HAL LEONARD

REED JIMMY MASTER BLUESMAN GUITAR RECORDED VERSION TABLATURE HAL LEONARD CHITARRA

REED JIMMY, MASTER BLUESMAN. TABLATURE

Aw shucks, hush your mouth
Ain't that lovin' you baby
baby, what you want me to do
baby, what's wrong
Boogie in the dark
Bright lights, big city
Can't stand to see you go
Caress me, baby
Found joy
Found love
Going to New York
Honest I do
I'm Mr. luck
Shame, shame, shame
You don't have to go
You got me dizzy

Price: €59,99
€59,99

REH, BLUES SOLOS FOR GUITAR, Keith Wyatt. REH Publications CD TABLATURE

REH, BLUES SOLOS FOR GUITAR, Wyatt. CD TAB.

Series: REH Publications
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Keith Wyatt

Learn lead guitar in the styles of Albert Collins, Eric Clapton, Albert King, B.B. King, Freddie King, Stevie Ray Vaughan and T-Bone Walker! This unique book/CD pack examines the solo concepts of each of these masters. The CD features full demos and rhythm-only tracks, and the book includes phrase-by-phrase performance notes and tips on bending strings, vibrato, tone, note selection and much more. Includes notes and tablature. A must for any blues guitarist! 96 pages.

Price: €26,99
€26,99

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

WATERS MUDDY DEEP BLUES Guitar Recorded Version TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

WATERS MUDDY, DEEP BLUES. Contiene: baby, please don't go -blow wind blow -the blues had a baby and they named it rock and roll -champagne and reefer -close to you -deep down in Florida -evil -good news -got my mojo working -honey bee -I can't be satisfield -I feel like going home -I just want to make love to you -I want to be loved -I'm Ready -I'm your hoochie coochie man -long distance call -Luisiana Blues -mannish boy -my home is on the Delta -my love strikes like lightning -rollin' and tumblin' -rollin' stone -sad, sad day -the same thing -screamin' and cryin' -she's nineteen years old -still a fool -streamline woman -you can't lose what you ain't never had -you schook me. TABLATURE

MUDDY WATERS - DEEP BLUES
Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Muddy Waters

30 tunes: Evil • Got My Mojo Working • Honey Bee • I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man • more.

Produced in Cooperation with the estate of McKINLEY MORGANFIELD

Inventory #HL 00694789
ISBN: 9780793509553
UPC: 073999947892
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
184 pages

Through 1953, the small group (sans piano, and sometimes sans bass) persisted
with classics like "Long Distance Call" and "Still A Fool." September of that year
saw the release of "Blow Wind Blow" with Muddy: guitar and vocals, Jimmy Rogers:
guitar, Otis Spann: piano, Walter "Shakey" Horton: harp, and Elgin Evans: drums.
A new element of swinging, rhythmic drive had been added to the down-home feel
of the original group. Then in 1954, "I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man" was sprung
on an unsuspecting music world (with the magic Little Walter back), and a new
direction in blues was heralded. Master blues composer Willie Dixon wrote the opus
and played bass, freeing Rogers to play rhythm and fill guitar. The first (and
perhaps best) classic Muddy Waters band had arrived, and the music rocked with the
energy of big-city dynamism and real-life country soul.
A hand injury took the guitar out of Muddy's hands in the late fifties and early
sixties. The recordings continued with two guitars, however as a first-class stable of
guitarists was established to fill the positions. Besides Jimmy Rogers, there was Pat
Hare, Luther Tucker, and Andrew Stephens to choose from. Earl Hooker, and
Buddy Guy also left their highly individual stamps on "modern" Chicago blues
standards like "You Shook Me" and "The Same Thing."
Around the mid sixties, Muddy's axe was appearing again in the clubs and in the
studio. He was playing better than ever, as the acoustic sides "Good Morning Little
Schoolgirl" and "My Home In The Delta" and the fierce electric slide of "You Can't
Lose What You Ain't Never Had" attest.
The late sixties saw Muddy riding the crest of the blues revival on stage, but his
recorded output was checkered. Electric Mud and After The Rain were low-water
marks, with their ridiculous sounding wah-wahs and fuzztones. Fathers And Sons,
though, with the young turks Michael Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield, and Duck Dunn,
was a sweetly satisfying, authentic survey of Muddy's choice material. Such a loving,
empathetic approach to recording Muddy would not occur again until Johnny
Winters' successful collaborations from 1977 through 1981 for Blue Sky Records.
Plans were taking shape for more recordings when Muddy died on April 30, 1983.
Muddy Waters' influence on electric guitar music is rivaled only by that of B.B.
King. Though never a virtuoso soloist, he had an intuitive sense of the power and
expressive possibilities of amplifier distortion. Those Aristocrat and early Chess sides
glowed with the thumping, growling bass and fat, sustaining treble licks afforded by
over-driven vacuum tubes. He clearly said it with his sound as well as his choice of
notes. Muddy's guitar's voice was big and bad enough to go toe-to-toe with any
guitar picker who played with him.
Muddy's approach to equipment was as direct and simple as his music. After a
string of hollow-body Stellas, Harmonys, and Gretches, he was seen with a Les Paul
Standard with single-coil pickups. When he got his red Tele in the late fifties, it
became his main instrument for over 30 years. Strung with knuckle-busting
.012-.056 gauge strings, he paired it with a pre-CBS Fender Super Reverb Amp (all
knobs on "9") and the little metal pinky slide made for him by a friend in the forties.
Muddy didn't listen to guitarists other than the men from his generation. He
most certainly was not impressed by fast, flashy players, though he respected those
like Johnny Winter and Bob Margolin who could play his style. \Vhat he looked for
in any blues musician was the ability to play "snap rhythm" - short, fast
embellishments around the chord changes, like Robert Johnson.
When asked, in his later years, if he ever felt the urge to practice, he said, "No,
I've been playing the blues for 50 years; it's in my hands. I don't need to practice it."
Special thanks to Bob Margolin, who played with Muddy for 10 years beforeforming The
Legendary Blues Band and leading his own group, for his invaluable assistance.
Dave Rubin

