TESTI DELLE CANZONI - ACCORDI - PENTAGRAMMA - TABLATURE

BRUCE JACK, THE BEST OF BASS TABLATURE EDITION-FLESH CREAM-DISRAELI GEARS-WHEELS OF FIRE

BRUCE JACK, THE BEST OF. BASS TABLATURE EDITION

13 CLASSICS FROM CREAM AND BEYOND.

The Best of Jack Bruce

Jack Bruce
Item: 00-32154
UPC: 038081352466
ISBN 10: 0739059017
ISBN 13: 9780739059012

Category: Bass Guitar Personality
Format: Book
Instrument: Bass Guitar
Version: Authentic Bass TAB

In the late '60s, co-leading the immortal rock trio Cream with Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce became the most famous bass player in rock music. Today, 40 years later, his prestige and influence remains unchanged. This book contains 13 of his best known compositions and performances, including 11 Cream classics and 2 of his favorites from his solo career all fully transcribed in full notation and TAB. Titles: Dance the Night Away * Deserted Cities of the Heart * I Feel Free * I’m So Glad * NSU * Politician * Rope Ladder to the Moon * Sunshine of Your Love * SWLABR * Theme for an Imaginary Western * We're Going Wrong * White Room.

TITLE COMPOSER

I’m So Glad - Skip James (composer) - FLESH CREAM - 1967
We’re Going Wrong - Jack Bruce (composer) - DISRAELI GEARS - 1969

White Room - Peter Brown (composer); John Bruce (composer) - WHEELS OF FIRE - 1968

Swlabr - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - DISRAELI GEARS - 1967
Theme for an Imaginary Western - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - SONGS FOR A TAYLOR - 1971
Sunshine of Your Love - Eric Clapton (composer); Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - DISRAELI GEARS - 1967
The Politician - Jack Bruce (contributor); Peter Constantine Brown (contributor) - WHEELS OF FIRE - 1968
Rope Ladder to the Moon - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - SONGS FOR A TAYLOR - 1971
Never Tell Your Mother She’s Out of Tune - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) – SONGS FOR A TAYLOR - 1969
N.S.U. - Jack Bruce (composer) - FLESH CREAM - 1966
Dance the Night Away - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - DISRAELI GEARS - 1967
I Feel Free - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - FLESH CREAM - 1967
Deserted Cities of the Heart - Jack Bruce (composer); Peter Brown (composer) - WHEELS OF FIRE - 1968 

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OSBOURNE OZZY GUITAR PLAY-ALONG ESSENTIAL CD TABLATURE-Mama, I'm Coming Home SPARTITI BASI

OSBOURNE OZZY, GUITAR PLAY-ALONG VOLUME 70. ESSENTIAL. LIBRO CON CD E TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA HEAVY METAL, CON CD.

CD DI BASI PER VOCE E VOCE E CHITARRA.

CD CON SOFTWARE PER RALLENTARE LE TRACCE AUDIO, E ALTRO.

LIBRO DI SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.  

Series: Guitar Play-Along
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB

The Guitar Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the guitar should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along. The audio CD is playable on any CD player. For PC and Mac computer users, the CD is enhanced so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch! 8 songs, 80 pages
Song List:

anno - Title - Autori

1989 - Crazy Babies – Parole e musica di Ozzy Osbourne, Robert Daisley, Zakk Wylde e Randy Castillo

1981 - Goodbye To Romance - Parole e musica di John Osbourne, Robert Daisley, Randy Rhoads

1981 - I Don't Know - Parole e musica di Osbourne, Randy Rhoads, Robert Daisley

1991 - Mama, I'm Coming Home - Parole e musica di Ozzy Osbourne e Zakk Wylde

1981 - Over The Mountain - Parole e musica di Osbourne, Randy Rhoads, Robert Daisley, Lee Kerslake

1995 - Perry Mason - Parole e musica di Ozzy Osbourne, Zakk Wylde e John Purdell

1981 - Suicide Solution - Parole e musica di John Osbourne, Robert Daisley, Randy Rhoads

1991 - Time After Time - Parole e musica di Ozzy Osbourne, Zakk Wylde

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REED LOU SONGBOOK SIX STRINGS AND THE WORDS ARTIST APPROVED TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO

REED LOU, SONGBOOK, SIX STRINGS AND THE WORDS. ARTIST APPROVED. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE. 

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCK.

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

36 titoli, 196 Pagine. TABLATURE

This book was approved by Lou Reed

Lou ha registrato il doppio album "live in Italy" dal concerto all'arena di Verona del 7 settembre 1983.

E c'eravamo anca noi.

Nico ha recitato nel film di Federico Fellini "la dolce vita", con Marcello Mastroianni. Qui c'è uno spezzone.
 
 
 
Design by Stan Stanski
Cover photo by Robert Leslie
Back cover photo by Amy-Beth McNeeley
or photos by Guido Harari, pg. 1,2,19; Amy-Beth McNeeley, pg. 3,4,5,54,67,72,81,89,97,106,121,131;
Doug Yule, pg. 6; Henri ter Hall, pg. 27, 37,46; Robert Leslie, pg. 152, 161, 169, 186; Len Prince, pg. 195
Transcribed by Steve Gorenberg
Cherry Lane Music Company
Director of Publications/Project Editor: Mark Phillips
Project Coordinator: Rebecca Skidmore
ISBN 978-1-57560-919-5
Copyright © 2009 Cherry Lane Music Company
International Copyright Secured
All Rights Reserved

 

