TESTI DELLE CANZONI - ACCORDI - PENTAGRAMMA - TABLATURE

THE ROOTS OF COUNTRY GUITAR TABLATURE FRED SOKOLOW CD buckaroo-Don Rich-cotton fields-Maybelle Carter-galloping on guitar-Chet Atkins-I am a pilgrim Merle Travis-twin guitar special Eldon Shamblin-ballad of thunder road Joe Maphis

THE ROOTS OF COUNTRY GUITAR. Sokolow. 6 canzoni complete di canto. buckaroo, Don Rich -cotton fields, Maybelle Carter -galloping on guitar, Chet Atkins -I am a pilgrim, Merle Travis -twin guitar special, Eldon Shamblin -ballad of thunder road, Joe Maphis. CD TABLATURE

Prezzo: €29,99
€29,99

BLUEGRASS SONGBOOK. Peter Wernick GUITAR TABLATURE Blue Ridge Mountain Blues-Daddy Sang Bass-Bury Me Beneath The Willow-Knoxville Girl

BLUEGRASS SONGBOOK. Peter Wernick. TABLATURE

Over 130 songs in several styles from old-time, traditional, and newgrass, top gospel, and novelty tunes. Includes Ballad Of Jed Clampett, Blue Ridge Mountain Blues, Daddy Sang Bass, Bury Me Beneath The Willow, and Knoxville Girl.

Bluegrass Songbook. (Melody/Lyrics/Chords). For voice and guitar (or banjo). Music Sales America. Bluegrass and Americana. Difficulty: easy-medium. Fake book (simplified 3 string guitar tablature). Vocal melody (simplified 3 string guitar tablature), lyrics, chord names, performance notes, introductory text and black & white photos. 128 pages. Oak Publications #OK63198. Published by Oak Publications (HL.14004665).
ISBN 0825601649. With vocal melody (simplified 3 string guitar tablature), lyrics, chord names, performance notes, introductory text and black & white photos. Bluegrass and Americana. 9x12 inches.
Over 130 songs in several styles--from old-time, traditional, and newgrass, top gospel, and novelty tunes. Includes Ballad Of Jed Clampett, Blue Ridge Mountain Blues, Daddy Sang Bass, Bury Me Beneath The Willow, and Knoxville Girl.