31 tunes
184 pages

INTRODUCTION MUDDY WATERS DEEP BLUES
DISCOGRAPHY
MUDDY WATERS GUITAR STYLE:
OPEN G TUNING, first position E blues, the backup guitarist

Table of contents :

Baby, Please Don't Go - 1953
Blow, Wind, Blow - 1953
The Blues Had A Baby And They Named It Rock And Roll - 1977
Champagne And Reefer - 1981
Close To You (I Wanna Get) - 1959 
Deep Down In Florida - 1977
Evil - 1957
Good News - 1957
Got My MoJo Working - 1956
Honey Bee - 1950
I Can't Be Satisfied - 1948
I Feel Like Going Home - 1948
I Just Want To Make Love To You - 1954
I Want To Be Loved - 1977
I'm Ready - 1978
I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man - 
Long Distance Call - 1951
Louisiana Blues - 1950
Mannish Boy - 1977
My Home Is On The Delta - 1963
My Love Strikes Like Lightning - 1963
Rollin' Stone (Catfish Blues) - 1950
Rollin' And Tumblin' - 1944
Sad, Sad Day - 1981
The Same Thing - 1964
Screamin' And Cryin' - 1977
She's Nineteen Years Old - 1979
Still A Fool - 1950
Streamline Woman - 1948
You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had - 1964
You Shook Me - 1962

Price: €32,99
€32,99

TEXAS BLUES GUITAR Musician institute LIBRO CD TABLATURE Stevie Ray Vaughan-Johnny Winter

TEXAS BLUES GUITAR, musician institute. Tra mangiare una bistecca a Dallas, e una scatoletta a New York, c'è una grossa differenza; così è per il Blues. La chitarra ritmica e solista, di S.R.V., Winter, T-Bone, Freddie King, Albert Collins. Con 34 jam. CD TAB.

Robert Calva
Publisher: Musicians Institute Press

Musicians Institute instructor Robert Calva covers rhythm and lead guitar in the styles of Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnny Winter, T-Bone Walker, Freddie King and Albert Collins. He teaches: 24 common blues licks; common blues "box" positions; shuffle blues, slow blues, Latin blues & straight blues; and more. The book includes standard notation & TAB, and the CD features 34 full-band tracks.

Price: €22,99
€22,99

WINTER JOHNNY-BEST OF GUITAR TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA MUSICA BLUES LIBRO SLIDE CHORDS

WINTER JOHNNY, BEST OF. TAB.

Be Careful With A Fool -Dallas -Good Morning Little Schoolgirl -Highway 61 Revisited -Hustled Down In Texas -I Guess I'll Go Away -I'm Yours and I'm Hers -Illustrated Man -Johnny B. Goode -Mean Town Blues -Rock And Roll Hoochie Koo -Rock Me Baby -Still Alive And Well.

Since the 1960s, Johnny Winter has been making his own distinctive blend of blues and rock music. This folio features note-for-note transcriptions with tab for 13 Winter favourites, also features photos, Winter's commentary about each of the songs, and an extensive interview with Andy Aledort reprinted from Guitar magazine. 141 pages.

