CHITARRA - GUITAR

AL DI MEOLA JOHN McLAUGHLIN PACO DE LUCIA FRIDAY NIGHT IN SAN FRANCISCO TABLATURE CHITARRA RIO

DI MEOLA AL, JOHN McLAUGHLIN, PACO DE LUCIA. FRIDAY NIGHT IN SAN FRANCISCO. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE ! 

THE GUITAR PLAYER. 

LIBRO DI MUSICA: ACOUSTIC JAZZ FUSION. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA 1, CHITARRA 2, CHITARRA 3.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

Le 3 ''tremende'' linee di chitarra in TABLATURE, tutti i titoli del disco dal vivo, tranne "frevo rasgado"di Egberto Gismonti. 

 

TITOLI:

"Mediterranean Sundance (Al Di Meola) / Río Ancho (Paco de Lucía)" – 
Performed by: Paco de Lucía (Left Channel) and Al Di Meola (Right Channel)

"Short Tales of the Black Forest" (Chick Corea) – 
Performed by: John McLaughlin (Left Channel) and Al Di Meola (Right Channel)

"Fantasia Suite" (Al Di Meola) – 
Performed by: Paco de Lucía (Left Channel), John McLaughlin (Middle Channel) and Al Di Meola (Right Channel)

"Guardian Angel" (John McLaughlin) (Studio Recording) – 
Performed by: Paco de Lucía (Left Channel), John McLaughlin (Middle Channel) and Al Di Meola (Right Channel)

 

Al Di Meola – Acoustic Guitar
John McLaughlin – Acoustic Guitar
Paco de Lucía – Acoustic Guitar

 

Friday Night in San Francisco è un album dal vivo del 1981 del famoso virtuosistico trio chitarristico di Al Di Meola, John McLaughlin e Paco de Lucía. E' considerato come il più influente di tutti i live acoustic guitar albums.

Tutte le tracce registrate sono state incise dal concerto del The Warfield Theatre il 5 Dicembre 1980, a San Francisco.

Guardian Angel registrata al Minot Sound, in White Plains, New York. 

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CHRISTIAN CHARLIE THE BEST OF GUITAR SIGNATURE LICKS CD TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA METODO

CHRISTIAN CHARLIE, THE BEST OF. LICKS. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

A Step-by-Step Breakdown of the Styles and Techniques of the Father of Modern Jazz Guitar

 
LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD. 
 
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:
 
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TECNICA, 

Series: Signature Licks
Book & CD Package - TAB
Artist: Charlie Christian
Arranger: Wolf Marshall
Explore the riffs, solos and sounds of the original electric jazz guitar virtuoso with this comprehensive book/CD pack! Wolf Marshall uses excerpts from 15 of Christian's classics to demonstrate his groundbreaking techniques, including: Air Mail Special -Benny's Bugle -Good Enough to Keep (Air Mail Special) -Grand Slam -Honeysuckle Rose -I've Found a New Baby (I Found a New Baby) -Seven Come Eleven -Shivers - Solo Flight -Stardust -Wholly Cats, and more. Includes an introduction and foreword, and a Charlie Christian biography and axology. 64 pages.

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD. 
 
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:
 
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

THE BENNY GOODMAN SEXTET, FEATURING CHARLIE CHRISTIAN (1939-1941)

(Columbia CK CK 45144) "Stardust," "A Smooth One”.

 

CHARLIE CHRISTlAN- THE GENIUS OF THE ELECTRIC GUITAR. (columbia CK 40846)

“Seven Come Eleven,” “Till Tom Special,” “Grand Slam,” “Six Appeal,” “Benny's Bugle,”

“I've Found a New Baby (I Found a New Baby),” ''Solo Flight,” “Air Mail Special.”

 

CHARLIE CHRISTIAN (The Best of Jazz 4032- The Swing Era). "Honeysuckle Rose,"

"Shivers," "Gone with 'What' Wind," "Wholly Cats."

