak Low/Barney Kessel - When Sunny Gets Blue/George Barnes - Yesterdays/Wes Montgomery.
40 pages

Table of contents :
All The Things You Are
I Hear A Rhapsody
Oleo
Speak Low
When Sunny Gets Blue
Yesterdays

Price: €24,99
€24,99

JAZZ GUITAR HARMONY JODY FISHER CD TABLATURE-VOICING-EXTENDED ALTERED CHORDS-SUBSTITUTION

JAZZ GUITAR HARMONY. Fisher. CD TABLATURE

By Jody Fisher
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD

This comprehensive study of harmony is a must for any guitarist interested in jazz. This book explains the essentials of jazz harmony in a friendly, easy-to-understand manner. Learn about chord scales, abbreviated voicings, extended harmonies, altered chords, substitutions and analyzing chord progressions. Other topics include ii-V-I progressions, the dominant cycle, "rhythm changes," clusters, quartal harmonies, working with upper structures and much more. Finally, jazz harmony is demystified in one reliable and easy-to-read book.

Price: €26,99
€26,99

JAZZ GUITAR STANDARDS BOOK CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI HAL LEONARD 00672356

JAZZ GUITAR STANDARDS. 6 titoli: A Night In Tunisia, Billy Bauer -Falling In Love With Love, Grant Green -I've Got You Under My Skin, Jim Hall -Stompin' At The Savoy, Charlie Christian -Yardbird Suite, Joe Pass -You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me, Chuck Wayne. CD TAB.

Price: €39,95
€39,95

JAZZIZ CHRONICLES: THE GUITARISTS. A COLLECTION OF INTERVIEWS & FEATURES FROM THE AWARD-WINNING MAGAZINE (Book/CD)

 

JAZZIZ CHRONICLES GUITAR. Interviste a: George Benson, Les Paul, Herb Ellis, Larry Coryell, Sonny Sharrock, Al Di Meola, Bill Frisell, Pat Martino, John Scofield, Jim Hall, Pat Metheny, Wes Montgomery, Lee Ritenour, Kenny Burrell, Joe Pass and a host of others. Discover the history of the jazz guitar and enjoy JAZZIZ's top picks from its second talent search on the companion CD - Brian Hughes, Michael Gulezian, Rick Zunigar, Randy Bernsen, James Vincent, Dave Lowrey, George Simon, John Paul, Dave Onderdonk, Dave Occipinti, Bill Mize and Christopher Cortez. Includes great photos throughout. Non contiene pagine di musica. CD

A COLLECTION OF INTERVIEWS & FEATURES FROM THE AWARD-WINNING MAGAZINE

Foreword
What isJazz?
One day, not so long ago, I was flying from Florida to New York, listening to my Walkman. A gentleman sitting next to me on the plane asked what I was listening to. "Jazz," I replied. "I hate jazz," he said. A while later, I offered him my headphones, which he willingly donned. He listened for a moment. "Oh, but I like this," he said, loud enough to hear himself over the music.
Jazz means different things to different people. 20years ago, I came up with the concept and the name for my magazine - JAZZIZ- in response to this realization. I thought it would be worthwhile to eliminate some of the forbidding barriers that seem to surround jazz and that keep people from entering the inner sanctums of the jazz world. I recognized that the first problem most people have with jazz is figuring out exactly what it is. And that's forbidding. Most people want everything in their lives to be firmly and reliably defined, including their music. People are uncomfortable entering a world without apparent solidity, a world, that is, where nothing is clearly defined. Well,that's jazz: an ever-changing world that always manages to elude the best efforts to contain and define it. After publishing JAZZIZfor20 years, convincing people to overcome their fear of an uncertain and unpredictable music remains a difficult barrier to overcome. Still, I'm certain there's a huge potential audience for jazz out there. The bulk of that audience, I contend, harbors a less-than-satisfactory idea of what this art form is all about. The rich heritage of jazz begins with the musicians who forged a new musical language from fragments of old and disparate forms. Where the story of jazz ends is anybody's guess, as new young artists continue to emerge, invigorating and extending the music's vital legacy. For20 years, we've featured, interviewed, reviewed, profiled, and celebrated jazz artists, from the most popular to the most undeservedly obscure. Our JAZZIZ Chronicles book series - produced in conjunction with the fine folks at Cherry Lane - takes some of our best pieces, categorized by instrument, and presents them in single compilations. Essentially, these books chronicle our own contributions to the history of jazz, which basically amount to offering our insights into the talent behind the real contributors. Jazz is rich because it has so many great stories to tell. At JAZZIZ, we've always kept a sharp eye on the current scene. But we've also been mindful of the music's vivid past, as well as its promising future. The CDthat accompanies this book underscores the latter point. Over the years, we've conducted talent searches that were judged by some of the brightest names in jazz. With the CD,we present the winners to you. Think of them as a glimpse of the future history of jazz. We hope you enjoy. Michael Fagien Publisher and Editor-in-Chief JAZZIZ Magazine