Six Strings and the Words
Format: Softcover - TAB
Artist : Lou Reed

Here are 36 songs selected by Lou Reed's fan club in an unplugged, pared-down presentation with just the guitar chords and lyrics. Some of these songs are also shown in Play-It-Like-It-Is guitar tab, approved by Reed himself! Includes: Berlin - Coney Island Baby - Ecstasy - Goodnight Ladies - Guardian Angel - Heroin - NYC Man - Pale Blue Eyes - Ride Sally Ride - Rock and Roll - Sweet Jane - This Magic Moment - Walk on the Wild Side - Who Am I? - and more, plus an intro written by Reed and lots of rare photos. 196 pages

 

 

TITOLO - ALBUM

 

ADVENTURER     -     from SET THE TWILIGHT REELING

BERLIN     -     from LOU REED

THE BLUE MASK     -    from THE BLUE MASK

CAROLINE SAYS II     -     from BERLIN

CONEY ISLAND BABY    -    from CONEY ISLAND BABY

THE DAY JOHN KENNEDY DIED    -     from THE BLUE MASK

DIRTY BLVD.    -   From NEW YORK

ECSTASY     -   from ECSTASY

GOODNIGHT LADIES    -   from TRASFORMER

GUARDIAN ANGEL   -   from THE RAVEN

HEROIN    -    from ROCK N ROLL ANIMAL

THE HEROINE    -   from THE BLUE MASK

I'LL BE YOUR MIRROR   -   from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

I'M WAITING FOR THE MAN (WAITING FOR MY MAN)    -   from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

LEGENDARY HEARTS    -    from LEGENDARY HEARTS

MAGIC AND LOSS: THE SUMMATION    -    from MAGIC AND LOSS

NYC MAN    -    from SET THE TWILIGHT REELING

PALE BLUE EYES    -    from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND

PARANOIA KEY OF E    -    from ECSTASY

PERFECT DAY    -     from TRASFORMER

RIDE SALLY RIDE     -    from SALLY CAN'T DANCE

RIPTIDE     -     from SET THE TWILIGHT REELING

ROCK AND ROLL       -      from ROCK N ROLL ANIMAL

SATELLITE OF LOVE       -      from TRASFORMER

SET THE TWILIGHT REELING     -    from SET THE TWILIGHT REELING

STREET HASSLE    -    from STREET HASSLE

SUNDAY MORNING    -   from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

SWEET JANE    -     from LOADED

SWEET JANE (INTRO)     -    from ROCK N ROLL ANIMAL

TALKING BOOK     -     from PERFECT NIGHT: LIVE IN LONDON

TATTERS     -     from ECSTASY

VENUS IN FURS     -     from THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

WALK ON THE WILD SIDE    -     from TRANSFORMER

WHAT BECOMES A LEGEND MOST    -   from NEW SENSATIONS

WHITE LIGHT WHITE HEAT   -   from ROCK N ROLL ANIMAL

WHO AM I?       -     from THE RAVEN

WHY DO YOU TALK       -      from PERFECT NIGHT: LIVE IN LONDON

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SWING GUITAR Fred Sokolow MUSICA CD TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA SPARTITI Take The 'A' Train

SWING GUITAR, Fred Sokolow. SHEET MUSIC BOOK with CD & GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ SWING, CON CD.

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE   

 

A String Of Pearls -Choo Choo Ch' Boogie -Go Daddy-O -I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me) -In The Mood -It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) -Jersey Bounce -Jump, Jive An' Wail -Just A Gigolo -Route 66 -Sentimental Journey -Since I Don't Have You -Take The 'A' Train -Tuxedo Junction -Zoot Suit Riot. Basi Jam play-along. 

Series: Guitar Educational
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Fred Sokolow

Learn to play swing rhythm and lead guitar in the style of the masters! With this book/CD pack you get: transcriptions of 15 original hit recordings from the classics of the 1930s and '40s to the revival of the '90s; performance notes to help you understand the solos; instruction in comping patterns and chord embellishment; a history of swing guitar; and more. Songs, The accompanying CD includes full-band demos of all the songs, with guitar parts isolated. 80 pages

The Swing Era and the Swing Revival

Swing was America's pop music from the mid-1930s to the late 1940s. Some bands (like
Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw) were sweeter and milder, while others (like Benny Goodman and
Count Basie) were hotter and wilder. Some featured hot, improvised solos-the horn players
were the stars-and others strictly read the arrangements. But they all played dance music and
performed for jitterbugging and lindy-hopping couples. In the early 1930s, African-American
bands like those of Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Fletcher Henderson launched the swing
era, and predominantly white bands like those of Benny Goodman, the Dorseys, and Harry
James made it a mainstream pop phenomenon.
A typical swing band consisted of a rhythm section (piano, guitar, bass, and drums), four or
five saxophones, the same number of trumpets and likewise trombones, and at least one vocalist.
The leader was usually a virtuoso player, and expert arrangers made up intricate charts in
which horn sections often played repetitious, rhythmic riffs in counterpoint to one another.
As World War II ended, the popularity of the big bands waned. (In 1946, eight major big
bands folded!) Smaller, more rhythm 'n' blues-oriented combos like Louis Jordan and the
Tympany Five came on strong to take their place. The new music was still horn- and riff-driven,
but bands emphasized boogie-woogie, a strong backbeat, and simpler, bluesier chord progressions.
It led to rock 'n' roll in less than a decade. If you were a teenager in 1954, swing was the
"square" music your parents liked!
But what goes around comes around, and in the late 1980s a swing revival was bubbling up
all over the U.S. By the early 1990s, most large cities in the country had at least one nightclub
where swing bands played, and dancers dressed in retro styles displayed the steps they had just
learned at the swing-dance lesson that preceded the live band. (In between dances, instead of
holding a cigarette and cocktail, the hoofers had a towel and a bottle of Evian!) Groups like
Squirrel Nut Zippers, the Brian Setzer Orchestra, the Royal Crown Revue, and Big Bad Voodoo
Daddy had hit singles and albums, were featured in major films, and even played at the World
Series halftime show (a sure sign of popular acceptance). Most of these new bands were smaller
than the Dorseys' or Ellington's, and they borrowed as much from Louis Jordan and Louis Prima
as they did from Benny Goodman. But by the turn of the new millennium, the message was unmistakable:
swing was back.
The Role of Guitar in Swing
During the original swing era, guitars were acoustic. Charlie Christian introduced the electric
guitar to big band music in 1939 when he joined Benny Goodman's band, but by the time it
took hold in other bands, the swing era was nearly over. Most players favored arch-top, F-hole
guitars like the Gibson L-5 and the Epiphone Broadway or Emperor. (Epiphone was not owned
by Gibson in those days.) These guitars had no cutaway, and their purpose was to provide fourbeats-
to-the-bar rhythm. Since single-note guitar solos could hardly be heard above a horn section,
chords-rather than hot licks-were the guitarist's main tools. The steady chunk-chunkchunk
of the guitar kept the rhythm section flowing.
Often, when swing guitarists "comp" (play chord backup to a vocalist or soloist), theyembellish
the basic chord progression. Going beyond chord ornamentation (e.g. playing a G9 instead
of a G7), they improvise whole progressions that are not found on sheet music, to make
the music hip (or "hep," as they said during the swing era). So in order to comp in the authentic
swing style, the guitarist who is unschooled in jazz needs some hip ness (hepness?) lessons!

