CHITARRA - GUITAR

ESSENTIAL BLUES GUITAR Dave Celentano Centerstream Publications BOOK CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO

ESSENTIAL BLUES GUITAR, D. Celentano. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar
Publisher: Centerstream Publications
Medium: Softcover with CD
Composer: Dave Celentano

This handy guide to playing blues guitars emphasizes the essentials, such as: chord changes, scales, rhythms, turn arounds, phrasing, soloing and more. Includes lots of examples, plus 10 rhythm tracks for soloing and improvising. 80 pages.

Price: €99,95
€99,95

VIVALDI CLASSICAL GUITAR MUSIC OF Joseph Harris TABLATURE GARDELLINO CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

VIVALDI, CLASSICAL GUITAR MUSIC OF. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE. 

CONCERT MASTERWORKS

Classical Guitar Music of Vivaldi
Series: Creative Concepts Publishing
Publisher: Creative Concepts TAB
Artist: Antonio Vivaldi
Arranger: Joseph Harris

Features 31 pieces by Antonio Vivaldi arranged for solo guitar with tablature. Includes historical notes, performance suggestions, explanation of ornaments, and more.

Inventory #HL 00315187
ISBN: 9781569221945
UPC: 073999158755
Publisher Code: 074090
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
80 pages

About Classical Guitar Music Of Vivaldi - Guitar Solo
By Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741), arranged by Joseph Harris. Guitar tablature songbook for guitar. 80 pages.
With standard guitar notation, guitar tablature, introductory text and instructional text. Baroque. 9x12 inches.

Features 31 pieces by Antonio Vivaldi arranged for solo guitar with tablature. Includes historical notes, performance suggestions, explanation of ornaments, and more.

For many years remembered only for his contribution of hundreds of violin concertos, Antonio Vivaldi is regarded today as a key musical figure of the Italian Baroque. Although his most visible and enduring influence was indeed in the development of the solo concerto, Vivaldi was also admired in his day as a composer of excellent chamber music, a stunning violinist and a popular composer of Italian opera. This composer of "The Four Seasons" was a bold and impetuous individual who managed to focus his musical impulses in a unique voice that was consistent yet expressive. Vivaldi was born in Venice in 1678 and trained for the priesthood, but ended up practicing this vocation for only a brief time. Vivaldi served for nearly forty years (from 1703 until just before his death in 1741) as musical director of the Conservatorio dell'Ospedale della Pieta, one of four girls' orphanages in Venice. The Ospedale provided outstanding musical instruction and under Vivaldi's direction created quite a musical sensation. Vivaldi's tasks at the Ospedale included teaching private lessons, composing music for both concerts and church services, repairing musical instruments and commissioning works from other composers for concerts at the Ospedale. Vivaldi was extremely prolific, composing over 50 operas, 90 sonatas and 450 concertos. Despite the apparent ease with which he could produce a composition (he once boasted he could compose a piece faster than it could be copied), Vivaldi is criticized sometimes for being too predictable. The twentieth century Italian composer Luigi Dallapiccola once asserted that Vivaldi did not compose 450 separate concertos, but wrote the same concerto 450 times. Whereas during the Baroque many musicians believed that the particular intent of a composition (church, chamber or theatre) should dictate its musical language, Vivaldi's style varied little between genres and even between mediums. His vocal music and instrumental music share similar musical characteristics, as do his sacred and secular works. Furthermore, Vivaldi's compositional style remained remarkably consistent throughout his career and evolved very little. The only major variances one finds are in surface details, such as melodic contour, which tended to reflect public tastes. However, it is a tribute to Vivaldi's skill as a composer that within such a limited musical vocabulary he exhibited a virtually inexhaustible variety of invention.

Sonatas for Violin, Op. 2
The 12 Sonatas for Violin, Op. 2 were Vivaldi's first solo sonatas. The Sonatas were published in Italy in 1709 and dedicated to Frederick IV of Denmark on the occasion of his visit to Venice. For the Sonatas, Vivaldi drew upon models of Arcangelo Corelli, a conservative Italian composer whose works are tidily constructed, yet highly expressive. Vivaldi's Sonatas are a composite of church and chamber styles, demonstrating his tendency to blur boundaries between genres. In the Sonatas, dance movements intermingle with abstract movements (those with only tempo designations). Baroque dances of the Italian variety differ considerably from their French or German equivalents. The slight differences in the names of dances (for example, compare the Italian giga to the French gigue) do not signify nationality only, but salient musical traits. Whereas the French gigue is a lively, bouncy dance in an imitative texture, the Italian giga has a more restrained sense of pulse, a less rhythmically active bass line and little or no imitation between voices. The Italian gavotta lacks the characteristic two upbeats and musette-like middle section of the French gavotte. The Italian corrente is faster and more "running" in character than the French courante. Also, the French courante may emphasize dotted rhythms and an alternation between duple and triple meter, while the corrente is more rhythmically consistent and metrically stable.

Sonata No.3
In the Adagio (found on page 7), the bass line should be played with a warm tone, especially in areas where it is exposed (as in the opening and in measure 9). To achieve a warm tone on the guitar, play with the right hand close to the fretboard and strike the string with the side of the thumb, using as much flesh as possible. The Giga (found on page 8) should be played dynamically strong throughout and in a lightning fast tempo.