RITENOUR
seven and was a precocious, young player with an ear for jazz, classical, and pop music. He studied feverishly, taking lessons from such jazz heroes as Joe Pass, Howard Roberts, Barnie KesselI, and Kenny BurrelI. But the teacher to whom he credits his first burst of inspiration was the late Duke Miller, head of the guitar department at USC. A studious sort, Ritenour pursued guitar at USC partly because the great classical guitarist Christopher Parkening was there as a teacher. He had already taken private lessons from the American virtuoso when Parkening lived in the ValIey,in Studio City - not far from the Baked Potato. "I remember going over for lessons sometimes and Pepé Romero, from the Romeros [legendary family of classical virtuosi], would show up and Àngel [Romero] would show up in his pink Cadillac. There was anice, serious amount of musicians - heavy guitar players – floating around in those days. I got very serious about the classical guitar, but I was no Christopher Parkening. My weight was still toward the electric guitar." In fact, Ritenour's interest in classical guitar was eclipsed by his growing passion for jazz and, specificalIy, the inspiration he felt in hearing – and copping licks from - Wes Montgomery. Still, it was more than just technique that a young Ritenour admired. "Ofthe guitar players, Wes was the first one who crossed over into more of a pop area in a contemporary field," he points out. "He had that sound that permeated things and is still as viable today as it was in 1960." Long before Ritenour did, Montgomery took criticism for his pop ventures. Says Rit, "Alot of the records of his that Creed Taylor produced were highly arranged and showed some terrific arranging and guitar playing. But they were recording simple pop songs, and a lot of them had almost syrupy arrangements. He definitely got a lot of flak. Unfortunately, he got so much flak for doing those commerciai records that people began to miss that he was, indeed, the greatest jazz guitarist of the 20th century. He just had that magic. My father took me to hear Wes at the Lighthouse in Redondo Beach when I was 16,and I was sitting about 10 feet away. l'Il never forget it." Ritenour also remembers being wowed by early exposure to the Mahavishnu Orchestra, who he saw at the Roxy as a big-eared teenager. By the time Ritenour kicked off his own career as a leader, settling into the Baked Potato and turning out albums, he was locked into the funk-intlected groove going around town. But his interpretation was lent clarity by his own welI-developed sound and was fortified with trace elements of the edgier stuff he heard in Mahavishnu. They called him Captain Fingers, the title of his second album. It's easy to forget, now, how marginai this more pop-oriented, L.A.branch of jazz-rock was in the 1970Smarketplace, before NACradio was a gleam in anyone's eye. Ritenour recalIs, "When I handed in my first record to Epic in 1976, I remember I gave it to the A&Rwoman and she said 'What is this? What is this called and what are we going to do with it?'" He laughs. "She just wanted to give it back. I knew I was in trouble right then. There was no radio, and there was no support from the record companies. "That's why Dave Grusin and Larry Rosen started GRPrecords. They were completely frustrated that there was no sounding board, no outlet for this kind of sound. There was no doubt that the Crusaders, with Larry Carlton and Joe Sample, were the cutting edge of this sound. Tom Scott was in there, and certainly Lee Ritenour and Dave Grusin. Dave had a big influence on a lot of people," Ritenour says, "more so than most people know because he's always been such a subtle creator. I realIy have to cite Dave as the biggest influence for my producer and arranger chops." You can hear that influence in Ritenour's streamlined productions. A second wave of marketable energy entered Ritenour's story in 1991. He teamed up with Bob ...