Ain't Gonna Work Tomorrow
All The Good Times Are Past And Gone
Amazing Grace
Angel Band
Ballad Of Jed Clampett
Banks Of The Ohio
(A) Beautiful Life
Before I Met You
Big Ball In Boston
Blue Ridge Mountain Blues
(The) Bluebirds Are Singing For Me
Bluegrass Express
Bound To Ride
Brand New Shoes
Bringing Mary Home
Bury Me Beneath The Willow
(The Children Are Crying And) Calling Your Name
Close By
Columbus Stockade Blues
Daddy Sang Bass
Dark Hollow
Darling Corey
Detroit City
Don't Let Your Deal Go Down
Don't Put Her Down, You Helped Put Her There
Don't This Road Look Rough And Rocky
Down In The Willow Garden
Down The Road
Eating Out Of Your Hand
Face Lost In The Crowd
Fair And Tender Ladies
Foggy Mountain Top
Footprints In The Snow
Fox On The Run
Free Born Man
Freight Train
Give Me Your Hand
Handsome Molly
He Will Set Your Fields On Fire
Heaven
Hello City Limits
Highway Of Regret
Hot Corn, Cold Corn
How Mountain Girls Can Love
I'm A Pilgrim
I Know You're Married But I Love You Still
I'm Using My Bible For A Roadmap
If I Lose
In The Pines
(It's A Long Way) To The Top Of The World
It's In My Mind To Ramble
Jesse James
John Hardy
John Henry
Katy Daley
Knoxville Girl
(The) Last Song
Late Last Night (Way Downtown)
(The) Legend Of The Rebel Soldier
Life Is Like A Mountain Railroad
Listening To The Rain
Little Bessie
Little Birdie
(The) Little Girl And The Dreadful Snake
Little Glass Of Wine
Little Joe
Little Maggie
Little White Church
(The) Lonesome River
Lonesome Road Blues
Long Black Veil
Long Journey Home (Two Dollar Bill)
Lord, I'm Coming Home
Love, Please Come Home
Making Plans
Man Of Constant Sorrow
Maple On The Hill
Matterhorn
Memories Of Mother And Dad
(The) Memory Of Your Smile
Midnight On The Stormy Deep
Milwaukee Here I Come
Mr. Engineer
Mountain Dew
My Better Years
My Dying Bed
New Freedom Bell
New River Train
Nine Pound Hammer
(The) Old Old House
Ole Slew Foot
On The Jericho Road
Out On The Ocean
Pallet On Your Floor
Paradise
Poor Ellen Smith
Precious Memories
Pretty Polly
Rabbit In The Log (Feast Here Tonight)
Rank Stranger
Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Roll Muddy River
Roll On Buddy
Roving Gambler
Satisfied Mind
Short Life Of Trouble
Singing All Day And Dinner On The Ground
Sitting On Top Of The World
(She Left Me) Standing On The Mountain
Steppin' Stones
Stone Walls And Steel Bars
Sweet Little Miss Blue Eyes
Sweet Sunny South
Swing Low Sweet Chariot
Teardrops In My Eyes
Tennessee
Tennessee Stud
That's How I Can Count On You
Things In Life
Think Of What You've Done
This Is The Girl I Love
Tragic Romance
Two Little Boys
Victim To The Tomb
Wabash Cannonball
We Need A Whole Lot More Of Jesus
Wear A Red Rose
What Would You Give In Exchange For Your Soul
When The Golden Leaves Begin To Fall
Where The Soul Never Dies
White House Blues
Widow Maker
Wildwood Flower
Will The Circle Be Unbroken
With Care From Someone
Working On A Building
Worried Man Blues
Wreck Of The Old Ninety-seven
Y'all Come
You Go To Your Church (And I'll Go To Mine)

Prezzo: €30,99
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THE ROOTS OF ACOUSTIC BLUES GUITAR CD TABLATURE baby,please don't go-Lightnin' Hopkins-come back baby

THE ROOTS OF ACOUSTIC BLUES GUITAR. Fred Sokolow.

LIBRO DI MUSICA CON CD, SPARTITI PER CHITARRA E CANTO. CON ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

Canzoni complete con il canto: baby, please don't go, Lightnin' Hopkins -come back baby, Mance Lipscomb -hey hey, Big Bill Broonzy -I'm so glad, Skip James -the prodigal son, Rev. Robert Wilkins -stack o'lee, Mississippi John Hurt. CD TABLATURE

Prezzo: €19,99
€19,99

MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT STEFAN GROSSMAN'S EARLY MASTERS OF AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR 2CD TABLATURE

MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT, STEFAN GROSSMAN'S EARLY MASTERS OF AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR. 2CD TABLATURE

26 titoli di blues acustico. 2CD TABLATURE, Curato e trascritto da Stefan Grossman. 

 I libri della serie "I primi maestri americani della chitarra Blues" offrono l'opportunità unica di studiare le vere radici del blues moderno. Stefan Grossman, noto chitarrista e musicologo, ha compilato questa affascinante collezione di 26 canzoni del leggendario chitarrista Blues Mississippi John Hurt. Oltre alle esperte trascrizioni di Stefan, il libro include un CD contenente le registrazioni originali di John Hurt, in modo da poter sentire la musica come era originariamente eseguita. Mississippi John Hurt ha avuto una carriera affascinante, in origine registrò una manciata di canzoni alla fine del 1920, e dopo essere stato dimenticato per quasi 30 anni, fu riscoperto da una nuova generazione di musicisti che comprendeva Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, e Stephen Sills. Ritrovato nel 1963, mentre viveva in una piccola città del Mississippi, da un ammiratore che lo ha rintracciato attraverso i testi del suo singolo "Avalon Blues" del 1928, Mississippi John Hurt è stato convinto ad andare a Washington, DC e iniziare una nuova carriera. E ha trascorso i successivi tre anni suonando e registrando. Oltre a trascrivere tutte le canzoni di questa raccolta, Stefan Grossman è stato anche allievo di John Hurt.