Price: €29,99
€29,99

Acoustic guitar MAGAZINE ACOUSTIC BLUES GUITAR ESSENTIAL CD TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA

Acoustic guitar magazine, ACOUSTIC BLUES GUITAR ESSENTIAL. 10 lezioni, 6 canzoni. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar Collection
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Various Authors
Straight from the experts at Acoustic Guitar magazine! The 12 private lessons in this book/CD pack are full of helpful examples, licks, great songs, and excellent advice on blues flatpicking rhythm and lead, fingerpicking, and slide techniques from some of the finest teachers around, including Mike Christiansen, Acoustic Guitar music editor Dylan Schorer, Stefan Grossman and many others. The book shows all examples in both standard notation and TAB, and the CD allows you to play and replay the lessons and songs until you've perfected them.

Songlist:
Around The Bend
Blues In G
Boll Weevil Blues
Fill 'Em Up
Guitar Rag
Keep On Sailin'

72 pages
Description
This book-and-CD package offers ten in-depth lessons for players of all levels, taught and recorded by the master teachers of Acoustic Guitar magazine. The book is divided into four sections: Rhythm, Lead, Fingerpicking, and Slide. Start with Mike Christiansen's concise explanation of chord accompaniment and Dylan Schorer's crunchy rhythm and bass lines. Put some "wail" into your music as you bend strings with Glenn Weiser. Join the Society of the Big Thumb while learning to fingerpick with Kenny Sultan. And log onto Dale Miller's guide to selecting and setting up a guitar for slide. In addition to these great lessons and tips, you'll also get six complete songs to play.

Lesson

RHYTHM

Strumming a 12-Bar Blues - Mike Christiansen
The Blues Shuffle - Dylan Schorer
Boogie-Woogie Bass Lines - Dylan Schorer
Blues Chords up the Neck - Glenn Weiser

LEAD

Learning to Solo - Mike Christiansen
Bending Strings - Glenn Weiser

FINGERPICKING

Fingerstyle Blues Basics - Kenny Sultan
Your First Guitar Rag - Dale Miller

SLIDE

Acoustic Slide Essentials - Dale Miller
Slide Guitars and Setup - Dale Miller

SONGS

Boll Weevil Blues
Around the Bend
Fill ’Em Up
Guitar Rag
Keep On Sailin'
Blues in G

Price: €48,99
€48,99

Acoustic guitar magazine ROOTS AND BLUES FINGERSTYLE Steve James CD TABLATURE SPARTITI BOOK

Acoustic guitar magazine, THE ROOTS AND BLUES FINGERPICKING GUITAR. Steve James presenta 25 tradizionali American blues guitar styles, per imparare il fingerpicking (suonare con le dita, senza il plettro) e la tecnica slide suonando le canzoni del repertorio di maestri come Furry Lewis, Blind Willie McTell, Sam McGee, and Mance Lipscomb. Il canto, le parole, fotografie, e altro. Take Me Back -Sugar Babe -Milwaukee Blues -Sebastopol -John Henry, e altre. CD TAB.

Acoustic Guitar Private Lessons
Series: Guitar Collection
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB

Arranger: Steve James

Steve James presents a treasure trove of traditional American guitar styles in this unique book/CD pack. Guitarists will learn fingerpicking and slide techniques not through dry exercises but by playing 25 songs from James' own repertoire and from such masters as Furry Lewis, Blind Willie McTell, Sam McGee, and Mance Lipscomb. Drawing on his extensive research and first-hand experience with these guitar pioneers, James tells the stories behind the songs, too. Features authentic arrangements in notes & TAB, vocal melodies and lyrics, historic photos, and more. Songs: Take Me Back - Sugar Babe - Milwaukee Blues - Sebastopol - John Henry , more! 96 pages

Amos Johnson Rag
Bear Creek Hop
Blues In A
Buckdancer's Choice
Guitar Rag
I Got To Cross That River Of Jordan
I Will Turn Your Money Green
Jack O' Diamonds/Rye Whiskey
John Henry
Judge Harsh Blues
Liberty
Milwaukee Blues
Railroad Bill
Railroad Blues
Roll And Tumble Blues
Sebastopol
Spanish Fandango
Stack Lee's Blues
Sugar Babe
Take Me Back
Things About Comin My Way
Way Out On The Desert

Price: €24,99
€24,99

BLOCK RORY TEACHES COUNTRY BLUES GUITAR libro CD chitarra TABLATURE

BLOCK RORY, TEACHES CLASSICS OF COUNTRY BLUES GUITAR. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar
Publisher: Homespun Listen and Learn Series
Medium: Softcover with CD
Author: Rory Block

Here are some of the greatest country blues solos of all time, taught in phrase-by-phrase detail. Rory Block, one of the most knowledgeable and talented exponents of this style, performs and breaks down these fingerstyle pieces by Willie Moore, Blind Willie McTell, Tommy Johnson, Mississippi John Hurt, Skip James and others. 32 pages

 