Sonata No.6
The Preludio (found on page 12) should sound very elegant and graceful. Exaggerate the dotted rhythms by playing the long notes longer and the short notes shorter. The Giga (found on page 16) should be played in a moderately fast tempo. Count two beats per measure, not four, to give the piece a stronger and more stable sense of forward motion

Sonata No.7
The tempo of the Corrente (found on page 19) should be very fast. However, in areas where the bass line becomes more active (especially in mm. 17-21), make sure that neither voice breaks down.

Sonata No.9
The Preludio (found on page 23) is an energetic and dramatic piece. The movement contains elements of a "learned" style, which show off a composer's contrapuntal skills. Be sure to emphasize the points of imitation (as in the first few measures).

Sonata No. 11
The abundance of syncopated rhythms presents an interesting technical problem for the solo performer in the Gavotta (found on page 28). In order toconvey the meter clearly, keep the tempo steady and count two beats per measure. Hold on to notes with the left hand for as long as possible before fingering new notes.

Sonatas for One or Two Violins, Ope 5
The Six Sonatas, Op. 5 were first published in 1716. By this time, Vivaldi had chosen a new publisher, Etienne Roger in Amsterdam. There were at least two significant reasons for the switch: superior printing methods and an increased demand for the music of Vivaldi and other Italians in northern Europe. The Sonatas, Op. 5 were actually engraved and published at Roger's own expense. Such a practice was quite rare in Vivaldi's time and testifies to his immense popularity.

Sonata No. 13
The Sarabanda (found on page 30) lacks the lasciviously strong accent on the second beat characteristic of the Spanish sarabande. Keep the tempo slow, the meter even and play with as much vibrato as possible. Sonata No. 14

For the Gavotta (found on page 32), the left-hand slurs (as in mm. 7-9 and 39-41) may require some extra attention during practice. Isolate each slur and treat it as a trilling exercise. Devote a few minutes each day to these passages until they sound crisp and clear.

Sonata No. 16
In the Preludio (found on page 35), exaggerate the dotted rhythms and apply vibrato liberally. Because of the slow tempo, it will be necessary to think ahead and be aware of the melody's direction and shape. At some point, you may want to do a simple phrase analysis of the Preludio. Break the piece into small phrases, study how they relate to one another and then group them into longer phrases. The longer the phrases you envision, the better the sense of forward motion you will convey.

Sonata No. 18
The Air-Minuet (found on page 38) demonstrates an ambiguity in Vivaldi's choice of titles for movements. The designation "Air" suggests the vocal-like quality of the melody. The piece is also an instrumental dance movement, containing the clear four-bar phrasing and clear cadences typical of a minuet. Overall, the piece should sound stately, yet singing.

II cimento dell'armonia e dell'inventione, Op. 8
The Concertos, Op. 8 were first published in 1725 and dedicated to the Bohemian Count Wenzeslaus von Morzin. The first four concertos are collectively known as "The Four Seasons." A significant feature in each of these concertos is the inclusion of an explanatory sonnet, each line of poetry corresponding to a particular passage in the music.

Il cimento dell'armonia e dell'invenzione, Op. 8
Pubblicati per la prima volta nel 1725, i primi 4 concerti sono conosciuti come "Le quattro stagioni".

TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
Historical Notes & Performance Suggestions
Explanation of Ornaments
Adagio Sonata for Violin, Op. 2, No.3
Giga from Sonata for Violin, Ope 2, No. 3
Preludio from Sonata for Violin, Ope 2, No. 6
Giga from Sonata for Violin, Ope 2, No. 6
Corrente from Sonata for Violin, Ope 2, No. 7
Largo from Concerto for Flute, Op. 10, NO.3 (''il Gardellino") ,
Preludio from Sonata for Violin, Op. 2, No. 9 ,
Gavotta from Sonata for Violin, Ope 2, No. 11
Sarabanda from Sonata for Violin, Ope 5, No. 13
Gavotta from Sonata for Violin, Ope 5, No. 14 .
Preludio from Sonata for Violin, Ope 5, No. 16 .
Air-Menuet from Sonata for Two Violins, Op. 5, No. 18 .
Allegro non molto From the Four Seasons, Op. 8, NO.2 (Summer) .
Largo From The Four Seasons, Op. 8, NO.4 (Winter) .
Affettuoso From Sonata for Flute, RV 48 .
Allegro assai From Sonata for Flute, RV 48 .
Allegro Sonata for Flute, RV48 .
Preludio from Sonata for Flute, RV 49 .
Sarabanda from Sonata for Flute, RV 49 .
Siciliana from Sonata for Flute, RV 49 .
Preludio from Sonata for Recorder, RV 52 .
Allemanda from Sonata for Recorder, RV 52 .
Aria di Giga from Sonata for Recorder, RV 52 .
Largo from Concerto for Lute and Two Violins, RV93 .
Largo from Concerto for Flute and Oboe, RV95 ("La Pastorella") .
Andante from Concerto for Flute, RV429 .
Grave from Concerto for Violin and Organ, RV541 .
Allegro alla Francese Violin and Oboe, RV 543
Largo from Concerto for Oboe and Violin, RV 548 .
Largo from Concerto for Flute, Op. 10, No.4 .
Largo from Sonata for Musette, Vielle, Flute, Oboe or Violin, Op. 13, No.6

Catalog #07- 4090
ISBN# 1-56922-194-4
CREATIVE CONCEPTS PUBLISHING CORPORATION
Creative Concepts Publishing Corp.