Charles Henry (Charlie) Christian was born in Bonham, Texas on July 29, 1916, into a musical family. His father, Clarence James Christian, played trumpet in a silent movie theater, while his mother, Willie Mae, accompanied him on the piano. Christian had two older brothers-Edward and Clarence. Both were musically inclined, though to a lesser extent than Charlie. In 1918, the Christian family moved from the Dallas area to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. There, during the early 1920s, he attended elementary grades in the Douglass School, which had an extensive music program. Interestingly, this coincided with the first known experiments of the amplified "electric" guitar. At this time, Christian took informal guitar lessons from his father, but dropped the instrument when his father died in 1926. A couple of years later, he briefly took up the trumpet to play in the school band. Christian's interest in the guitar was revived in 1928, and it is thought that his earliest jazz influence was instilled a year later when tenor saxophonist Lester Young arrived in Kansas City. Young's linear style had a strong effect on Christian, who remained a permanent "addict" to his music and was known to scat sing his solos throughout his life. Christian's first public performance as a guitarist was in 1930 at around age fourteen, when he sat in with the Don Redman Orchestra at Honey Murphy's Club in Oklahoma City. He took solos on "Sweet Georgia Brown," "Tea For Two," and "Rose Room"-most likely holding his guitar up to a microphone. In 1933, Christian began to study guitar with Ralph "Big-Foot Chuck" Hamilton. He learned to read music and some basic music theory. Christian introduced his friend T-Bone Walker to Hamilton, who taught them together. Hamilton played in the typical chordal style of the period, and it is doubtful that he had any influence on either Christian's or Walker's single-note solo approach. During this time, Walker and Christian, while learning together, played shows as a duo alternating on bass and guitar. In 1934, Christian secured his first professional music job with the Alphonso Trent band as a bassist. The group toured throughout the area, playing venues in Kansas City, Dallas, Fort Worth, Little Rock, and Tulsa. In the next three years, Christian also played with The Jolly Jugglers (with his brother Edward), toured the Southwest with the Anna Mae Winburn Orchestra, and worked with the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra in St. Louis. In his travels he probably encountered Delta blues players, as well as western swing bands, which were now regularly featuring amplified steel guitars and soloists who used a swingbased single-note styleA breakthrough occurred in 1937. Back in Oklahoma City, Christian was playing piano and met Count Basie's guitarist Eddie Durham, who is credited with having recorded one of the earliest amplified guitar solos. Christian was immediately enthralled with the electric guitar and sought Durham out for some basic pointers. Durham later remarked, "I never saw anyone learn so fast, nor have I seen anyone rise to the top so quickly." Soon after the meeting, Christian bought his first electric guitar and began to assemble the components of his horn-like approach. By 1938, he was touring as an electric guitarist with Alphonso Trent's Septet and worked at The Dome in Bismarck, North Dakota. There, he was heard by jazz guitarist Mary Osborne. She recalled that it was "the most startling thing" she ever heard, and that it sounded like a distorted saxophone. Osborne further recalled that Christian played Django Reinhardt's difficult "St. Louis Blues" note for note, and many of the figures he worked into his solos evolved later into Benny Goodman tunes like "Seven Come Eleven" and "Gone with 'What' Wind." At that time, a local music store displayed the Gibson ES- 150 with a sign reading "As featured by Charlie Christian." Christian was, by this point, a regional hero. In July 1939, jazz and blues impresario and producer John Hammond became aware of Charlie Christian. Acting on a tip from singer Mary Lou Williams, Hammond flew to Oklahoma to hear the guitarist. He then arranged an audition in Los Angeles for swing clarinetist Benny Goodman, who was becoming interested in the electric guitar as an ensemble instrument. Goodman was initially unimpressed when he heard Christian comp unamplified rhythm guitar behind "Tea For Two" and further dubbed him "an impossible rube." Later, Hammond sneaked Christian onto the bandstand for an impromptu jam session with the Benny Goodman Quintet at the Victor Hugo Restaurant. The group played an extended jam on "Rose Room," during which Christian matched Goodman riff for riff and improvised over twenty choruses. He was hired on the spot for $150 a week to play with the Benny Goodman Sextet and relocated to New York City. Christian's influential recordings began in late 1939. He recorded extensively with the Goodman Sextet, Septet, and Orchestra, as well as the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, and participated in the historic Carnegie Hall jazz concert Spirituals to Swing. These sessions marked the formal genesis of modern jazz guitar. Christian's stirring performances on pieces such as "Air Mail Special," "Seven Come Eleven," "Honeysuckle Rose," and the epic "Solo Flight" argue the case convincingly. During his association with Goodman, Christian became one of the biggest names of the swing era. Not content to rest on his laurels and enjoy the fruits of his newfound stardom and accolades, he pushed the envelope further. In 1940, Christian was part of the milieu at Minton's Playhouse in Harlem, and as such foreshadowed the arrival of the bebop idiom along with early luminaries of the genre Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius Monk, and Kenny Clarke. Christian went so far as to purchase an amplifier to be kept on the premises for his regular after-hours jams. Plagued with respiratory problems his entire life and unwilling to scale down a demanding lifestyle, Christian succumbed to tuberculosis and died on March 2, 1942. In retrospect, his contributions are profound and inescapable. During a period of less than three years, Christian had emerged from total obscurity to produce a copious body of material that forever altered the course of music. Legendary jazz guitarist Barney Kessel is one of few guitarists to have actually played with Charlie Christian during his short career. On August 22,2001, I visited Barney at his home in San Diego, CA, and during our time together discussions naturally turned to Charlie. He graciously offered his memories...