 

AL DI MEOLA
"My connection with Astor was due to the fact that we were both Italian and we'd had extremely similar experiences. Napoli, where mine and Astor's families hail trom, is the artisti c center of Italy. AlI the great painters and musicians and singers are fram there. The arts still thrive there to this day. Piazzolla said the origins of tango are in Napoli. The sound of the accordion is very much a symbol of that region. You feel in the sentimentality of his music and even the melancholy atmosphere it creates that this comes fram a person of the motherland." Di Meola's own upbringing also fed into his development. Bom and raised in Bergenfield, New Jersey, a teenaged Albert Di Meola would often cut classes to make the train in time for the first set at a popular Manhattan salsa club. Drawn to the rhythmic tension of the clave, he was soon inspired to play the drums. The guitar of Larry CoryelI was an even greater fascination, and Di Meola quickly progressed through lessons with local guitar teacher Bob Aswanian. Enrolling at Berklee, Di Meola shared a three-room apartment where he spent alI his time practicing ("I got the closet to practice in; I smelled like mothbalIs for two years"). A tape of a drug-warped gig reached Chick Corea, and a 19-year-old Di Meola was soon the guitar star of a quartet perched on the cutting edge of jazz. "I carne onto the scene so young. I had a lot of developing to do quite fast to be in that kind of company," says Di Meola. "I had to leam to stay afloat. If you want to get better as a musician, surround yourself with guys who will kick your butto That band was like the dream band of alI time for a guitarist. Nothing carne close." Di Meola telIs an unusual tale of how he gamered that fateful position with Return to Forever. "I didn't replace Bill Connors. I replaced Earl Klugh, who was the replacement for Bill Connors. I went to an early show expecting to see Bill Connors and out comes this guy wearing a little golf cap with a little beany on top, and he had on this Playboy bunny tee-shirt. What is this? It was definitely out of context. I knew that was my chance. "A friend of mine gave Chick a tape of me playing on New Year's Eve with Barry Miles at some club called Richard's Lounge in New Jersey. l've never been into drugs, but that night I did a hit of mescaline, and that put me on a different planet. That tape got me the job with Chick." Along with Piazzolla and Corea ("Theme of the Mothership" gets the Grange and Blue treatment), Di Meola cites Brazilian artists like Milton Nascimento, Caetano Veloso, and Egberto Gismonti as influences on his current work. "Less and less it's guitarists that influence me," he says, "more musicians like Astor and Milton Nascimento. I had met Milton in Brazil in 1974.I had absorbed a lot of that music long before a lot of people had ever heard of him." Di Meola wrote a 1992Musician article entitled "Why Has Music Become WalIpaper?" In other publications, he has scorned, name by name, the major label producers who tumed a deaf ear to his soonto- be-successful Kiss My Axe album. An artist with less girth could have become a footnote by now, but Di Meola has not only prospered against the odds, he's triumphed, as Grange and Blue clearly shows. And Di Meola still envisions a national radio culture where music is foremost - not false demographics or advertising dollars. Di Meola believes in the mixed bag. "With radio in the 199°5, there shouldn't be any problem with having a format where Hendrix follows Joshua Redman. Then Sting and Peter Gabriel and Joni MitchelI, even k.d. lang and Kenny G can work. I can't believe there isn't a huge listening audience for a format with real music. It doesn't have to be a nostalgie blast; it's music that works."