TiTLES :

Choo Choo Ch' Boogie - Louis Jordan and The Tympany Five, 1946
Go Daddy-O - Big Bad Wodoo Daddy, 1995 
I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me) - Spencer Williams, 1956
In The Mood - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1939
It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Duke Ellington - Sophisticated Ladies, 1932
Jersey Bounce - Benny Goodman, 1942
Jump, Jive An' Wail - Brian Setzer Orchestra - Louis Prima, (1956) 1998
Just A Gigolo - Leonello Casucci, 1930 
Route 66 - Nat Cole Trio, 1946
Sentimental Journey - Les Brown and his Orchestra, 1943
Since I Don't Have You - Brian Setzer Orchesta, (1959) 1988
A String Of Pearls - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1942
Take The 'A' Train - Duke Ellington - Billy Strayhorn - 1941
Tuxedo Junction - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1940
Zoot Suit Riot - Cherry Poppin' Daddies - 1997 - Steve Perry

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ROCKABILLY GUITAR PLAY-ALONG Vol. 20 CD TABLATURE LIBRO BASI CHITARRA MUSICA SPARTITI

ROCKABILLY GUITAR PLAY-ALONG Vol. 20. Basi: Be-Bop-A-Lula -Blue Suede Shoes -Hello Mary Lou -Little Sister -Mystery Train -Rock This Town -Stray Cat Strut -That'll Be the Day. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCKABILLY,

CD DI BASI PER VOCE E VOCE E CHITARRA.

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

Series: Guitar Play-Along
Softcover with CD - TAB
Artist: Various
56 pages

The Guitar Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the guitar should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along. The audio CD is playable on any CD player. For PC and Mac computer users, the CD is enhanced so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch! 8 songs:

Be-Bop-A-Lula - GENE VINCENT - Words and Music: Tex Davis, Gene Vincent - 1956
Blue Suede Shoes - CARL PERKINS - Words and Music: Calr Lee Perkins - 1955
Hello Mary Lou - RICKY NELSON - Words and Music: Gene Pitney, C. Mangiaracina - 1960
Little Sister - ELVIS PRESLEY - Words and Music: Doc Pomus, Mort Shuman - 1961
Mystery Train - ELVIS PRESLEY - Words and Music: Sam C. Phillips, Herman Parker Jr. - 1955
Rock This Town - STRAY CATS - Words and Music: Brian Setzer - 1981
Stray Cat Strut - STRAY CATS - Words and Music: Brian Setzer - 1981
That'll Be The Day - BUDDY HOLLY - Words and Music: Jerry Allison, Norman Petty, Buddy Holly - 1957 

 

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WOODSTOCK GUITAR SONGBOOK EDITION TABLATURE LIBRO-I’M GOING HOME-alvin lee-NEIL YOUNG

WOODSTOCK: THE GUITAR SONGBOOK. TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA, SPARTITI PER CHITARRA E VOCE. PENTAGRAMMA, ACCORDI E TABLATURE. 

AUTHENTIC GUITAR TAB EDITION

3 giorni di pace e musica. 
Era il 15 - 16 - 17 Agosto 1969, il biglietto costava $6.00 al giorno. Il 18 agosto suonerà Hendrix che chiuse il concerto di "Pace e musica" con una canzone sulla gelosia criminale, Hey Joe:

Hey Joe, dove stai andando con quella pistola in mano
Hey Joe, ho detto dove stai andando con quella pistola in mano

Sto andando a uccidere la mia vecchia signora
Sai, l'ho trovata in giro con un altro tizio
Sto andando a uccidere la mia vecchia signora
Sai, l'ho trovata in giro con un altro tizio
e questo non va bene

Hey Joe, ho sentito che hai sparato alla tua vecchia signora,
le hai sparato, adesso
ho detto, ho sentito che hai sparato alla tua vecchia signora,
le hai sparato, l'hai stesa

sì è vero, le ho sparato
sai, l'ho trovata in giro, in giro per la città
sì è vero, le ho sparato
sai, ho trovato la mia signora che faceva casino in giro per la città
e l'ho ripagata con la pistola
LE HO SPARATO!