 

Songlist:

Table of contents
A Smooth One
Air Mail Special
Benny's Bugle
Gone With 'What' Wind
Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
Grand Slam
Honeysuckle Rose
I've Found A New Baby (I Found A New Baby)
Seven Come Eleven
Shivers
Six Appeal
Solo Flight
Stardust
Till Tom Special
Wholly Cats

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COLTRANE JOHN-ESSENTIAL JAZZ LINES IN THE STYLE OF BOOK CD LIBRO SPARTITI CHITARRA

COLTRANE JOHN, ESSENTIAL JAZZ LINES IN THE STYLE OF. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

STUDIO, MANUALE, 

Saxophonist John Coltrane was one of the most innovative, creative, and influential jazz artists of the 20th Century. Both stylistically and harmonically, he opened doors for others to follow. This book will focus on the first period of Coltrane's career, when he was with Miles Davis, and the jazz vocabulary he used. First, to help the student better understand Coltrane's bebop style of improvising, the authors discuss the use of guide tones, bebop scales, three to flat nine, targeting, and other techniques. Then the text presents numerous one-, two-, and three-measure jazz lines in Coltrane's style in notation and tablature grouped by the harmony over which they can be used. The accompanying play-along CD provides the rhythm parts for each section, including a track for each section that modulates through the cycle of fourths, helping you master the phrases in all keys. By combining various lines, musicians will be able to mix and match numerous combinations of these lines to play over ii-V-I progressions, turnarounds, and other harmonic situations. Incorporate these essential jazz lines into your vocabulary and you will be able to create your own lines in the style of John Coltrane.

 

John Coltrane
The Style of John Coltrane
Jazz Language
Guide Tones
Bebop Scales
Mixolydian Bebop
Major Bebop
Minor Bebop
Scalar Patterns
3-flat9
Augmented Dominant
Playing the Upper-Structure of Chords
Targeting
Substitutions
John Coltrane's Style
Summary
Minor Chord Material
Track 1: Tuning
Track 2: Minor Chord Vamp
Track 3: Minor Moving in Fourths
Dominant Seventh Chord Material
Track 4: Dominant Seventh Vamp
Track 5: Dominant Seventh Moving in Fourths
One Measure ii-V (Short ii-V) Material
Track 6: Short ii-V Vamp
Track 7: Short ii-V Moving in Fourths
Two Measure ii-V (Long ii-V) Material
Track 8: Long ii-V Vamp
Track 9: Long ii-V Moving in Fourths
Major (I) Chord Material
Track 10: Major Vamp
Track 11: Major Moving in Fourths
Minor ii-V Material
Track 12: Minor ii-V Vamp
Track 13: Minor ii-V Moving in Fourths
Play Along Recordings
Track 14: Short ii-V-I Vamp
Track 15: Short ii-V-I Moving in Fourths
Track 16: Long ii-V-I Vamp
Track 17: Long ii-V-I Moving in Fourths
Track 18: Minor ii-V-i Vamp
Track 19: Minor ii-V-i Moving in Fourths
Turnarounds
Track 20: Turnaround Vamp
Track 21: Turnaround Moving in Fourths
Creating Solos
Track 22: Creating Solos
Track 23: Progression Similar to Pent Up House
Coltrane Changes/Giant Steps
Practicing Coltrane Changes
Track 24: Long ii-V-I with Coltrane Changes Vamp
Track 25: Long ii-V-I with Coltrane Changes Moving in Fourths
Track 26: Eight Measure Giant Steps Vamp
Track 27: Progression Similar to Giant Steps
Superimposing the Coltrane Changes
Track 28: Blues for a Giant
Track 29: Snap Shots
Conclusion
Selected Discography
About the Authors