Price: €20,99
€20,99

HILAND JOHNNY LICKS & TRICKS VOL.2 LIBRO CD TABLATURE CHITARRA COUNTRY B-BENDER

HILAND JOHNNY, LICKS & TRICKS VOL.2. CD TAB.

Product Description:
Recorded lessons from one of America's greatest guitarists Johnny Hiland teaches essential Licks and Tricks every great country player should know. Lessons in standard notation and TAB with complete audio instruction.

Song Title:
B-Bender Chord Licks
B-Bender Licks
B-Bender Licks Without Using The B-Bender
Bending Behind The Nut
The Funky Chicken Lick
The Tractor Trailer Lick
Train Whistle Lick

Price: €23,99
€23,99

HILAND JOHNNY LICKS & TRICKS VOL.1 LIBRO CD TABLATURE CHITARRA COUNTRY

HILAND JOHNNY, LICKS & TRICKS VOL.1. CD TAB.

Product Description:
Recorded lessons from one of America's greatest guitarists Johnny Hiland teaches essential Licks and Tricks every great Blues and Rock player should know. Lessons in standard notation and TAB with complete audio instruction.

Song Title: Composer/Source:
Bending Blues Licks Johnny Hiland
Blues Rhythm Pattern Johnny Hiland
Classic Blues Licks Johnny Hiland
Heavy Metal Style Harmonics Johnny Hiland
Pick-Hand Finger Tapping Johnny Hiland
Slide Licks in Standard Tuning Johnny Hiland
Slide/Rhythm Licks in Open G Tuning Johnny Hiland

Price: €24,99
€24,99

THE ROOTS OF JAZZ GUITAR songs and licks Fred Sokolow CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

THE ROOTS OF JAZZ. CD TABLATURE
The songs and licks that made it happen. 

Dinah
East Of The Sun (And West Of The Moon)
Honeysuckle Rose
I'll Remember April
Rose Room
Yesterdays

The Roots of Jazz Guitar
Series: Guitar Collection
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB
Composer: Fred Sokolow
Inventory #HL 00699082
ISBN: 9780793577347
UPC: 073999990829
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
64 pages

A complete survey of jazz guitar, its pioneers and how it developed. Includes: six note-for-note transcriptions of famous standards pivotal to the genre; instruction in the essential playing styles; the history and development of jazz guitar; biographies of the pioneering artists; a recording of the songs, exercises, and licks; and more.

Songs include:

- Dinah (Eddie Lang)

- East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) (Barney Kessel)

- Honeysuckle Rose (Charlie Christian)

- I'll Remember April (George Van Eps)

- Rose Room (Django Reinhardt)

- Yesterdays (Wes Montgomery).

64 pages.

 

MUSCAL INTRODUCTION
A LOOK AT THE ROOTS OF JAZZ GUITAR
At the beginning of the twentieth century, New Orleans bands began combining two traditions: They
borrowed some repertoire from European bands, which often included strings, horns, and a piano,
and performed classical pieces, polkas, mazurkas, sentimental ballads and waltzes. They also imitated
Southern string bands, sometimes called "spasm bands," which consisted of guitars, banjos, violins,
mandolins and string bass, and who played ragtime, blues, jigs and reels. New Orleans bandleaders
like Buddy Bolden and Kid Ory used all these instruments and fused the musical styles, and
their music began to be identified as "jazz."
Johnny St. Cyr, who played with Kid Ory, Jelly Roll Morton and many of the New Orleans bands,
was typical of the first jazz guitarists: he was a four-string banjo player who played guitar as a sideline.
Seldom soloing, he strummed four-beats-to-the-bar and provided bands with a rhythmic backbone.
In pre-microphone days, banjo was audible over loud horns; guitar did not cut it. But in the
'20s, as phonograph recordings gained popularity, the guitar became more prominent. It was easier
to record than banjo.

HOT JAZZ: GUITARIN THE '20s
Jazz was the hot popular dance music of the decade that is often called "The Jazz Age."
Accomplished pickers like Roy Smeck, Nick Lucas and Lonnie Johnson performed the first melodic
guitar solos on records in the 1920s. These versatile players played popular tunes, blues and
whatever the traffic would bear, sometimes fingerpicking but usually flatpicking scales, chords and
arpeggios. But most performing guitarists in jazz bands simply strummed chords, until Eddie Lang
came along.
Lang performed with many of the popular ensembles of his day, including the Goldkette Orchestra,
Red Nichols and the Five Pennies, Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby. One of the first studio guitar
aces, he accompanied most of the stars of his era on records. Live and in the studio, Lang combined
rhythmic strumming with a melodic soloing style, opening up new possibilities for a whole generation
of guitarists. When he died, in 1933, he left a recorded legacy of ensemble work, solos and duets
with Lonnie Johnson and with lifelong musical companion, violinist Joe Venuti. He inspired countless
jazz banjoists to play guitar, and to be melodic as well as rhythmic. The guitar became a soloing
voice in jazz.