Hey Joe, va bene
sparale ancora, baby

Hey Joe, ho detto
e adesso dove te ne andrai?
adesso dove te ne andrai?
Hey Joe, ho detto adesso dove te ne andrai?
Dove, dove andrai?
Be', scava

Andrò a sud,
verso il Messico
va bene!
Andrò a sud,
a sud dove posso essere libero
nessuno mi troverà

Non ci sarà nessun boia,
non mi metterà una corda intorno al collo
farai meglio a crederci
adesso devo andare
Hey Joe, è meglio che ti muova
arrivederci a tutti
Hey Joe, uhh
vattene via 

Hey Joe, where you goin' with that gun in your hand 
Hey Joe, I said where you goin' with that gun in your hand 

I'm going down to shoot my old lady 
You know, I've caught her messin' around with another man 
I'm going down to shoot my old lady 
You know, I've caught her messin' around with another man 
And that ain't too cool 

Hey Joe, I've heard you shot your woman down, 
shot her down, now 
I said I've heard you shot your old lady down, 
You shot her down to the ground 

Yes I did, I shot her 
You know, I caught her messin' round, messin' round town 
Yes I did, I shot her 
You know, I caught my old lady messin' around town 
And I gave her the gun 
I SHOT HER! 

Hey Joe, alright 
Shoot her one more time, baby 

Hey Joe, said now 
Where you gonna run to now? 
Where you gonna run to? 
Hey Joe, I said where you gonna run to now? 
Where you, where you gonna go? 
Well, dig it 

I'm goin' way down south, 
Way down to Mexico way 
Alright! 
I'm goin' way down south, 
Way down where I can be free 
Ain't no one gonna find me 

Ain't no hangman gonna, 
He ain't gonna put a rope around me 
You better believe it right now 
I gotta go now 
Hey Joe, you better run on down 
Good by everybody 
Hey Joe, uhh 
Run on down 

FOR MUCH OF THE WORLD, THE SUMMER OF '69 IS MARKED BY THE MILESTONE OF THE MANKIND'S FIRST STEP ON THE MOON, SYNONYMOUS WITH THE SENTENCE, "THIS IS ONE SMALL STEP FOR  MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND." 

 

The year 1969 was characterized by a fracturing American society. In the aftermath of tumultuous events from the previous year; which included poIitical assassinations, race riots, the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, student uprisings, and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, the world seemed divided between whites and blacks, capitalists and communists, haves and have-nots, straights and stoners, the silent majority and the counterculture. Two days after the Apollo I I astronauts emerged from quarantine, 500,000 concert goers-more than two and a half times the anticipated number of attendees-assembled in the alfalfa fields outside of Bethel, New York, to hear 32 musical acts, some already the biggest artists in the world, and some whose careers would explode following their exposure at the festival. From the point of view of their elders, the young people had been "infected" by a threat to the mores of society that was more insidious than the unknown space germs possibly brought back to earth from Apollo I I's trans-lunar journey. These "hippies" largely opposed the Vietnam War; materialism, and racism, while practicing free love and illicit drug use, and their values were implicitly and explicitly stated in much of the music performed at Woodstock. 

 

Friday, August 15

Richie Havens

Swami Satchidananda - gave the invocation for the festival

Sweetwater

Bert Sommer

Ravi Shankar

Tim Hardin

Melanie

Arlo Guthrie

Joan Baez

 

Saturday, August 16

Quill, forty-minute set of four songs

Country Joe McDonald

John Sebastian

Santana

Keef Hartley Band

The Incredible String Band

Canned Heat

Mountain

Grateful Dead

Creedence Clearwater Revival

Janis Joplin with The Kozmic Blues Band

Sly & the Family Stone

The Who began at 4 a.m., kicking off a 25-song set including Tommy

Jefferson Airplane

 

Sunday, August 17

The Grease Band

Joe Cocker

Country Joe and the Fish

Ten Years After

The Band

Blood, Sweat & Tears

Johnny Winter featuring his brother, Edgar Winter

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Paul Butterfield Blues Band

Sha-Na-Na

Monday, August 18

Jimi Hendrix

For the particular generation, it calls to mind a '80s pop song about the dashed hopes of youthful idealism. But for the baby boomer generation and free spirits everywhere, the summer of 69 is defined by a mid-August music Festival, where a half-million young people wallowed in the mud  of the Max Yasgur's 600-acre dairy farm.

A r t i s t  T i t l e

JOAN BAEZ - JOE HILL - Parole: Alfred Haynes. Musica: Earl Robinson - 1938
THE BAND - CHEST FEVER - parole e musica: Robbie Robertson - 1968
THE BAND - THE WEIGHT - parole e musica: Robbie Robertson - 1968
CANNED HEAT - GOING UP THE COUNTRY - parole e musica: Alan Wilson - 1968 
JOE COCKER - DELTA LADY - parole e musica: Leon Russell - 1969
JOE COCKER - LET’S GO GET STONED - parole e musica: Valerie Simpson, Nicholas Ashford, Josephine Armstead - 1965
COUNTRY JOE MCDONALD - I-FEEL-LIKE-I’M-FIXIN’-TO-DIE RAG - parole e musica: Joe McDonald - 1965

CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG - BLUEBIRD - parole e musica: Stephen Stills - 1967
CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG - WOODSTOCK - parole e musica: Joni Mitchell - 1969

GRATEFUL DEAD - DARK STAR - parole: Robert Hunter. musica: Jerry Garcia, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh, Ron McKernan, Bob Weir - 1971
GRATEFUL DEAD - ST. STEPHEN - parole: Robert Hunter. Musica: Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh - 1969

