Acoustic Guitar

EARLY JAZZ AND SWING SONGS FOR GUITAR Acoustic Guitar Method Songbook CD TABLATURE LIBRO

EARLY JAZZ AND SWING SONGS FOR GUITAR, Acoustic Guitar Method Songbook. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ SWING CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE. 

Series: String Letter Publishing
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB
Artist: Various Artists

Editor: Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers

Author Photograph: Stephen Hunt

Add to your repertoire with this collection of early jazz and swing standards! The companion CD features a two-guitar recording of each tune, and the book includes full guitar parts in standard notation and tab with chord diagrams, plus detailed notes on the song origins and arrangements.

Includes 15 songs: After You've Gone - Avalon - Baby, Won't You Please Come Home - Ballin' the Jack - Hindustan - I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares for Me) - Indiana (Back Home Again in Indiana) - Limehouse Blues - Poor Butterfly - Rose Room - Saint James Infirmary - St. Louis Blues - Tain't Nobody's Biz-ness If I Do - Till the Clouds Roll By - Whispering. 38 pages

 

EARLY JAZZ AND SWING SONGS FOR GUITAR INTRODUCTION

Early jazz refers to a period in American popular music that lasted from the late 'teens through the 1920s; the swing era basically refers to the 1930s. These periods overlap, of course, since musicians from the '20s continued playing throughout the 1930s and beyond, and the swing players of the '30s likewise continued to perform and record into the subsequent decades. With one exception, the 15 songs in this book were composed by professional songwriters in the first quarter of the 20th century. They were written as popular songs, to be sung in theatrical shows and revues and to be sold as sheet music, which at the time was still a bigger business than the sale of recordings. By the mid-1920s, as Louis Armstrong was hitting his stride with his Hot Five and Hot Seven sessions, recorded music was having its first big boom, and the interpretations of jazz musicians like Armstrong began to create a whole second life for certain popular songs. Jazz groups recorded these tunes with looser, more swinging interpretations of the melodies, new chord voicings, and a jazz pulse, generally using the songs as vehicles for improvisation. This fresh approach served to pull the songs in this book into what was then just becoming the jazz repertoire. By the 1930s the swing orchestras of Fletcher Henderson, Count Basie, and Benny Goodman were streamlining and refining the innovations made by Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton, and others. Having cut their teeth on the music of the 1920s, Henderson, Basie, Goodman, and their peers and sidemen naturally gravitated toward reinterpreting those tunes, even as they composed new pieces and chose current show music to arrange. So we get Basie's and Goodman's versions of "Royal Garden Blues," Goodman's and Henderson's versions of "Rose Room," Basie's and Fats Waller's versions of "I Ain't Got Nobody," Goodman's and Jimmy Lunceford's versions of Introduction and Tune-Up: "Avalon"-all songs written a good 15 to 20 years before and given new life in the latest popular style. History exerts a winnowing effect on the music of the past-the 1960s' reputation as a golden era of rock 'n' roll, for instance, rests as much on forgetting the work of the Archies as on remembering that of Beatles and Bob Dylan. With the jazz age, too, certain songs have emerged as standards while countless other topical, novelty, and sentimental songs lie crumbling in the dust where they probably belong. In terms of the jazz repertoire, a standard is simply a song still in circulation because at some point an artist with sufficient influence saw fit to treat it as jazz material, and enough others subsequently ratified that first musician's judgement by recording and performing the song themselves. Early Jazz and Swing Songs includes the melody and chords to 15 standards in the public domain. The Cdincludes a two-guitar recording of each arrangement, but to really learn how to play these tunes, especially the melodies, I suggest tracking down at least one original recording of each song. I have stayed close to the published sheet-music versions of the melodies found in Hal Leonard's Early Jazz Standards, and more than a few of the tunes sound somewhat square when played that way. I did so, however, because even by the 1930s, many jazz musicians' renditions of these tunes were loose interpretations of the original theme, and if you want to understand the kind of improvisors they were, there are few better places to start than observing how they ornamented and re-created the melodies. I hope you have fun learning to play these tunes. Like fiddle tunes or classic rock songs, early jazz and swing standards are a great meeting ground for casual jamming with friends and fellow musicians. So once you've got a few of these under your fingers, don't hesitate to try them out the next time you're doing some picking. Good luck!