THE '30s SWING ERA
During the swing or big-band era, guitarists in popular swing orchestras played rhythm. Count
Basie's guitarist, Freddie Greene, never played a solo. Some guitarists like Carl Kress, Dick
McDonough, George Van Eps and George Barnes followed Eddie Lang's lead and created beautiful,
harmonically rich, chord-based soloing styles. They recorded solos, duets and small ensemble "listening"
(not dancing) records for jazz afficionados. Like Lang, they usually played Gibson L-5 archtop guitars.
Meanwhile, inspired players like Snoozer Quinn, Teddy Bunn and Oscar Aleman (who played an allmetal
National guitar) helped develop the art of single-note jazz soloing throughout the '30s. But the
creative genius who caught most listeners' and players' ears was the Belgian gypsy, Django Reinhardt.
The first international jazz star, Reinhardt rose to fame playing with his "quintette" in Paris. Although
his own style and his duets with violinist Stephane Grappelli were admittedly based on the
LangNenuti model, he took single-note guitar soloing to new heights. His ad-lib improvisations were
fiery, tender, incredibly inventive, and he always swung. Budding country, blues and jazz guitarists
memorized his solos.
 

DINAH, EDDIE LANG

Born into a musical Italian family October 25, 1902 in Philadelphia, Salvatore Massaro studied violin
and music theory at age seven. By his teens he was playing four- and six-string banjo in pop
orchestras, often with his boyhood friend, violinist Joe Venuti. Venuti claims Lang was self-taught,
and the only guitarist he recalls Lang mentioning as an inspiration was Segovia. When asked who
Lang imitated, Venuti said "Who else was there? Eddie started it all."
In 1924, using the name of boyhood baseball hero Eddie Lang, he joined the Mound City Blue
Blowers, a sort of jug band, as a guitarist. The recordings he made with them demonstrate why
Lang is said to have legitimized guitar as a jazz instrument: instead of simply strumming the chords,
he played several chords per measure, and peppered his backup with bass runs, passing tones,
arpeggios, single-string fills, bluesy string-bending and harmonics.
In the next several years, Lang was increasingly in demand as a performer. He played with the big
bands of Jean Goldkette (where he befriended Bix Beiderbecke), Roger Kahn, Adrian Rollini, and
Paul Whiteman. Although he was capable of reading music, Lang played by ear. During his tenure
with Whiteman, he kept a piece of paper the size of a business card in his pocket that contained on
it (in markings only decipherable by Lang) everything he needed to know about Whiteman's musical
repertoire. When Whiteman's singer, Bing Crosby, went solo, Lang became Crosby's guitarist and
appeared with him in the 1932 film, The Big Broadcast.
One of the first versatile studio guitarists, Lang recorded with Red Nichols and His Five Pennies,
Cliff Edwards (known as Ukulele Ike), AI Jolson, Ruth Etting, Sophie Tucker, the Boswell Sisters,
Emmett Miller and a host of blues singers, including Bessie Smith, Victoria Spivey and Texas
Alexander. His technique was most audible when he recorded solo (often composing his own
songs), and in duets with Joe Venuti or with small ensembles such as Venuti's Blue Four or Blue
Five. These were probably the first listening (not dancing) jazz recordings. Using the name "Blind
Willie Dunn," he recorded memorable duets with guitarist Lonnie Johnson, the other guitar giant of
the '20s, who, like Lang, played both blues and jazz.
By 1933, when Lang died of complications from a tonsillectomy, most jazz bands had switched from
banjo to guitar, and most guitarists were playing the archtop, F-hole instrument Lang preferred.
Using blues and classical techniques, he inspired the first generation of jazz guitarists, most of
whom agree: Lang laid the groundwork for jazz guitar.

PERFORMANCE NOTES
"Dinah" features Lang's backup and lead styles. It has a typical pop song structure, and in 1928 Joe
Venuti's Blue Four, recording for Okeh Records in New York City, gave it the usual jazz treatment
(see as follows). Released in Europe by Parlaphone, it was one of the "chamber jazz" sides that
made Venuti and Lang internationally famous. The quartet consisted of Venuti, Lang, a pianist and
baritone sax.

SONG STRUCTURE AND THE JAZZ TREATMENT
Like many pop tunes, "Dinah" has an AABA structure:
• An eight-bar section ("A part") is played twice in a row, with a slightly different ending the second time.
• An eight-bar bridge follows (that's "B").
• The "A part" is repeated.
 

Price: €29,99
€29,99

HOT CLUB SESSION BASIC ACOUSTIC SWING JAZZ GUITAR Felix Schell LIBRO CD TABLATURE

HOT CLUB SESSION BASIC ACOUSTIC SWING JAZZ GUITAR. F. Schell. 7 Pezzi completi, e 5 basi complete, arpeggios, scales, symetrical scales, melodic embellishments. CD TAB.