ARLO GUTHRIE - COMING INTO LOS ANGELES -  parole e musica: Arlo Guthrie - 1969
RICHIE HAVENS - HANDSOME JOHNNY - parole e musica: Richie Havens, Luis Goussett - 1967
JANIS JOPLIN WITH THE KOZMIC BLUES BAND - PIECE OF MY HEART - parole e musica: Jerry Ragovoy, Bert Russell - 1967
JANIS JOPLIN WITH THE KOZMIC BLUES BAND - TRY (JUST A LITTLE BIT HARDER) - parole e musica: Jerry Ragovoy, Chip Taylor - 1968

THE JEFFERSON AIRPLANE - VOLUNTEERS - parole e musica: Marty Balin, Paul Kantner - 1969
JIMI HENDRIX WITH GYPSY SUN AND RAINBOWS - HEY JOE - parole e musica: Billy Roberts - 1962 
MOUNTAIN - THEME FOR AN I MAGINARY WESTERN - parole e musica: Jack Bruce, Pete Brown - 1971
SANTANA - EVIL WAYS - parole e musica: Sonny Henry - 1967
SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE - EVERYDAY PEOPLE - parole e musica: Sylvester Stewart - 1969
SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE - I WANT TO TAKE YOU HIGHER - parole e musica: Sylvester Stewart - 1968
THE WHO - MY GENERATION - parole e musica: Peter Townshend - 1965
THE WHO - SUMMERTIME BLUES - parole e musica: Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart - 1958
TEN YEARS AFTER - I’M GOING HOME - parole e musica: Alvin Lee - 1969

Prezzo: €139,99
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ROLLING STONE: SELECTIONS FROM THE 100 GREATEST GUITAR SONGS OF ALL TIME Authentic Guitar TAB TABLATURE

ROLLING STONE: SELECTIONS FROM THE 100 GREATEST GUITAR SONGS OF ALL TIME. TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCK. 

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA, CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, NOTE, TABLATURE. 

 

Rolling Stone: Selections from the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time

36 Songs That Defined Rock Guitar
Item: 00-32815
UPC: 038081357263
ISBN 10: 0739061488
ISBN 13: 9780739061480
Category: Guitar Mixed Folio
Format: Book
Instrument: Guitar
Version: Authentic Guitar TAB 

 

Crossroads
Cream,1968
» No. 3 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Eric Clapton once described Cream's music as "blues ancient and modern." This track is what he meant. He was not yet 23 when he played this high-velocity version of the Robert Johnson song at San Francisco's Winterland on March 10th, 1968. Everything in Clapton's solos is grounded in the blues vocabulary but pointed to the future. "When Clapton soloed, he wrote wonderful symphonies from classic blues licks in that fantastic tone," Little Steven Van Zandt told Rolling Stone in 2004. "You could sing his solos like songs in themselves."
Appears on: Wheels of Fire (Polydor)


Brown Sugar
The Rolling Stones, 1971
» No. 5 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
“Satisfaction" may be the Rolling Stones' most recognizable riff, but this Sticky Fingers hit – based on a gutbucket guitar part devised by Mick Jagger – is the band's raunchy guitar pinnacle. Keith Richards' secret weapon: He's playing a guitar that's missing its lowest string.
Appears on: Sticky Fingers (Virgin)


Eruption
Van Halen, 1978
» No. 6 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Eddie Van Halen's 102-second mission statement was a piece he invented onstage: a solo showcase for his mastery of tone and technique, notably the rush of notes he produced with his fretboard tapping. An army of teens would try to duplicate it, emerging years later in every metal band of the Eighties.
Appears on: Van Halen (Warner Bros.)
(Music appears on page)


Stairway to Heaven
Led Zeppelin, 1971
» No. 8 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
"Stairway," Jimmy Page told RS in 1975, "crystallized the essence of the band." It's a masterpiece of dramatic ascension: Page's acoustic picking rising into chiming chords, which introduce the solo, a brilliant succession of phrases that steadily move toward rock& roll ecstasy.
Appears on: Led Zeppelin IV (Atlantic)
(Music appears on page )


Statesboro Blues
The Allman Brothers Band, 1971
» No.9 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
In 1968, Gregg Allman went to visit his older brother, Duane, on his 22nd birthday. Duane was sick in bed, so Gregg brought along a bottle of Coricidin pills for his fever and the debut album by guitarist Taj Mahal as a gift. "About two hours after I left, my phone rang," Gregg remembers. " 'Baby brother, baby brother, get over here now!' " When Gregg got there, Duane had poured the pills out of the bottle, washed off the label and was using it as a slide to play "Statesboro Blues," the old Blind Willie McTellsong that Taj Mahal covered. Duane had never played slide before, says Gregg, but "he just picked it up and started bumin'. He was a natural." The song quickly became a part of the Allman Brothers Band's repertoire, and Duane's slide guitar became crucial to their sound. "Statesboro Blues" was the opening track on their legendary 1971 live double album, At Fillmore East, and ever since, the moaning and squealing opening licks have given fans chills at live shows. "It wasn't something that Duane would play the same way every night," says current Allmans guitarist Warren Haynes, one of many guitarists who have filled Duane's shoes since he died in late 1971. "But in all of our heads, that's the way it goes." There's one thing the current band doesn't try to replicate from the Fillmore East performance: At the end of Duane's sublime "Statesboro" solo, the guitarist hits an off-key note that Gregg calls the "note from hell." "He left it in because he knew I hated it," says Gregg, claiming that the mistake only adds to the song's legend. "It was live. It was something that happened."
Appears on: At Fillmore East (Island/Mercury)
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Whole Lotta Love
Led Zeppelin, 1969
» No. 11 from Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
This thundering rewrite of Muddy Waters' "You Need Love" showcased three of Jimmy Page's specialties: primal, monomaniacal riffs; innovative production; and solos with the savage mastery he'd developed as a top-flight session musician in the pre-Zeppel years.
Appears on: Led Zeppelin II /(Atlantic)
(Music appears on page )