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COMPLETE BOOK OF JAZZ GUITAR LINES & PHRASES Sid Jacobs CD TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI

COMPLETE BOOK OF JAZZ GUITAR LINES & PHRASES. Sid Jacobs. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ, CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE, 

Product Description:
An important addition to the improvising jazz guitarist's library, this thoughtful blend of text and musical examples focuses on the vocabulary of modern jazz and some of the applications of modern harmony. With examples written in standard notation and tablature, Jacobs offers instruction on bebop style phrases, playing fourths, inside-outside playing, pentatonic, whole-tone and symmetrical scales, slash chords, polychords, hip lines, fingerings and much more. The companion CD presents the material in the text played with chord accompaniment.

Product Number: 95737BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
Series: Complete
160 PAGES

 

 

Introduction

It has been said that a great composer doesn't borrow, he steals. If this book dealt with memorizing rules, I would certainly place "steal from the best" as rule number one. Some might feel uncomfortable about imitation but there is little to fear if you are judicious in what you steal and don't just "loot one store:' We learn to speak by imitation. We use an existing language to express our thoughts. It is no different for the improviser, using and connecting phrases from an existing idiom. If we substitute the term "line" with sentence and "improvisation" with conversation, we de-mystify the process. The way a person puts his words and phrases together gives him his conversational style and consequently, the more vocabulary he has, the better equipped he is to express himself. Similarly,the way a player connects his musical phrases gives him his improvising style, and the more vocabulary he has, the better equipped he is. The idiomatic phrases of the Jazz language distinguish it from other music. Through use of examples, we hope to illustrate some ideas that are used to create jazz lines and phrases. Improvising is an art. The ability to articulate your ideas clearly is a craft. When you connect your ideas creatively and extemporaneously, the craft is elevated to art. Improvisation is the art of jazz. Observe your own speech patterns and phrasing. You will notice that no two or three words have exactly the same volume. What I'm pointing out is that in conversation, we naturally use one of the first learned and first forgotten lessons in music: dynamics. In good conversation, one idea naturally flows to another. With fluency we make connections. In jazz improvisation, where the subject of our conversation is the chord changes or modulations, we need the ability to melodically imply the chord we are playing over and at any given point in time, smoothly connect to a close available chord tone or note in the key center. (See Example 1.)In this example the modulations and chord changes are made by moving to the closest available note.

 

About the Author Sid Jacobs

Sid Jacobs grew up in Miami, Fla. and began guitar lessons at the age of seven. As a teenager he became serious about jazz playing and would study and practice by day and sneak into the jazz clubs at night. When the Jacobs family moved to Nevada, he obtained a position as guitar instructor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. This made him, at eighteen, the youngest faculty member in the school's music department. While living in Nevada, Sid found work in the hotel pit orchestras, and as touring accompanist to a number of celebrity singers and jazz artists. After moving to Los Angeles, he developed the curriculum for the Jazz Guitar elective at the Musicians Institute (GIT)and the Advanced Bebop and Jazz Guitar course at the Dick Grove SchooL In 1991the CD It's Not Goodnight was released featuring his original compositions and improvisations. Among the many jazz artists Sid has performed with are Eddie Harris, Harold Land, Buddy Montgomery, Red Holloway, Conte Candoli, and in duo concert settings with guitarist Joe Diorio. Through his involvement in education, his personal associations with jazz notables, and his discipline, Sid continues to gain recognition as an influential educator, composer, and performing artist. In reviewing a live performance, Los Angeles Times jazz critic Don Heckman characterized him in this way, "... a highly articulate improviser... Never at a loss for a new phrase his improvisations seemed to unfold with the ever-changing fascination of a set of Bach variations:' Sid currently divides his time among his pursuits as GIT instructor, musical equipment manufacturer's consultant, performance and recording artist, and jazz clinician. Sid jacobs plays a Borys guitar and usesThomastik-Infeld strings.