Product Description:
Finally, a great method which will show you how to play the acoustic jazz guitar in the style of players like Django Reinhardt, Oscar Alleman and Eddie Lang - their style is characterized by a powerful rhythm guitar and a vital swinging single-note solo line. Due to the fact that it can be very hard to master the original transcriptions, this book simplifies this style without losing the essence of the original sound. Written in standard notation and TAB, the material can be played by students and players that master the easy to intermediate level on plectrum style jazz guitar. All titles are included on CD, as well as some play along tracks which offer a great possibility to improvise on typical gypsy chord changes and rhythms.

Format: Book/CD Set

Song Title: Composer/Source:

Arpeggios
Blues of the Gypsys Felix Schell
Chromatic Line Felix Schell
Dark Eyes Felix Schell
Improvisation
Le Reve Felix Schell
Major & Minor Scales
Melodic Embellishments
Minor Stomp (1) Felix Schell
Minor Stomp (2) Felix Schell
One Note Rhythm (1) Felix Schell
One Note Rhythm (2) Felix Schell
One Note Rhythm (3) Felix Schell
Special Effects
Symmetrical Scales
Waltz for Django Felix Schell

Price: €18,99
€18,99

JAZZ GUITAR STANDARDS CHORD MELODY SOLOS BOOK 2 CD TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA LIBRO

JAZZ GUITAR STANDARDS: CHORD MELODY SOLOS. 2CD TAB.

Product Description:
This collection of jazz standard chord solos for guitar is compiled from Mel Bay and Warner Bros. collaborations Jazz Guitar Standards Vol. 1 and 2. What makes this work so special is that each artist has personally recorded their solo guitar arrangement. The book comes with the CDs which have all 44 tunes. This book is a wonderful anthology of solo guitar that can be used for performances as well as educational purposes.

Song Title: Composer/Source:
A Foggy Day
All of You
All the Things You Are
Alone Together
April in Paris
Arranger Index
As Time Goes By
Beautiful Love
Bluesette
Body and Soul
But Not for Me
Bye Bye Blackbird
Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
Days of Wine and Roses
East of the Sun (and West of the Moon)
Embraceable You
Have You Met Mis Jones?
Honeysuckle Rose
How High the Moon
I Can't Get Started
I Could Write a Book
I Love You
I've Got You Under My Skin
In Your Own Sweet Way
Invitation
It Don't Mean a Thing
Just Friends
Long Ago (and Far Away)
Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)
Misty
Moonlight in Vermont
My Funny Valentine
Night and Day
Satin Doll
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Someone to Watch Over Me
Speak Low
Summertime
The Way You Look Tonight
Watch What Happens
What Is This Thing Called Love?
What's New?
Yesterday
You Go to My Head
You Stepped Out of a Dream

Price: €109,99
€109,99

CHORDS FOR JAZZ GUITAR The Complete Guide to Comping Chord Melody and Chord Soloing CD TABLATURE libro

CHORDS FOR JAZZ GUITAR, The Complete Guide to Comping, Chord Melody and Chord Soloing. CD TABLATURE

Chords for Jazz Guitar
The Complete Guide to Comping, Chord Melody and Chord Soloing
Series: Guitar Educational
Format: Softcover with CD
Author: Charlton Johnson

This book/CD pack will teach you how to play jazz chords all over the fretboard in a variety of styles and progressions. It covers: voicings, progressions, jazz chord theory, comping, chord melody, chord soloing, voice leading and many more topics. The CD includes 98 full-band demo tracks. No tablature. 149 pages.

Inventory #HL 00695706
ISBN: 9780634047145
UPC: 073999793710
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
152 pages

Price: €26,99
€26,99

CRASH COURSE ON JAZZ GUITAR VOICINGS The Essential Guide for All Guitarists. Hugh Burns CD TABLATURE

CRASH COURSE ON JAZZ GUITAR VOICINGS, The Essential Guide for All Guitarists. Hugh Burns. CD TAB.

Series: Guitar Educational
Publisher: Artemis Editions
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Hugh Burns

Which chords should I use if I want to play jazz? How does jazz harmony work? How can I sound like a real jazz guitarist? You'll find the answers to these questions and many more in this detailed introduction to jazz guitar voicings. By learning only a handful of simple shapes, you'll soon be playing classic jazz sequences and jamming along with the 50+ professional live backing tracks on the accompanying CD. Packed with hints and tips on how to get an authentic jazz sound, this pack includes: simple explanations of basic jazz harmony; jazz chord voicings that sound great; three complete tunes to learn and play along with; and more. 32 pages

Price: €99,99
€99,99

MODERN JAZZ GUITAR STYLES André Bush CD TABLATURE SOLOING Chord Voicings-Modal-Rhythmic Sequencing

MODERN JAZZ GUITAR STYLES, A. Bush. CD TABLATURE

Product Description:
A unique book and CD package including extensive chapters on soloing, chords, rhythm and effects. With in-depth exercises on modern scale applications and intervallic choices, developing individual chord voicings, incorporating rock and funk concepts, exploring elements from world music such as odd meters and polyrhythms, and ideas for developing your own sonic textures and approach to tonal manipulation. Each section features an essay illustrating the musical history and specific innovations of modern jazz guitar masters, with insightful commentary accompanying each concept and example. The last section thoroughly analyzes studio performances of two original compositions incorporating all the above materials. Modern Jazz Guitar Styles provides the serious student or professional seeking to broaden his palette with a comprehensive overview of the current state of jazz guitar.