Introduction

Dear Friends,
There was a time when the last thing I wanted to do was to teach blues. I was 15 years old and
believed that one needed to devote ones life to apprenticeship with the masters in order to
learn the old music. I didn't have the perspective at the time to realize how briefly those
masters would be among us and how little access the country at large had to a small area of the
east coast and a dot in time. I hoarded the music jealously.
Later on I realized how the things I had learned firsthand from Son House, Reverend Gary
Davis, Mississippi John Hurt, Fred McDowell, Skip James and others did not just belong to
me, or to those who had the good fortune of being at the right place at the right time. I realized
that his precious music belonged to everyone, and that I was the last person who wanted to see
it die away. I began to desire to share whatever I knew, to pass on my small part of the puzzle,
to inspire and educate if I was able. During this time many other venerable musicians, famous
and obscure have added their own irreplaceable passion to the equation. We have also recently
seen a new wave of the second generation, children and grand children, heirs to this great
music, and at the same time an increase in both availability and interest in historic music.
Myoid frienn. Artie Traum was there, as was I, during the roots music revival of the '60s, and it
was Artie who suggested I sit down and record this first audio series of my all-time favorite
country blues songs. I now feel it a great honor to be a part of this process, and hope to inspire
in each listener and player a burning need to add something of themselves to everything they
play, because that connection with the soul, that expression of the individual in each note is
what really carries the music on.

TEACHES
Classics of Country Blues Guitar

Table of Contents

 Introduction

"Old Country Rock"
Intro Music - "Old Country Rock"
Introduction
Tuning Pitches
1st 4 Measures
G7 Chord
Connecting Run
Measures 7 and 8
1st 8 Measures - Slow Version
1st 8 Measures - Fast Version
Rhythmical "Gem"
Tag #1
Tag #2 ("A" Section)
Tag #2 ("D" Section)
"Old Country Rock"

"Statesboro Blues"
Intro Music - "Statesboro Blues"
Intro Breakdown
Full Intro
Song Breakdown
"Statesboro Blues"

"Big Road Blues"
Introduction
Intro Breakdown
Ascending Bassline
"Big Road Blues"
"D" Section Substitution
G7 Section
Right Hand Techniques
Right Hand Techniques Continued
"Snapping"
"Snapping" Continued
Last Section Breakdown

"Canned Heat"
Intro Music - "Canned Heat"
Song Breakdown
Song Review

"Future Blues"
Introduction
Tuning Pitches
"Future Blues"
Song Breakdown
Adding Vocals

"Devil Got My Man"
Introduction
Tuning Pitches
"Devil Got My Man"
Song Breakdown
Song Breakdown Continued
Song Discussion
"Devil Got My Man" with Vocal

"Police Dog Blues"
Intro Music - "Police Dog Blues"
Harmonics
Song Breakdown
Alternate Ending (meas. 15 and 16)
Alternate Verse #1 (meas. 7-11)
Alternate Verse #2 (meas. 7-11)
Song Review

"Mississippi Blues"
Introduction
Tuning Pitches
Song Discussion
"Mississippi Blues"
Intro Breakdown
Intro Review
Verse Breakdown
Verse Review
Solo Breakdown
"Mississippi Blues" with Vocals
Outro
Continue Your Studies with Rory Block
A Selected Discography 

Price: €23,99
€23,99

JOHNSON ROBERT SIGNATURE LICKS Legendary Guitarist's Style Technique Dave Rubin CD TABLATURE

JOHNSON ROBERT, STYLE AND TECHNIQUE. 32-20 Blues -Come On In My Kitchen -Cross Road Blues (Crossroads) -Hell Hound On My Trail -I Believe I'll Dust My Broom -I'm A Steady Rollin' Man (Steady Rollin' Man) -If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day -Kind Hearted Woman Blues -Love In Vain Blues -Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil) -Ramblin' On My Mind -Stop Breakin' Down Blues -Sweet Home Chicago -Terraplane Blues -Walkin' Blues. CD TAB.

A Step-by-Step Breakdown of the Legendary Guitarist's Style and Technique
Series: Signature Licks Guitar
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Dave Rubin
Artist: Robert Johnson

Explore the music of one of the greatest acoustic bluesmen of all time with this fascinating book/CD pack. Blues expert Dave Rubin provides an introduction on Johnson's place in musical history, and extensive notes on his tunings, arrangements, fingerstyle technique and guitars. Features in-depth lessons and audio examples of 15 of his most famous songs, 64 pages

Table of contents :
Come On In My Kitchen
Cross Road Blues (Crossroads)
Hell Hound On My Trail
I Believe I'll Dust My Broom
I'm A Steady Rollin' Man (Steady Rollin' Man)
If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day
Kind Hearted Woman Blues
Love In Vain Blues
Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil)
Ramblin' On My Mind
Stop Breakin' Down Blues
Sweet Home Chicago
Terraplane Blues
32-20 Blues
Walkin' Blues

Price: €34,99
€34,99
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