Layla
Derek and the Dominos, 1970
» No. 13 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs ofAll Time
"I didn't do it - it was Duane," Eric Clapton said, laughing, in 1988. Guest guitarist Duane Allman
created one of rock's most exciting and memorable licks, pinching the vocal line from Albert King's "As the Years Go Passing By"and speeding it up. App~ars on: Layla and Oth~r Assorted Love Songs (Polydor)
(Music appears on page )


My Generation
The Who, 1965
» No. 15 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs ofAll Time
Before smashing guitars was a cliche, it was a shock, and The Who's signature song was one shock after another, from Pete Townshend's pile-driving two-chord riff to his sudden disappearance while bassist John Entwistle solos to the glitchy feedback that ends the original recording.
Appears on: My Generation (Geffen)
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Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath, 1970
» No. 17 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs ofAll Time
Tony Iommi invented heavy-metal guitar out of necessity: He'd lost two fingertips on his fretting hand, and he used thimbles and dropped tunings to make playing easier. His crawling, dissonant riff (also called "the devil's chord") became the basis of thousands of metal songs.
Appears on: Black Sabbath (Warner Bros.)
(Music appears on page )


Blitzlaieg Bop
Ramones, 1976
» No. 18 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs ofAll Time
There's no guitar solo, because guitarist Johnny Ramone hated solos. But his down-stroke barre chords were fat with Dick Dale's twang and Bo Diddley's strumming. Joey Ramone once said that in Johnny's guitar, he heard organ, piano and other instruments that weren't really there.
Appears on: Ramones (Rhino)
(Music appears on page )


People Get Ready
The Impressions, 1965
» No. 20 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Curtis Mayfield's deepest civil rights anthem is powered by his eloquent open-tuned guitar-playing: The backbeat echoed the new sounds coming out of Jamaica, and the subtle, fluid solo spirals are as expressive as his singing. Bob Marley later synthesized it with "One Love."
Appears on: Ultimate Collection (Hip-O)
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Can't You Hear Me Knocking
The Rolling Stones, 1971
» No. 25 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs ofAll Time
The fist-on-your-door riff was classic Keith Richards, while the solo showed Mick Taylor's disciplined touch. "Mick was so lyrical on songs like 'Knocking,' " Charlie Watts has said, noting his love of the song's long instrumental coda. "That was a complete jam, one take at the end."
Appears on: Sticky Fingers (Virgin)
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Back in Black
AC/DC, 1980
» No. 29 from Rolling Stone" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Angus and Malcolm Young's dual-guitar masterpiece is the platonic ideal of hard rock. The bridge alone is heavier than most axmen ever manage, and the riff is instantly recognizable: "Black"has been covered by everyone from Living Colour to Shakira, and sampled by the Beastie Boys and Eminem.
Appears on: Back in Black (Epic)
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Sweet Child 0' Mine
Guns n' Roses, 1987
»No. 63 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Slash was sitting on the floor in Guns n' Roses' squalid East Hollywood house sometime in 1986 when he started fooling around with a chiming, circular melody. "It was an interesting sort of pattern," Slash says. "But Jesus Christ, I never thought it was going to become a song." As he kept playing, fellow G n' R guitarist Izzy Stradlin joined in, playing a simple chord progression. They didn't realize that Ax}Rose was listening in from upstairs - and writing lyrics. At rehearsal the next day, the band hashed out what would become "Sweet Child" - over the objections of Slash, who was convinced that the music was too lightweight for what he saw as a "thrash band," But he relented, and soon came up with the lyrical, multisectioned solo that ended up on the finished song. "It's a combination of influences," Slash says. "From Jeff Beck, Cream and Zeppelin to stuff you'd be surprised at: the solos in Manfred Mann's version of 'Blinded by the Light' and Gerry Rafferty's 'Baker Street.''' Despite the solo's complexity, it was the song's precise intro that proved challenging onstage. "It's easy now, but it was very daunting in the early days," Slash says. "Especially because I drank exorbitant amounts of alcohol and had other chemical things going on. I hated playing that song for years."
Appears on: Appetite for Destruction (Geffen)
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Adam Raised a Cain
Bruce Springsteen, 1978
»No. 67 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Before he was known as a songwriter, Springsteen was the fastest guitar player in Asbury Park. And in this bluesy hard-rock blast, he lets those chops loose again, pushing the E Street Band to garage-land with the angriest lead guitar on record.
Appears on: Darkness on the Edge of Town (Columbia)
(Music appears on page 10)


Money
Pink Floyd, 1973
»No. 69 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
David Gilmour hangs back for the first three minutes of this definitive Floyd rocker, which started as an acoustic blues song in rehearsals. Then the song shifts from a 7/4 stomp into straight time, and he delivers a rampaging freakout, ending up on notes so high most guitars don't even reach them.
Appears on: Dark Side of the Moon (Capitol)
(Music appears on page)


Summertime Blues
Blue Cheer, 1968
» No. 73 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
This power trio's cover of Eddie Cochran's classic was their only hit, sometimes called the first heavy-metal record. It's a showcase for the massive roar of Leigh Stephens' guitar, so fuzzed-up it scrapes like steel wool, dragging the rockabilly riff through the dust.
Appears on: Vincebus Eruptum (Island/Mercury)


Beat It
Michael Jackson, 1982
» No. 81 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
There had never been a soul hit with as much heavy guitar as this or a heavy-metal hit with as much soul. Paul Jackson Jr. and Steve Lukather play the menacing riff, but Eddie Van Halen's speed-shred solo is the coup de grace. Van Halen says producer Quincy Jones' only advice was "go be yourself."
Appears on: Thriller (Epic)