Extensive chapters on soloing, chords, rhythm and effects

In-depth exercises on modern scale applications and intervallic choices

Ideas for developing your own sonic textures and approach to tonal manipulation

Covers developing individual chord voicings, incorporating rock and funk concepts and exploring elements from world music

Provides serious student/professional a comprehensive overview of current state of jazz guitar

Companion CD included

 

Product Number: 99917BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 0786658657
UPC: 796279073325
ISBN13: 9780786658657
Series: Non-Series
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.
Date Published: 1/31/2005
104 PAGES

modern jazz guitar styles chapter one introduction &
A jazz steps into the 21st century, creative guitarists have an unprecedented array of musical options at their fingertips. Fundamental study materials are more available in more forms than ever, and contemporary jazz has become infused with the influences of pop, rock, techno, hip-hop, rap, world music, etc. We guitarists may freely draw from not only the musical gestures of these styles, but also the techniques, tones and production values. In so doing, the new breed of jazz guitarist is well within the greatest traditions of jazz, which has always used whatever means necessary to express itself. Consider Dizzy Gillespie's championing of Afro-Cuban music, Illinois Jacquet's growling, distorted tone or Miles Davis' radical transformation of Tin Pan Alley and show tunes. As soon as technology permitted, jazz musicians recorded extended improvisations and compositions, and the advent of the electric guitar itself allowed guitarists to utilize be-bop phraseology.
The seminal work of modem jazz guitar pioneers such as John McLaughlin, Larry Coryell, Pat Metheny, John Scofield, Bill Frisell, Ralph Towner and many others now enters the jazz continuum and stands equally alongside the work of Charlie Christian, Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall etc. While these great artists deliberately set about combining rock and jazz styles, a new generation of jazz guitarists accepts these techniques as matter of fact. The sounds of Jimi Hendrix and Charlie Parker sit side by side in the new jazz guitar vocabulary.
In this book we will explore modem soloing techniques, chord playing, rhythmic theory and its practical application. Throughout, we will examine major guitarist/composers of recent years and how various styles from outside the jazz tradition have informed their work. There will also be a chapter on signal processing devices and their role in jazz guitar. Woven into all chapters and their various subjects will be commentary on specific artistis and albums where you can find great examples of the particular technique or effect. Also, I will begin every chapter with a short essay, which will try to give some historical context to the materials and times.
I will include a detailed analysis of two original compositions from my CD Invisible City (Quicksil ver Records/Odd Culture Productions) in which we will take an in-depth look at the compositional material, guitar techniques and effects, with an eye on all the material presented here. 1'11 conclude with a list of suggested listening and reading, where I will recommend CDs by many of the artists we've looked at, and related reading and viewing material.
While this volume contains some material that may be helpful and of interest to the beginning or intermediate player, I have geared most of the material and subject matter to the serious student of jazz guitar. While this list is by no means definitive, I would consider a basic grasp of the following material to be prerequisite to the subject matter in this book.

1. Major, melodic and harmonic minor scales, their modes and chords, as well as the diminished, whole-tone and pentatonic scales.

2. Basic fretboard harmony, including standard voicings for all major, minor, dominant and
diminished 7th chords, with extensions.

3. Basic principals of chord substitutions (i.e. tritone substitution, backcycling, triad over bass,
reharmonizing, etc.)

4. Knowledge of a good number of jazz standards (melody, chord changes and improvisational
analysis), preferably memorized.

5. Familiarity with the history of jazz guitar and the ability to identify major figures from all eras by ear. ...
 

modern jazz guitar styles chapter one introduction &
A jazz steps into the 21st century, creative guitarists have an unprecedented array of musical options at their fingertips. Fundamental study materials are more available in more forms than ever, and contemporary jazz has become infused with the influences of pop, rock, techno, hip-hop, rap, world music, etc. We guitarists may freely draw from not only the musical gestures of these styles, but also the techniques, tones and production values. In so doing, the new breed of jazz guitarist is well within the greatest traditions of jazz, which has always used whatever means necessary to express itself. Consider Dizzy Gillespie's championing of Afro-Cuban music, Illinois Jacquet's growling, distorted tone or Miles Davis' radical transformation of Tin Pan Alley and show tunes. As soon as technology permitted, jazz musicians recorded extended improvisations and compositions, and the advent of the electric guitar itself allowed guitarists to utilize be-bop phraseology.
The seminal work of modem jazz guitar pioneers such as John McLaughlin, Larry Coryell, Pat Metheny, John Scofield, Bill Frisell, Ralph Towner and many others now enters the jazz continuum and stands equally alongside the work of Charlie Christian, Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall etc. While these great artists deliberately set about combining rock and jazz styles, a new generation of jazz guitarists accepts these techniques as matter of fact. The sounds of Jimi Hendrix and Charlie Parker sit side by side in the new jazz guitar vocabulary.
In this book we will explore modem soloing techniques, chord playing, rhythmic theory and its practical application. Throughout, we will examine major guitarist/composers of recent years and how various styles from outside the jazz tradition have informed their work. There will also be a chapter on signal processing devices and their role in jazz guitar. Woven into all chapters and their various subjects will be commentary on specific artistis and albums where you can find great examples of the particular technique or effect. Also, I will begin every chapter with a short essay, which will try to give some historical context to the materials and times.
I will include a detailed analysis of two original compositions from my CD Invisible City (Quicksil ver Records/Odd Culture Productions) in which we will take an in-depth look at the compositional material, guitar techniques and effects, with an eye on all the material presented here. 1'11 conclude with a list of suggested listening and reading, where I will recommend CDs by many of the artists we've looked at, and related reading and viewing material.
While this volume contains some material that may be helpful and of interest to the beginning or intermediate player, I have geared most of the material and subject matter to the serious student of jazz guitar. While this list is by no means definitive, I would consider a basic grasp of the following material to be prerequisite to the subject matter in this book.