 

THE RHYTHM STYLE

I've arranged the chord progressions in this book in what guitarists call the Freddie Green style, after the rhythm guitarist who reportedly took only one recorded solo in his five decades with the Count Basie orchestra. While such nobility may not be your cup of Darjeeling, Green nevertheless perfected a comping (as in, ac-comp-animent) style that lays down just the right groove for a swing interpretation of the melody. There are two components to this style: what chords to play and how to play them. Let's look at each one before we get into the tunes themselves.

 

THE CHORDS

Jazz guitarists tend to use four-note chord voicings, but Green's style trimmed each chord down to the three notes found on the sixth, fourth, and third strings, as shown below in the second row. (Note that there is no commonly used fournote version of the G/D, so just the three-note version is shown.) You can play all 15 arrangements in this book using just these nine chord shapes.

Four-Note Voicings. Several of these chords have the third or the fifth of the chord on the lowest string, rather than the root. You may also have noticed that the Gm6, G7/D,and Gdim chords all have the exact same shape. These chords are meant to be played with a bassist, who is presumably playing the root of the chord on the first beat of each measure. Heard out of that context, these chords may not sound right at first, which is another good reason to spend some time with original recordings of these tunes and even to try and play along with them. Wherever possible, I've arranged these songs in the keys in which they were first published. While jazz musicians usually stick to the original key, sometimes another key becomes a popular alternative-for example, "Indiana" is just as frequently played in the key of F as in the original key of AJ,. And standards are frequently moved to another key to accommodate a vocalist.

 

STRUMMING

In the swing era, the guitarist was usually part of a four-piece rhythm section that also included piano, bass, and drums. Keeping good time meant providing a steady flow of quarter notes, four per bar, by playing a downstroke on every beat and possibly emphasizing beats 2 and 4 somewhat. Ifyou let your fretting fingers mute the fifth, second, and first strings, you can do a big, percussive strum across all six strings and just hear the notes you want to hear, on the sixth, fourth, and third strings. Relaxing your grip at the end of each quarter note dampens the strings and creates a little space between each stroke. At slower tempos, the four strums in a bar tend to come out relatively evenly, as in Example 1. At a moderate tempo (Example 2), the second and fourth beats start to get more clipped. And at faster tempos (Example 3), the second and fourth beats tend to become just a percussive backbeat.  

 

After You've Gone

Avalon
Baby, Won't You Please Come Home
Ballin' The Jack
Hindustan
I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me)
Indiana (Back Home Again In Indiana)
Limehouse Blues
Poor Butterfly
Rose Room
Saint James Infirmary
St. Louis Blues
Tain't Nobody's Biz-ness If I Do
Till The Clouds Roll By
Whispering

Prezzo: €18,99
€18,99

Acoustic Guitar Private Lessons BLUEGRASS GUITAR ESSENTIALS, LEARN TO PLAY BASS RUNS, FIDDLE TUNES, BLUESY SOLOS, AND MORE. CD TABLATURE

Acoustic Guitar Private Lessons BLUEGRASS GUITAR ESSENTIALS, LEARN TO PLAY BASS RUNS, FIDDLE TUNES, BLUESY SOLOS, AND MORE. CD TABLATURE

Series: String Letter Publishing
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Scott Nygaard

Learn the fundamentals of bluegrass by exploring its various styles and the masters who defined the genre: Doc Watson, Clarence White, and Norman Blake. The book includes background information, instruction and 12 classic songs, including: Greenback Dollar - Kingdom Come - Lonesome Old River - Midnight on the Stormy Deep - Up the Creek - Whiskey Before Breakfast, and more. The CD includes demos of the exercises and songs. 72 pages.