How Soon Is Now?
The Smiths, 1985
» No. 90 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Trm<
Trading guitarist Johnny Marr's spidery technique for a sobbing oscillation on a few extended chords and a tone-bending wail that sounds like the world racingby, this song became a club standard, opening the passageways between underground rock and dance music.
Appears on: Meat Is Murder (Sire) (Music appears on page )


Memo From Turner
Mick Jagger, 1970
» No. 92 from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of AllTrmtt
Guitar virtuoso Ry Cooder, who played on the Stones' Let It Bleed, accused Keith Richards of stealing his open-G tuning technique on singles like "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Gimme Shelter." Cooder's jittery slide guitar defines Jagger's first solo recording, which was written for his film role as a decadent rock star in 1970's Performance.
Appears on: The Very Best of Mick Jagger (Rhino)
(Music appears on page )

WhiteRoom
Cream, 1968
» No. 55from Rolling Stone"' Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
The first rock supergroup, Cream gave Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker as much playas Eric Clapton, but Clapton's unrelenting wah-wah cascade signs his name in foot-high letters over the song. Along with Jimi Hendrix's "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)," it made that pedal the sound of '68 psychedelia. Appears on: Wheels of Fire (Polydor) (Music appears on page 246)

Eight Miles High
The Byrds, 1966
» No. 56from Rolling Stone"' Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Roger McGuinn's chiming 12-string solos helped to mold Sixties rock. But what he was inspired by here wasn't rock at all: Indian classical music and saxophonist John Coltrane's explorations of single
chords and phrases. McGuinn said his guitar "breathes like a wind instrument."
Appears on: The Byrds Greatest Hits (Columbia/Legacy)
(Music appears on page 80)

Dark Star
Grateful Dead, 1969
» No. 57from Rolling Stone"' Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
Considered the Dead's greatest live track, this definitive near-half-hour version from an acid-soaked Fillmore West show is Jerry Garcia at his spaciest and most exploratory. Framed by Bob Weir and Phil Lesh, Garcia's free-form improvisation is the song's "nightfall of diamonds" come to life. Appears on: Live/Dead (Rhino) (Music appears on page 76)

Rumble
Link Wray, 1958
» No. 58from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
In 1958, guitar distortion and power chords were virtually unheard of, but Wray stabbed a pencil through his amplifier to make it sound nastier, dragged his pick like a switchblade, and got this blues riff banned by radio stations as an incitement to violence. Not bad for
an instrumental. Appears on: Rumble! The Best of Link Wray (Rhino)
(Music appears on page 186)

Freeway Jam
Jeff Beck, 1975
» No. 59from Rolling Stone'" Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
After years of leading bands with vocalists, Beck proved he is his own best singer. There's a howling quality to his string-bending in this brisk funk. "There were thousands of guitarists playing with their Les Pauls cranked up bloody blaring loud," he later told RS. "I needed to try something new." Appears on: Blow by Blow (Epic) (Music appears on page 90)

Soul Man
Sam and Dave, 1967
» No. 61from Rolling Stone"' Magazine's 100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time
"Play it, Steve!" shouts Sam Moore - he's calling out to Steve Cropper, the genius who powered Stax Records' house band. Cropper's fluttering, high-end riffs provide the song's rhythmic mojo, and his squealing fills (for which he used a cigarette lighter in lieu of an actual slide) are its third singing voice. Appears on: Soul Men (Rhino) (Music appears on page 179)

 

 

- Adam Raised a Cain, Bruce Springsteen 

- Back in Black, AC/DC

-Beat It, Michael Jackson Van Halen

-Black Magic Woman/Gypsy Queen, Santana

-Black Sabbath, Black Sabbath

-Blitzkrieg Bop, Ramones

-Brown Sugar, The Rolling Stones

-Can’t You Hear Me Knocking, The Rolling Stones

-Crossroads, Cream

-Dark Star, Grateful Dead

-Eight Miles High, The Byrds

-Eruption, Van Halen

-Freeway Jam, Jeff Beck

-How Soon Is Now? The Smiths

-I Can See for Miles, The Who

-Layla, Derek and the Dominos

-London Calling, The Clash

-Memo from Turner, Mick Jagger

-Money, Pink Floyd

-My Generation, The Who

-My Iron Lung, Radiohead

-Panama, Van Halen 

-People Get Ready, The Impressions

-(We’re Gonna) Rock Around the Clock, Bill Haley and His Comets

-Rumble, Link Wray - Words and Music: Link Wray, Milton Grant - 1958

-Soul Man, Sam and Dave

-Stairway to Heaven, Led Zeppelin - Words and Music: Jimmy Page, Robert Plant - 1997

-Statesboro Blues, The Allman Brothers Band - Words and Music: Will McTell - 1929

-Stay with Me, The Faces - Words and Music: Ron Wood, Rod Stewart - 1972 

-Summertime Blues, Blue Cheer - Words and Music: Eddie Cochran, Jerry Capehart - 1958

-Sweet Child O’ Mine, Guns n’ Roses - Words and Music: Steven Adler, Saul Hudson, Duff McKagan, W. Axl Rose, Izzy Stradlin - 1987

-That’s All Right, Elvis Presley - Arthur Crudup - 1947

-White Room, Cream - Words and Music: Jack Bruce, Peter Brown - 1968

-Whole Lotta Love, Led Zeppelin - Words and Music: Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, John Bonham, Willie Dixon - 1969

Prezzo: €32,99
€32,99

CLASSIC ROCK FOR FINGERSTYLE GUITAR Marcel Robinson Hal Leonard TABLATURE Every Breath You Take

CLASSIC ROCK FOR FINGERSTYLE GUITAR.  SHEET MUSIC BOOK with GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA POP ROCK.