 

Table of Contents:

 

About the Author Sid Jacobs .

Preface 

Introduction .

The Craft .

More Diatonic Sequences .

Smokin' A Half Note (Etude) .

Idioms .

Idiomatic ii or ii - V Shapes .

Idiomatic V - I Resolution Shapes .

Idiomatic I Major Shapes .

Sample II or II - V Lines .

Sample Major Lines .

Sample II - V - I Lines .

Some Additional Notes On the Idioms .

Some Miscellaneous Bebop Style Phrases .

Major 7th Lines .

Miscellaneous Phrases Over Common Progressions .

Another Blues in F (Etude) .

May The Fourths Be With You .

Triads (Fourth Triads) .

The Pentatonic Scale & Fourths .

Some Pentatonic Fourth Shapes .

Fourths Contours and Permutations .

Pentatonic Scales .

Pentatonics Inside Out .

The Madness - The Method

Ideas & Examples Combining Pentatonic Sounds .

Diatonic Fourths & Fifths

Fourths & Intervallic Sequences .

Piccardy Fourths (Etude)

Quartal Harmony .

Symmetrical Scales .

The "Magic Scale" (Augmented) .

Major Triads from the Augmented Scale

Minor Triads from the Augmented ("Magic") Scale

Some Augmented Scale Harmonies .

The Diminished Scale .

Some Diminished Scale Melodic Patterns .

Diminished Scale Harmony .

Whole Tone Scale

Whole Tone Scale Fingerings .

Some Whole Tone Lines

The Chromatic Scale .

Octave Displacement .

Polychords & Slash Chords .

Blues 4 Poly (Etude)

Kernels of Tomorrow (Etude) .

Final Notes .

Acknowledgments .

 

MEL BAY'S COMPLETE BOOK OF JAZZ GUITAR LINES & PHRASES

By Sid Jacobs

I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone who is serious about playing jazz guitar. It is a thorough, comprehensive and organized approach that can only come from someone who is a great musician and teacher.

-Bruce Forman

 

The plethora of disorganized, trendy guitar "methods" is ultimately confusing and overwhelming even to the most dedicated and devoted of students. Jacobs has brought us back to the simple musical truths that must inform all of our studies and music making. Jacobs' text is simple, clear, concise, and complete-It's the only jazz guitar "method" you'll ever need! -Fa reed Haque, Blue Note Recording Artist, Professor NIU (Northern Illinois University)

 

The Complete Book of Jazz Guitar Lines & Phrases is a concise, thorough exploration of the modern jazz vocabulary. It takes the mystery out of jazz harmony while stressing its creative applications. The explanations are clear and easy to follow, and the notated examples are fun, challenging, and musically relevant. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the study and advancement of jazz guitar. -John Hart

 

CD CONTENTS

Idiomatic II or II-V Shapes /p. 21 (5:58)

Idiomatic V-I Resolution Shapes /p.24 (2:14)

Idiomatic I Major Shapes /p. 27 (2:07)

Sample Major Lines /p.35 (3:03)

Sample II-V-I Lines /p.39 (1:46)

Some Miscellaneous Bebop Styles /p.43 (2:54)

Major 7th Lines /p.48 (1: 11)

Miscellaneous Phrases Common Program /p.51 (1:23)

Another Blues in F (Etude) /p.54 (1 :06)

May the Fourths Be with You /p.56 (:26)

Triads (Fourth Triads) /p.60 (1:10)

The Pentatonic Scale & Fourths /p.62 (1:25)

Some Pentatonic Fourth Shapes /p.64 (1 :45)

The Madness-The Method /p.78 (:55)

Ideas & Examples Pentatonic Sounds /p.81 (4:32)

Symmetrical Scales /p.95 (3:31)

The Magic Scale /p.100 (1 :50)

Major Triads from Augmented Scale /p.104 (1 :41)

Major Triads from Augmented (Magic) scale /p.105 (3:29)

Augmented Scale Harmonies /p.109 (1 :48)

The Diminished Scale /p.110 (4:04)

Diminished Scale Melodic Patterns /p.114 (5: 12)

Diminished Scale Harmony /p.119 (3:48)