Billy In The Lowground
Black Mountain Rag
Cuckoo's Next
Down In The Valley To Pray
Greenback Dollar
Kingdom Come
Lonesome Old River
Midnight On The Stormy Deep
Paddy On The Turnpike
Sugar Baby Blues
Up The Creek
Whiskey Before Breakfast

 

Contents

 

Introduction

Tune-up

Music Notation Key 5

 

FUNDAMENTALS

Bass Runs

  Greenback Dollar

Fiddle Tunes

  Paddy on the Turnpike

  Cuckoo's Nest

Bluesy Bluegrass

  Sugar Baby Blues

Bluegrass Kickoffs

 

EXPLORING BLUEGRASS STYLES

Crosspicking

  Midnight on the Stormy Deep

Going Beyond I-IV-V

  Up the Creek

New Directions in Flatpicking

Solo Flatpicking

  Kingdom Come

 

BLUEGRASS GUITAR MASTERS

 

Doc Watson

  Black Mountain Rag

Clarence White

  Billy in the Lowground

Norman Blake

  Whiskey Before Breackfast

 

 

MORE SONGS TO PLAY

Down in the Valley to Pray

Lonesome Old River

 

About the Author

Acknowledgments 

Prezzo: €19,95
€19,95

ACOUSTIC GUITAR FINGERSTYLE METHOD David Hamburger 2 CD LIBRO TABLATURE CHITARRA SPARTITI

THE ACOUSTIC GUITAR FINGERSTYLE METHOD. LIBRO CON 2 CD E TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA,  CON 2 CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA FINGERPICKING :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

The Acoustic Guitar Fingerstyle Method introduces you to the two most essential fingerstyle approaches for playing American roots music: Travis picking and the steady-bass style. In each lesson, you’ll learn new techniques, concepts, and chord voicings and ways to practice and get them under your fingers. Then you’ll use what you’ve just learned to play a classic song or solo break from the blues, ragtime, folk, country, and ragtime traditions. 18 In-Depth Lessons: Travis Picking Basics - From Backup to Melody - Switching Chords - Eighth Notes and Syncopation - The Steady-Bass Blues - Steady Bass from Chord to Chord - Triplet Feel - Picking Pattern Fills - Descending Bass Lines and Chord Substitutions - Quicker Chord Changes - Double Stops - Seventh Chords up the Neck - Walking Bass Lines - Doin’ that Rag - Chord Anticipations and Early Jazz - Dropped-D Tuning - Swinging the Blues - Open-D Tuning 15 Songs to Play: - John Henry - Since I’ve Laid My Burden Down - Delia - St. James Infirmary - Nobody’s Fault but Mine - Houston Blues - Down in Navasota - Alberta - Hazleton - The Uptown Lowdown - Rag Mama - I Ain’t Got Nobody - St. Louis Blues - The Blunn Creek Slow Drag - Battle Hymn of the Republic

Spice up your fingerstyle blues with this melodic technique. With audio examples.
Full song lyrics
Essential listening suggestions for classic recordings of every songs
Arrangements
complete guitar parts

Whether you are studying with a techer or on your own, let the acoustic guitar method be your guide to joys and pleasures of playing guitar. This comprehensive approach with graded lessons and supplementary songs, is the one tool you need to get started. On the companion CDs you'll hear clear performances of all the music in the book. 

Welcome to the Acoustic Guitar Fingersty/e Method. This book focuses on the two most essential fingerstyle approaches for playing American roots music, Travis picking and the steady-bass style. In each lesson, you'll be introduced to new techniques, concepts, and chord voicings and shown ways to practice them and get them under your fingers. Then you'll use what you've just learned to play a new song or solo break. If you mostly play and sing, these lessons will give you the tools to spice up your guitar accompaniment as well as add instrumental breaks, intros, and outros. Ifyou'd sooner dance down the street in your underwear than sing, this book will give you lots of ways to make cool and complete-sounding music all by yourself without ever opening your mouth. Either way, by the end of this book, you'll have a whole new repertoire of tunes to play and a big handful of new chops to play them with. The Acoustic Guitar Fingersty/e Method picks up where the Acoustic Guitar Method left off, and assumes that you're familiar with picking patterns and with at least a dozen essential open-position chords. However, in case you're starting from scratch with this fingerpicking thing, or could just use a little brushing up, in the first lesson we'll review simple picking patterns and how to apply them to chords. (Speaking of which: for a detailed discussion of the theory, construction, and naming of chords, you might check out the Acoustic Guitar Chord Book, written by the very same quirkily handsome and surprisingly coherent gentleman who has the privilege of your attention at the present moment.) So if you think you've already got all these preliminaries in the bag, proceed directly to Lesson 2. Youmay pass Go, but alas, there is no $200 waiting for you. On the flip side, you won't have to sit on your hands for most of the book waiting for Mississippi John Hurt to hit your hotels on Boardwalk or Park Place ... 