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA FINGERSTYLE.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

18 canzoni arrangiate per chitarra: Angie -Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You -Brown Eyed Girl -Dream On -Dreams -Dust In The Wind -Every Breath You Take -Fire And Rain -Free Bird -Free Fallin' -Imagine -Just The Way You Are -Layla -New Kid In Town -Something -Wonderful Tonight -Your Song -you're in my heart.

1973 - Angie - Performed by The Rolling Stones – Parole e Musica di: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards

1969 - Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You - Performed by Led Zeppelin - Parole e Musica di: Anne Bredon, Jimmy Page, Robert Plant

1967 - Brown Eyed Girl - Performed by Van Morrison – Parole e Musica di: Van Morrison

1973 - Dream On - Performed by Aerosmith – Parole e Musica di: Steven Tyler

1977 - Dreams - Performed by Fleetwood Mac – Parole e Musica di: Stevie Nicks

1977 - Dust In The Wind - Performed by Kansas – Parole e Musica di: Kerry Livgren

1983 - Every Breath You Take - Performed by The Police - Parole e Musica di: Sting

1969 - Fire And Rain - Performed by James Taylor - Parole e Musica di: James Taylor

1973 - Free Bird - Performed by Lynyrd Skynyrd - Parole e Musica di: Allen Collins, Ronnie Van Zant

1989 - Free Fallin' - Performed by Tom Petty - Parole e Musica di: Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne

1971 - Imagine - Performed by John Lennon - Parole e Musica di: John Lennon

1977 - Just The Way You Are - Performed by Billy Joel - Parole e Musica di: Billy Joel

1970 - Layla - Performed by Derek And The Dominoes - Parole e Musica di: Eric Clapton, Jim Gordon

1976 - New Kid In Town - Performed by The Eagles – Parole e Musica di: John David Souther, Don Henley, Glenn Frey

1969 - Something - Performed by The Beatles - Parole e Musica di: George Harrison

1977 - Wonderful Tonight - Performed by Eric Clapton – Parole e Musica di: Eric Clapton

1977 - You're in My Heart - Performed by Rod Stewart - Parole e Musica di: Rod Stewart

1969 - Your Song - Performed by Elton John - Parole e Musica di: Elton John, Bernie Taupin

Prezzo: €33,99
€33,99

BLUES BASS PLAY-ALONG Volume 9 LIBRO BASSO CD TABLATURE Sweet Home Chicago-Pride And Joy-I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man

BLUES BASS PLAY-ALONG Volume 9. All Your Love (I Miss Loving) -Born Under A Bad Sign -I'm Tore Down -I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man -Killing Floor -Pride And Joy -Sweet Home Chicago -The Thrill Is Gone. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO PER BASSO CON CD E TABLATURE


BLUES
Blues Bass Play-Along Volume 9
Series: Bass Play-Along
Softcover with CD - TAB

Composer: Various

The Bass Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the bass should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along. The audio CD is playable on any CD player. For PC and Mac computer users, the CD is enhanced so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch!

Songs: All Your Love (I Miss Loving) - Born Under a Bad Sign - I'm Tore Down - I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man - Killing Floor - Pride and Joy - Sweet Home Chicago - The Thrill Is Gone.
56 pages

All Your Love (I Miss Loving) - OTIS RUSH - 1965
Born Under A Bad Sign - ALBERT KING - 1967 - BOOKER T. JONES, WILLIAM BELL
I'm Tore Down - ERIC CLAPTON - 1962 - SONNY THOMPSON
I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man - MUDDY WATERS - 1957 - WILLIE DIXON
Killing Floor - HOWLIN' WOLF - 1965 - CHESTER BURNETT 
Pride And Joy - STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN - 1985
Sweet Home Chicago - ROBERT JOHNSON
The Thrill Is Gone - B.B. KING - 1951 - ROY HAWKINS, RICK DARNELL

Prezzo: €16,99
€16,99

BLUES Guitar Play-Along Volume 38 CD JAM TRACK TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

BLUES Guitar Play-Along Volume 38. Boom Boom -Cold Shot -Crosscut Saw -Everyday I Have The Blues -Frosty -Further On Up The Road -Killing Floor -Texas Flood. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD JAMTRACK & GUITAR TABLATURE.

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES CON CD.

CD DI BASI JAM TRACK PER VOCE E, VOCE E CHITARRA.

LIBRO DI SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

Serie: Guitar Play-Along TAB
Artisti: Vari

The Guitar Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the guitar should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along. The audio CD is playable on any CD player. For PC and Mac computer users, the CD is enhanced so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch!

This volume includes 8 songs: Boom Boom - Cold Shot - Crosscut Saw - Everyday I Have the Blues - Frosty - Further on up the Road - Killing Floor - Texas Flood.

64 pagine

TiTLES:
- Boom Boom - Parole e musica: John Lee Hooker - 1962
- Cold Shot - STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN - Parole e musica : Mike Kindred e Wesley Clark - 1984
- Crosscut Saw - ALBERT KING - Parole e musica: R.G. Ford - 1969
- Everyday I Have The Blues - B.B. KING - Parole e musica: Peter Chatman - 1952
- Frosty - Albert Collins - 1965
- Further On Up The Road - Parole e musica: Joe Veasey e Don Robey - 1957
- Killing Floor - HOWLIN' WOLF - Parole e musica: Chester Burnett - 1965
- Texas Flood - Parole e musica: Larry Davis e Joseph W. Scott - 1958

Prezzo: €19,99
€19,99
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