Whole Tone Scale /p.123 (:23)

Some Whole Tone Lines /p.127 (1 :55)

The Chromatic Scale /p.131 (2:26)

Octave Displacement / p.137 (:59)

Polychords & Slash Chords /p.139 (7:52)

Blues 4 Poly (Etude) /p.148 (1:04)

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COOL BLUES & HOT JAZZ GUITAR Adrian Ingram CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITO METHOD

COOL BLUES & HOT JAZZ GUITAR. Adrian Ingram. Esercizi, titoli. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD GUITAR TABLATURE, 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA JAZZ, BLUES, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

Cool Blues & Hot Jazz has been written to introduce the most valuable jazz guitar techniques and present them in a clear and concise way with the beginning jazz guitarist in mind and for players with a rock or blues background. This tutorial covers an innovative combination of ideas and music to introduce you to the playing of great jazz and blues players such as Wes Montgomery, Joe Pass, Pat Martino, Kenny Burrell, Robben Ford, Duke Robillard, Larry Carlton and many others.
Whatever your level, or interest, Cool Blues & Hot Jazz breaks down the barriers to the normally confusing world of jazz. It will teach you step by step the most important (yet seldom explained) guitar techniques in an easily accessible but thorough way.

STAGES IN THE LEARNING CYCLE
Each lesson has been divided into three separate sections to help clarify the learning process:

STAGE 1.
The LESSON contains information you will need to know for the assignment, together with further material for clarification and future reference.

STAGE 2.
The ASSIGNMENT is where you will play along with the c.d.; where you take IIfrom the page to the guitar!

STAGE 3.
The CROSS-REFERENCING of what has been learnt in the assignment, with the information given in the lesson, completes the learnig cycle.

Contents:
Introduction .
Tuning Notes .
Notation Guide .
Chords and Scale Reference .
Lesson 1: The Dominant Seventh chord forms and substitutions.
Lesson 2: The Jazz / Blues Progression .
Lesson 3: "Minorizing" the Dominant .
Lesson 4: "Minorization" & Single-Line Soloing .
Lesson 5: Jazz Phrases .
Lesson 6: Single-Note Soloing on a Minorized Blues. Scale and arpeggio substitutions.
Lesson 7: The Tone-Below Principle .
Lesson 8: Coda:Putting it all Together . Cool Blues & Hot Jazz .

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LARRY & LEE RITENOUR & CARLTON GUITARS TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA TRASCRIZIONI BOOK

LARRY & LEE - LARRY CARLTON & LEE RITENOUR. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ FUSION.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE  . 

2 PENTAGRAMMI, E 2 LINEE DI TABLATURA.

103 PAGES.

SUPER TRANSCRIPTIONS !

LARRY CARLTON e LEE RITENOUR
(YEAR ALBUM: 1995)

Crosstown Kids - MUSIC BY LEE RITENOUR. 
Low Steppin' - MUSIC BY LEE RITENOUR and LARRY CARLTON. 
L.A. Underground - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Closed Door Jam - MUSIC BY LARRY CARLTON.  
After the Rain - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Remembering J.P. - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Fun in the Dark - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Lots About Nothin' - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Take That - MUSIC by LEE RITENOUR. 
Up and Adam - MUSIC by LARRY CARLTON. 
Reflection of a Guitar Player - MUSIC BY LARRY CARLTON. 

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CARLTON LARRY TABLATURE ROOM 335-NITE CRAWLER-POINT IT UP-RIO SAMBA DON'T GIVE IT UP-(IT WAS) ONLY

CARLTON LARRY, LARRY CARLTON. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE . 

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ FUSION,

SPARTITO PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, NOTE, TABLATURE.

Room 335 - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1973
Nite Crawler - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1977
Point It Up - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
Rio Samba - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
Don't Give It Up - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978
(It Was) Only Yesterday - Musica di: Larry Carlton - 1978

 

A longtime Nashville resident, Larry Carlton will perform a special hometown show at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center on Friday, September 30. Carlton spoke to Examiner.com about the upcoming show, his long career, playing with Michael Jackson and Dolly Parton, his continuing passion for music and more in the following interview.

Special thanks to Larry Carlton, and to Laurie Davis of the Nashville Symphony for arranging this interview.