FRISELL
Frisell decided to try something entirely different. He gathered together three acoustic players – a trumpeter, Ron Miles; a trombonist, Curtis Fowlkes; and a violinist, Eyvind Kang - and no rhythm section at all. "I didn't want to just get another drummer, and then always be thinking, 'Oh, Iwonder what Joey would be doing.' So the quartet was kind of perfect. 'I just won't have any bass or drums.''' Since all three of the other players were essentially lead voices, Frisell was constrained to build the role of "rhythm section" into the arrangements or act as bass-and-drums himself. This may sound terribly limiting, but the best art often arises in response to odd or severe limitations; Frisell's new quartet ended up making the music he had been refining openly since 1993'sHave a Little Faith better, perhaps, than any previous configuration. The 1996 album Quartet, with its fresh vision and odd make-up, may well be the best solo record he's made. Another project that presented itself around this time was the brainchild of Frisell's record company, Nonesuch. One imagines most players walk in dread of the moment when the suits say, "Hey, listen, we've got a great idea ..." It's usually a money thing - at best, a mixed blessing; more often, painfully obvious or obviously wrong. Here's the germ of the idea: People keep saying that Frisell has this traditional American-music thing going, that he has this country sound coming through. Why not take that idea head on, surround him with a bunch of great bluegrass players and see what kind of music comes out of the cross-pollination? Frisell liked the idea immediately, and the universe (through his label and network of musician friends) conspired to make it happen. So a month after recording Quartet, a time when he could have been enjoying a well-deserved break, he was back in the studio with vocalist Robin Holcomb, doing the preliminary recordings for this other album (eventually to be called Nashville). They recorded a number of tunes, and three of them - Neil Young's "One of These Days," Hazel Dickens' odd gospel gem "Will Jesus Wash the Bloodstains From YourHands?," and Skeeter Davis' "End of the World" - made it onto the final, mostly instrumental, recording. It was another year before Frisell could get all the other musicians together, but the result is something lovely and rare. It's not so much Bill Frisell doing country or bluegrass as it is bluegrass springing up in a space cleared by Frisell the composer, then tended by Frisell the guitarist. Frisell's Nashville is no place in particular, certainly not the center of commercial country music. Rather, the recording comes across as a postcard from some wistful utopia, the perfect home you never had but long for nonetheless. The pace and ambiance ofNashville is very comfortable. It sounds not pat, by any means, but like it had a good chance to ripen before the mics and recorders were turned on. The narrative of its development, you might think, could be this: Frisell takes some time to let the idea percolate, gradually writes some tunes for the personnel he has selected or imagines, picks the best, lets the others settle out, structures some fairly detailed arrangements, then pulls everybody together for rehearsals; finally, the whole crew rolls into the studio, and they perform their most gorgeous versions of the music they are already well familiar with. That scenario could hardly be further from the truth. In fact, Nashville was yet another of Frisell's launches into the unknown, another instance in which he set himself in the arms of Music (and great musicians) and trusted in his instincts and abilities to pull disparate voices together into something coherent and compelling. "The second thing someone will say about my playing is that there's this country influence," says Frisell, "but I never really played the real thing. ...

Table of
Contents
BADI ASSAD - The Girl from Ipanema She's Not
By Mark Holston

KENNY BURRELL - Soaring with the Mystics
By Steve Matteo

CRAIG CHAQUICO - The Four Corners Converge
By Jonathan Widran

LARRY CORYELL - Call and Response -
An Interview with Larry Coryell
By Lucy Tauss

STEVE KHAN - Catching a Wave
By Mike Bieber

PAT METHENY - In Search of Pat Metheny
By Josef Woodard

MARC RIBOT - Swimming Upstream to Cuba 22
By Josef Woodard

LEE RITENOUR - Captain Fingers ...
and the Fully Baked Potato 24
By Josef Woodard

JOHN SCOFIELD - Defender of the Groove 29
By Tom Moon

JOE MORRIS - Melodic Morris Code 34
By Sam Prestianni

PAT MARTINO - Real Time 37
By Josef Woodard

BILL FRISELL - On the Road to Bill Frisell 42
By William Stephenson

WILLIE NELSON - You Were Always on My Mind 47
By Bill Milkowski

JIM HALL - Why They All Want to Play
with Jim Hall.

HARRIET TUBMAN - Josef Woodard
Harriet Tubman: A Kinder, Gentler Skronk
By Josef Woodard

RONNY JORDAN - Ronny Jordan: Not an Acid Trip 57
By Jonathan Wid ran

JOE PASS - Joe Pass - The Logical Extension
of the Bop-Oriented Masters 59
By Scott Yanow

HERB ELLIS - Don't Take Herb Ellis for Granted 62
By Scott Yanow

AL DI MEOLA - After the Tango 65
By Ken Micallef

STEV TIBBETTS - Seductive and Inscrutable .
By Josef Woodard

The Critics Pick the First
String Guitarists .
By JAZZIZ critics

Anatomy of the Guitar & Bass .
By Scott Yanow

SONNY SHARROCK - Sonny Sharrock - Gone Too Soon .
By Hank Bordowitz

JEAN-PAUL BOURELLY - A Blues Grit Crossbred with
Hip hop and Hard bop .
By Josef Woodard