1. Major, melodic and harmonic minor scales, their modes and chords, as well as the diminished, whole-tone and pentatonic scales.

2. Basic fretboard harmony, including standard voicings for all major, minor, dominant and
diminished 7th chords, with extensions.

3. Basic principals of chord substitutions (i.e. tritone substitution, backcycling, triad over bass,
reharmonizing, etc.)

4. Knowledge of a good number of jazz standards (melody, chord changes and improvisational
analysis), preferably memorized.

5. Familiarity with the history of jazz guitar and the ability to identify major figures from all eras by ear.
 

modern jazz guitar styles andre bush biography
Guitarist and composer Andre Bush draws from a wide range of influences in his music. He combines the
lyrical and creative approach of modem jazz heroes such as Wayne Shorter, Keith Jarrett and Pat Metheny with the
high-energy grooves and complex sonic structures of innovative guitarists such as John McLaughlin, Sco
Henderson and Nguyen Le. In addition to a thorough grounding in the jazz tradition, his extensive experience in
the world of rock and pop give him a unique musical outlook. Andre's playing seamlessly reconciles the
disparate worlds and establishes his conception as a natural and logical extension of the jazz guitar tradition.
Andre's new album, Start From Silence, pairs Andre with master pianist Art Lande and an allstar ban
performing his complex yet accessible compositions. Challenging rhythms, beautiful harmony, poignant lyricism.
and brilliant improvisation combine to create a cohesive and unique album.
Start From Silence follows up Invisible City (Quicksilver/Increase,) an album that featured jazz icons Dave
Liebman and Steve Smith. Invisible City emerged as one of the most critically acclaimed releases of 2000, nam
"CD of the Year" by the Jazz Review, and was added to hundreds of jazz radio stations nationwide, appearing 0
both CMJ and Gavin jazz charts.
Andre has performed or recorded with Dave Liebman, Steve Smith, Paul McCandless, Art Lande, Kenn_
emer, James Genus, Charlie Haden, Tootie Heath, George Cables, Buster Williams, Carl Allen, Andy NarelL
Darol Anger, Matt Rollings, Liz Story, Will Ackerman, Paul Hanson, Jack Perla and many others. Andre h
maintained a longtime musical partnership with Jenna Mammina, serving as her guitarist musical director ~
several albums and tours. He has appeared at the Mt. Hood Jazz Festival, San Francisco Jazz Festival, Montere_
Jazz Festival, Vancouver International Jazz Festival, Windham Hill's Winter Solstice tour and in clubs and theate
around the country. As a session guitarist, Andre has appeared with various bands at the Lilith Fair, on VHI an
TV and Alice Radio nationwide, contributed to many recording projects, and toured with a wide variety _
international artists.
Andre is a naturally gifted teacher who clarifies and inspires enthusiasm for complex musical concepts. H
i in frequent demand in the US and Europe as a guitar clinician and jazz educator.
Currently, Andre is touring in support of Start From Silence and Modern Jazz Guitar Styles. He teache
The Jazzschool in Berkeley, CA and at his home studio, is a frequent faculty member at Stanford Jazz Worksh
and Jazzcamp West and is a regular contributor to Guitar Player Magazine.
For information on concerts, clinics, workshops or seminars please contact:
odd culture productions, San Francisco.

 


Contents:

1) Introduction.4
2) Scales / Single Note Soloing.
In this chapter we will explore modern approaches to single note soloing.
Modern intervallic choices, scalar approaches, picking techniques and
articulation such as sweeps and legato phrasing will be covered, as well
as a few practicing ideas.

3) Chords.28
Here we will cover some approaches to modern chord voicings. We'll
focus on breaking out of standard chord forms and developing voice
leading. Quartal harmony, cluster voicings and modern substitutions
will be covered.

4) Rhythm44
In this chapter we will explore ways in which various rhythmic languages
have been integrated into jazz in the past three decades. Odd meters,
brazilian rhythms, Indian theory as well as some metronome basics will
be explored.

5) Effects..71
In this chapter we will explore signal processing, tonal manipulation, detuning,
etc. in modern jazz guitar. We'll cover time-based effects (reverb, delays, etc)
tonal effects (distortion, chorusing), amp technology, and how they have been
integrated into several different guitarists musical languages.

6) Analysis of "Odd Culture, This" and "Past and Future Warriors"..76
In this chapter I'll give a detailed analysis of two songs from my album Invisible
City (Odd Culture Productions/Quicksilver Records). Many of the elements that
we've studied throughout the book are present here, such as odd meters, modern
chord voicings and jazz/rock guitar techniques, so this will be a good opportunity
to explore these elements from the ground up.