 

You're playing at the Schermerhorn on Friday. Is this in conjunction with the Larry Carlton Plays the Sound of Philadelphia project?

That will be part of the show. The show I'm putting together is . . . I don't know if you'd call it the landscape of my career, but I'm going to do some things that I haven't done before, and the people are gonna be excited. They're gonna go, "Wow, I didn't know he played on that," or "Really? He was involved in that?"

I want to do a special show that night. It won't be just me and a sax player. (Laughs).

How did this come about? Did they approach you, or were you looking around for an appropriate venue for a particular type of show?

I was approached. I guess they finally got around to me. (Laughs). No, I was excited when I got the call. It's hometown for me, and the venue, if you will. I'm really excited.

I saw on your web site that you're going to be appearing with Steely Dan in New York City. Did you see them when they were in town?

No, I was actually out of town. Last year, or a year and a half ago they invited me to do seven shows with them. So I did a couple of nights in New York, one in Chicago, a couple of nights in LA. It was the first time . . . well, I'd never played live with them, and it was the first time in 35 years, since we cut The Royal Scam, that I went back and learned my solo from "Kid Charlemagne."

What's it like going back and re-visiting a part of your own career like that? Is it strange for you?

They're great memories. The weirdest thing for me is, I've never learned one of my own solos. (Laughs). I knew I had to play it note-for-note, and when I did, I got a standing ovation. People wanted to hear Larry play that solo.

After the long career you've had and all the various things you've done, what is it that keeps you active and excited about music?

That's a difficult question in that, at four years old I was fascinated with the guitar. At six years old I started taking lessons. I was passionate about it through the next fifty years, and that passion still exists.

Do you still keep an active practice regimen? Do you have the guitar in your hand every day?

No, normally I do about 125-150 a year touring around the world. So when I come home - and this is not new to me, I did this way back in the seventies - it's not unusual for me to not touch the guitar for a month, and just live my life; go horseback riding, go fishing.

I find that's good for my soul, good for my mind, and then when I come back to the guitar it's time to go again. It's a balance, I think.

You came up in an era where everything about the business was different. With all the changes in recording and distribution, do you think it's easier or harder for an artist in your position than it used to be?

Well, I have a unique situation, so I'm going to say it's easier. I have my own label now, and for the last four-and-a-half years. It was the first time in 17 years that I wasn't on a major label, and it was by choice. With the Internet I can talk to, play for, make music for the whole world, not just the US. When I was on a major they were very focused on the US.

Of course my albums were distributed overseas, and I have a great career in Japan and Europe. But now, I get an idea for a project . . . maybe it'll come from someone on Facebook saying, "Larry, have you ever thought of something with strings?" It could happen like that. So I'm enjoying the freedom of getting to make those choices.

What about the downside of the Internet, which is illegal downloading. Has that impacted you in the same way that it has rock and pop acts?

Well, of course. My numbers are down, like most artists, because everybody's exchanging files back and forth. That affects not only your record royalties, but your publishing and writing royalties. But it's just a new day, and I'm going with it. On my web site I'm sharing how I learned the guitar, how I play it . . . I want to be part of this new scene, and not avoid it and resent it.

You've obviously done a ton of recording, but two names jumped out at me from all that you've done that I wanted to ask you about, one of which is Michael Jackson. What did you do with Michael Jackson?

Quincy [Jones] called and said, "Larry, I have a special song, and it's got to be you." Because I wasn't doing a lot of dates, I'd already discontinued doing a lot of dates back then. So I went in and recorded what became a single, "She's Out of My Life."

In fact I'm looking at a three-foot plaque in my office right now that says, "Michael Jackson Off The Wall, over five million albums sold. We got all the marbles on this one, thanks for your help, Quincy." And there's four marbles in the bottom of it. It has a picture of Michael and the album cover. So yeah, I played on one cut on that album as a favor to Quincy.

The other one that popped out at me was Dolly Parton. I didn't know you'd done anything with her.

I don't remember the date, to tell you the truth. Whoever was producing her in LA in probably the early-to-mid seventies called me as the guitar player. So I know that I played on some stuff for Dolly, but I don't know what it was. (Laughs).

When you're doing that many different dates in so many different styles as you used to, is there any rational way to prepare for that, or do you just walk in and do it?

You walk in cold.