WES MONTGOMERY - Ritenour's Wes Bound for New Ears .
By Mark Holston

Historic Guitars .
By Hank Bordowitz

MIKE STERN - Mike Stern's Class Reunion .
By Josef Woodard

JEFF GOLUP - Bell-Bottom Blues .
By Jonathan Wid ran

MARC ANTOINE - Running Deep, Stretching for Miles .
By Jonathan Widran

WAYNE KRANTZ - Fed Up and Hungry
By Josef Woodard

GEORGE BENSON - The Original “G" Hits the Spot Again .
By David Okamoto

LES PAUL - Ingenious - Les Paul, Unpatented .
By Hank Bordowitz

Expanding the Universe
A Jazz Guitar Spectrum - Part 1... .
By Josef Woodard

Expanding the Universe
A Jazz Guitar Spectrum - Part II .
By Josef Woodard

35 Burnin' Up:
BRIAN HUGHES
MICHAEL GULEZIAN
RICK ZUNIGAR
RANDY BERNSEN (che ogni anno viene a suonare a Rimini)
JAMES VINCENT
DAVID LOWREY
GEORGE SIMON
JOHN PAUL
DAVE ONDERDONK
BILL MIZE
CHRISTOFER CORTEZ

JAZZIZ Presents Guitars on Fire .
By R.Dante Sawyer and Eric W. Moya

CD Jewel Case Art .
Readers Poll: The Public's
Favorite Jazz Guitarists .
Compiled by Albert W. Starkweather, Jr.
Find Your Favorite Players.
 

CD
1. Brian Hughes - Casa Magica
2. Michael Gulezian - Slugbug
3. Rick Zunigar - Rhum Boogie
4. Randy Bernsen - Hope
5. James Vincent - Peaks
6. Dave Lowrey - Bass Face
7. George Simon - Watching Angels
8. John Paul - Heads Up
9. Dave Onderdonk - Eight Is Enough
10. David OcchiNIpinti - David Leaves
11. Mill Mize - Miasma
12. Christopher Cortez - Different Samples
Produced by Michael Fagien
Special thanks to Lee Ritenour, John Patitucci, and Jim Hall
Exclusive CD available only with this book, JAZZIZ
Chronicles: The Guitarists JAZZIZMagazine

Price: €21,99
€21,99

JAZZ LICKS ENCYCLOPEDIA Jody Fisher BOOK CD GUITAR TABLATURE VOICING IMPROVISATION

JAZZ LICKS ENCYCLOPEDIA. 280 frasi. CD TABLATURE

By Jody Fisher
ITEM: 00-19420
UPC: 038081184524
ISBN 10: 0739011189
ISBN 13: 9780739011188
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD

Nearly 300 useful jazz guitar licks organized by chord type. Examples are shown in easy-to-read TAB and standard music notation. Four voicings are given for each chord type along with easy-to-read chord diagrams. Licks for common progressions such as ii-V-I are shown. Includes sections on Important Scales for Improvisation, Articulation, "Feel" and other important topics.

Price: €27,99
€27,99

JUMP JIVE 'N' SWING GUITAR Keith Wyatt Learn styles Freddie Green CD TABLATURE chitarra METODO

JUMP, JIVE 'N' SWING GUITAR. K. Wyatt. CD TAB.

By Keith Wyatt
SERIES: Jazz Masters Series
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD
In this book, Keith Wyatt leads you through all the techniques you need to play swing rhythm guitar. Keith covers blues progressions, swing chord voicings, comping patterns, rhythm feels, bass lines, horn-style riffs, and much more! The included CD contains full demonstrations of all the music examples, complete with a full swing band that you can play along with. All music examples are written in standard notation and tab. All you need is the Zoot suit!

Price: €113,99
€113,99

KHAN STEVE-CONTEMPORARY CHORD KHANCEPTS 2 CD LIBRO SPARTITI CHITARRA ACCORDI METODO

KHAN STEVE, CONTEMPORARY CHORD KHANCEPTS. 2 CD

CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & 2 CDs

In this book, Steve Khan shares his approach to chord construction on guitar, an area in which he has become famous. He has taken a complex subject and broken it down into simple building blocks and small study units: players will learn to extend their sense of harmony by the superimposition of chord forms which are familiar, as well as a world of new ones. With two CDs full of performed examples, play-along tracks, and five completely new compositions by Steve Khan available only in this package.

Price: €32,99
€32,99
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