7) Listening / Reading / Viewing / Bibliography / Study Materials.85
I'll conclude the book with a list and comments on several artists, their CDs, books and videos, to further help your studies. You'll be familiar with some of
these players, but others may be new and definitely worth checking out. Also
included will be a list of additional study materials.

 


Tuning Note A 440 and Introduction
Intervallic Ideas Using Major Scale Modes on a ii-V-I
Intervallic Ideas Using Major Scale Modes on a Pedal Tone
Intervallic Ideas Using Dorian Mode on One Chord
Intervallic Ideas on a Progression Similar to "Giant Steps"
Bluesy Ideas Using Melodic Minor Modes on a Minor ii-V-i
Intervallic Ideas Using sus b9 Mode on One Chord
Intervallic and Bluesy Ideas on a Progression Similar to "Stella By Starlight"
Funky Ideas Using Half-Whole Diminished Scale
Ideas Using Half-Whole Diminished Scale on a ii-V-I
Ideas Using Half-Whole Diminished Scale on a ii-V-I
Pentatonic Scale for Maj7(~11)
Pentatonic Scale for Maj7(:11) on a ii-V-I
Pentatonic Scale for Maj7(:11) on a ii-V-I
Pentatonic Scale for Altered Dominant Chords on a Turnaround
Melodic Sequencing on a Minor ii-V-I
Melodic Sequencing on a Minor ii-V-I
Melodic Sequencing on One Chord
Melodic Sequencing on One Chord
Melodic Sequencing on a Progression Similar to Have You Met Miss Jones?"
Legato Phrasing Techniques on a Major Scale
Legato Phrasing Techniques on One Chord
Sweep Picking Demonstration
Sweep Picking on a Minor ii-V-I
Sweep Picking on Arpeggio Combinations
Right Hand Tapping Demonstration
Right Hand Tapping Demonstration, Extended Example
Right Hand Tapping for Voicing a Chord
Open and Stopped String Combinations for a Major Scale
Open and Stopped String Combinations in a Melody
Fourth-Based Voicings for Major Scale Harmony
Fourth-Based Voicings for Melodic Minor Scale Harmony
Modal Voicings from the Major Scale Using Adjacent Strings
Modal Voicings from the Major Scale Mixing Adjacent and Non-Adjacent Strings
Modal Voicings from the Melodic Minor Scale Using Adjacent Strings
Modal Voicings from the Melodic Minor Scale
Mixing Adjacent and Non-Adjacent Strings
Chord Voicings Mixing Stopped and Open Strings
Chord Voicings Mixing Stopped and Open Strings
Chord Voicings Mixing Stopped and Open Strings on a ii-V-I
Modal Voicings Mixing Stopped and Open Strings
Chord Etude on a Progression Similar to "'SoWhat" or "Impressions"
Chord Etude on a Progression Similar to "Stella By Starlight"
Chord Etude on a Progression Similar to "Blue Bossa"
Comping in the Style of John McLaughlin
Hammond B3-Style Comping
Single Note Comping
Rhythm Etude Using a Single Note
Rhythm Etude Incorporating Melody
Rhythm Etude in 3/4
Vamp in 5/4 on One Chord
Vamp In 5/4 with Harmonic Modulation
Etude In 7/8 with Basic Subdivisions
Etude in 7/8 Adding Melody
Etude in 7/8 Adding Melody with Various Rhythmic Figures and Chord Voicings
Etude in 7/4 on a Progression Similar to "All the Things You Are" 54-
Etude on an 11/8 Blues
Funk Etude in 7/4
Metric Modulation, 4/4 to 3/4
Metric Modulation, 4/4 to 7/8
Rhythmic Displacement
Rhythmic Displacement with more Complex
Melody and Variation
Rhythmic Displacement through a Chord Progression
Rhythmic Sequencing on One Chord
Rhythmic Sequencing on One Chord
Rhythmic Sequencing on a Turnaround
Counting Subdivisions in 15/8
Counting in 15/8, Emphasizing First Beat of Each Subdivision
15/8 Groove, Adding Melody
15/8 Groove with Melody, Adding Rests and Ties
15/8 Groove, Adding Chord Progression and Melody
Basic Montuno for Guitar
Montuno for Guitar with Modem Harmony
Basic Bossa Nova Rhythm Guitar Pattern
Bossa Nova in 5/4
2 Against 3 Polyrhythm
12/8, 6/8,3/4 Polyrhythm
2 and 4 Against 3 Polyrhythm on a Progression Similar to "Someday My Prince Will Come"
Demonstration of Implied Metric Modulation
Short Composition Incorporating Implied Metric Modulation
Odd Culture, this from "Invisible City" (Odd Culture Productions/Quicksilver Records)
Past and Future Warriors from Invisible City (Odd Culture
Productions/Quicksilver Records)

Andre Bush cover photo
Danie/ Gohstand - danie/photo.com
Guitar images (AES620 series) courtesy of Yamaha
Recorded by Peter Wolf at Wolfsound Productions
 

Price: €39,99
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