Versatility has served me well, and I think one of the reasons that I'm so versatile as a musician is because of the era and time that I was brought up. You figure, I was born in 1948, so by the time 1958 came around I'm ten, and I'm listening to doo-wop music on the radio. And that transitioned into the sixties, and rock and roll became very big.

So I'm part of that whole history, and I was playing the guitar the whole time. Every time something new came out in a style, I was aware of it. It was part of my hunger to learn how they did that. I wanted to learn the solo on an Elvis Presley record, and then The Beatles came along. So I lived through that transition, and the one thing that really made me a little bit different is that I fell in love with jazz when I was 14, but I didn't neglect pop music.

Back then every genre lived side by side, whereas now it's become divided and everything is micro-marketed to a very narrowly defined target demographic. How has that impacted you?

Obviously because I'm an instrumentalist, I was very happy in the mid-eighties when that format came along called the quiet storm, which transitioned into smooth jazz. All of a sudden there was a place on the radio for those of us that don't sing.

But I think it's run its course, I think it's boring now, and most of the stuff on those stations all sounds the same. You can't tell one sax player from another. But it was a neat thing that happened, and it exposed a lot of us to people that otherwise wouldn't have known us.

Are you finding that there's any good that's coming to you from any of the various alternatives, like satellite radio?

Yeah, I think so. You know, my songs are on those stations, and I'm sure there are people at home that keep those on sometimes, and listen to them while they're living their lives in their house or car, so it's just a nice place where someone might discover an artist.

You're offering interactive lessons on your web site. What gave you the idea to do that?

I was doing a guitar seminar in New York, and a producer was there who produces teaching DVDs. He has the largest Internet site, called True Fire. Anyway, he was impressed with my seminar and the way I communicate, so he approached me and said, "I'd like to produce a teaching video with you. It's been twenty years since you've done one." So that's how it started, and it still continues. I'm flying out tomorrow to speak to him about another project. So having a great producer helps me expose what I want to give to the guys out there.

What do you think is the most important thing to know for a kid who wants to play guitar?

I think what you just said: if a kid wants to play. I think motive is really important. What's your motive to play the guitar? Mine was always to make music. I can say this honestly: I never thought about being a star. It never entered my mind. I wanted to play the guitar. My dream as a teen was to be like my jazz heroes and play jazz in smoky clubs my whole life. I didn't know I was gonna become a session guy or any of that stuff.

So it's motive. Are you doing this because you want to be a star, or do you want to be a musician? If you're doing it because you want to be a star, then you'll go that direction, and that's okay. Both avenues are fine, but I think you've got to be honest, because I think truthfulness comes out of you when you're playing your music.

I read this online; is it correct or incorrect that your niece is Vanessa Carlton?

Nope. Incorrect! (Laughs).

I suspected that.

 

Your son Travis is a bass player. Is it something that gives you pause, to see him go into the business? Because you have a decades-long bird's eye view of how difficult it can be.

All I can tell you is that he's gifted with music, and then he worked very, very hard as soon as he got out of high school. He went to GIT, graduated top of the class, Best Performer . . . he's a gifted, gifted musician who's worked very hard, and now he's reaping the rewards of that.

When he was a little boy sitting on my lap, and I'd be mixing a song in my studio, his body was always in time with the song. As a little kid. The stuff you can't teach, Travis got. I'm very proud of him. He plays in my band, he plays in Robben Ford's band, and he plays in Scott Henderson's band. People like grooving to Travis. It's a beautiful thing.

I wanted to ask you about Christianity and the music business. Do you ever find that being a Christian and being in the music business are at fundamentally cross purposes?

Personally, I have never had a struggle. When I became a reborn Christian in 1983, the Holy Spirit never told me, "Change what you're doing, Larry. Don't do that anymore." I mean musically. I was never called to that, "All right, now you only play religious songs." So I'm very comfortable with my relationship with God, and I just make my music, and my testimony is my music, and how I live my life.

I know some other Christian musicians that have been called to do it a different way, a more aggressive way, a more out-front way. I haven't been called to that, so I'm just growing where I was planted.

Is there anything else you want to say about the Schermerhorn show or whatever else is coming up?

I'm just excited to play at the Schermerhorn in my hometown, and I plan on bringing the best show I can.

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