Chapter 1 - Introduction.
CD Track: Tune Up

Chapter 2 - Travis Picking Basics.

Chapter 3 - From Backup to Melody.
CD Track: John Henry

Chapter 4 - Switching Chords.
CD Track: Since I've Laid My Burden Down

Chapter 5 - Eighth Notes and Syncopation.
CD Track: Delia

Chapter 6 - The Steady-Bass Blues.
CD Track: Nobody's Fault but Mine

Chapter 7 - Steady Bass From Chord to Chord.
CD Track: Houston Blues

Chapter 8 - Triplet Feel.
CD Track: Down in Navasota

Chapter 9 - Picking Pattern Fills.
CD Track: Since I've Laid My Burden Down

Chapter 10 - Descending Bass Lines and Chord Substitutions.
CD Track: Delia

Chapter 11 - Quicker Chord Changes.
CD Track: St. James Infirmary

Chapter 12 - Double Stops.
CD Track: Alberta

Chapter 13 - Seventh Chords Up the Neck.
CD Track: Hazleton

Chapter 14 - Walking Bass Lines.
CD Track: The Uptown Lowdown

Chapter 15 - Doin' That Rag.
CD Track: Rag Mama (Versions 1 and 2)

Chapter 16 - Chord Anticipations and Early Jazz.
CD Track: I Ain't Got Nobody

Chapter 17 - Dropped-D Tuning.
CD Track: St. Louis Blues

Chapter 18 - Swinging the Blues.
CD Track: The Blunn Creek Slow Drag

Chapter 19 - Open-D Tuning.
CD Track: Battle Hymn of the Republic

By David Hamburger.
Published by String Letter Publishing
Book/2 CDs

Prezzo: €31,99
€31,99

ACOUSTIC GUITAR MAGAZINE, ACOUSTIC INSTRUCTION, LEAD & MELODY BASICS. CD TABLATURE

acoustic guitar magazine, LEAD & MELODY BASICS. Per imparare a suonare musica folk, blues, Celtic & bluegrass, con i titoli: Cripple Creek -Cotton-Eyed Joe -Cottonwood -The Theme from the Pink Panther -She'll Be Comin' 'round the Mountain -Arkansas Traveler -Wildwood Flower -Walker Street -Tripping up the Stairs. Lezioni su melodie e scale maggiori arpeggiate -Jim Wood; Adding Melodies to Strum Patterns -Dylan Schorer; Beginning Blues Soloing -David Hamburger; Hammer-ons, Pull-offs, and Slides -Paul Schlueter. l'improvvisazione intorno a una melodia -Mike Christiansen; Learning to Transpose -Dix Bruce; Arpeggios and Melodies -Paul Kotapish; Melodic Solos up the Neck -Dylan Schorer. CD TABLATURE

contents

 

 CD Track List
 Introduction
 Music Notation Key
 About the Teachers
 
GETTING STARTED - Melodies and Maior Scales - JIM WOOD
 Cripple Creek
 Cotton-Eyed Joe
 
Adding Melodies to Strum Patterns - DYLAN SCHORER
 Cottonwood
 
Beginning Blues Soloing - David HAMBURGER
 
Hammer-ons, Pull-Offs, and Slides - PAUL SCHLUETER
 Pink Panther Theme
 
MOVING ON - Improvising around the Melody - MIKE CHRISTIANSEN
 She'll be Comin' 'round the Mountain
 
Learning to Transpose - DIX Bruce
 Arkansas Traveler
 Wildwood Flower
 
Arpeggios and Melodies - PAUL KOTAPISH
 Walker Street
 Tripping up the Stairs
 
Melodic Solos up the Neck - DYLAN SCHORER
 
 Scale Library
Prezzo: €15,99
€15,99
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