Contenuto:

Shake that Thing
Spike Driver's Blues
Casey Jones
Got the Blues, Can't Be Satisfied
Joe Turner Blues
Stocktime
Hey Baby, Right Away
Ain't Nobody But You babe
Make Me a Pallet on your Floor
Nobody's Dirty Business
Richlands Women Blues
Louis Collins
Blessed Be the Name
Praying On the Old Camp Grounds
Let the Mermaids Flirt With Me
Corrinna, Corrinna
Oh Mary Don't You Weep
Avalon Blues
Sliding Delta
Coffee Blues
Monday Morning Blues
Candyman
Trouble I've Had All My days
See See Rider
Stack O'Lee Blues
Big Leg Blues

 

Registrazioni originali VINTAGE, trasferite su CD dal 78 giri.

La musica di Mississippi John Hurt, trascritta da Stefan Grossman. Guitar Songbook tablature e CD esempi per chitarra acustica.

Serie: "i primi maestri di chitarra Blues americano" di Stefan Grossman. 96 pagine.

Con tablature per chitarra, notazione standard, la melodia vocale, i testi, i nomi degli accordi e diagrammi degli accordi di chitarra. Blues e Country Blues.

 

INTRODUCTION by Stefan Grossman
This collection has been a pleasure to put together. I first
heard the records of Mississippi John Hurt when I was
15years old. He had recorded 20 sides for the OKeh
record company in 1928of which 12 had been released.
During the folk revival ofthe 1960s,reissue albums began
to appear and many old blues recordings found their way
to the grooves of LPs. John Hurt's arrangements for "Spike
Driver Blues," "Frankie," "Stagolee," "Nobody's Dirty
Business," Candyman," "Louis Collins," and "Got the Blues
Can't Be Satisfied" became necessary ingredients to any
young fingerpicker's repertoire.
John Hurt's old recordings had a magnetic atmosphere
and a strong lyrical contents that made them attractive
to both players and listeners. His guitar style was easily
recognizable. The alternating bass pattern evoked the
piano sounds of turn-of-the-century America and against
this a melody line was interweaved. The same approach
was explored during the mid-1950s by White guitarists
such as Merle Travis and Chet Atkins. By the 1960s,this
guitar technique was completely embraced by folksingers
as far afield as Bob Dylan, Dave Van Ronk, and Stephen
Stills to Joan Baez.
Then in 1963,miracle of miracles occurred when Tom
Hoskin decided to try to locate the "legendary" Mississippi
John Hurt. John had recorded a song during his 1928
sessions titled "Avalon Blues." The current maps of
Mississippi did not show a town called Avalon, but in an
1878atlas, Avalon was shown as a small dot between
Greenwood and Grenada, Mississippi. Tom headed south
from Washington, D.C.and two days later pulled into
Stinson's store, an old combination gas station, general
store, and post office, which, with the owner's house,
comprised the entirety of Avalon. Tom asked several men
if they had ever heard or knew about a singer called
Mississippi John Hurt and was amazed when the pointed
down the dirt road and said, "'bout a mile down that road,
third mail box up the hill. Can't miss it."
Tom brought John up to Washington, D.C.to record and
perform and almost immediately Mississippi John Hurt was
a hit on the folk music scene. He performed at folk clubs,
The Newport Folk Festival, college campuses, and even the
Johnny Carson Tonight Show!
I met Mississippi John at his first concert in New York City.
Tom was a friend of mine and the chance to hear, as well
as meet, Mississippi John Hurt was almost too much for
me to imagine. The concert presented John and Doc Boggs
(another folk legend, but in this case in the story of white
five-string mountain banjo playing). After the concert, I
went backstage to say hellos and Tom insisted that I play
guitar for John and Doc. I picked a few of John's tunes that
I had transcribed from his 1928recordings. John started to
dance while Doc laughed and banged out time on his banjo
skin. This began my friendship with John Hurt that lasted
until his death.
Mississippi John Hurt was a wonderful teacher. He
patiently showed me his arrangements and licks as well
as giving me insight into life itself. John Hurt was a unique
man. He had a gentleness that could penetrate walls and
a voice that could relax your soul while your feet danced
to his guitar rhythms.
This collection brings together 26 great songs and
guitar arrangements. All the keys that John played in are
presented. On first listening, John Hurt's playing seems
deceptively easy, but to master his sound is quite a
challenge. He used three fingers to play. His ring and little
finger rested on the face of the guitar while he picked.
The source of John's unique sound can be found in his
thumb strokes. Basically, an alternating bass is used
throughout John's playing. The sound that is produced
can be described as "bum-chick." The first beat hits the
bass note with commitment but the second beat hits the
string hard enough to have the other strings vibrate. As a
result, a "chick" is created. This is fundamental to John's
style. The bass can stand by itself without any melody
lines and still sound musical. When the treble lines
are added, these act almost as embellishments. The
"John Hurt sound" is all in yourthumb.
Fortunately, there is some footage of John that comes
from Pete Seeger's Rainbow Quest. Seeing John play
will help you to better understand the power and
eloquence of his playing and singing. I have included
these performances in my video series Country Blues
Guitar Parts 1,2, & 3(Stefan Grossman's Guitar Workshop). I strongly recommend these.

MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT by Jas Obrecht
Songster and bluesman, John Hurt had a beautifully
syncopated fingerpicking style and a gentle, guileless
voice. After making a handful of 78s, he faded from view
during the Depression and then arose phoenix-like during
the 1960s.Throughout his career, his music provided an
aural passport to a bygone age of cakewalks and rags,
parables and polite society.
Hurt was 35 years old when he journeyed alone from the
Mississippi hill country to Memphis for his first session.
It was Valentine's Day, 1928,and the experience was not
entirely pleasant: "A great big hall with only Mr. Rockwell,
one engineer, and myself," John remembered. "I sat on
a chair and they pushed the microphone right up close
to my mouth and told me not to move after they found the
right position. Oh, I was nervous, and my neck was sore for
days after." Eight songs were cut that day, but only a single
OKeh 78 was issued-"Nobody's Dirty Business" backed
by "Frankie," one of his few songs in open tuning. Hurt was
paid about $20 per song, a good fee for unproven talent.
The original note on Columbia's file cards for the matrixes"
old time music"-was later changed to "race."
Hurt headed home and worked another season; under his
sharecropping arrangement atthe time, half of the corn
and cotton he grew on 13 acres was turned over to the land
owner. In November, IJ. Rockwell wrote Hurt inviting him to
record again. John's December 21st session in New York City
produced usable version of "Ain't No Tellin'" (essentially new
words set to the "Make Me Pallet On the Floor" melody),
the murder ballad "Louis Collins," and "Avalon Blues." On
December 28, 1928,Hurt was back in the studio for his final
and most fruitful prewar session, cutting three spirituals
and five blues. Of all Hurt's prewar sides, the one he
composed his first day in New York, "Avalon Blues,"
proved to be the most important. Nearly four decades
after its release, it would lead to his rediscovery:
"Avalon my home town,
always on my mind,
Avalon my home town,
always on my mind,
Pretty mama's in Avalon,
want me there all the time"
During the 1920s,when its population was less than a
hundred, Avalon, Mississippi was little more than a
ramshackle rail settlement between Greenwood and
Grenada. Born in nearby Teoc on July 3, 1893,John Smith
Hurt spent most of his life living there in poverty. He had
seven older brothers and two sisters. He made it through
the fifth grade at St. James School, and around this time
began teaching himself guitar. "I always tried to make my
strings say just what I say," he'd explain. "I grab it and go
my way with it. Use my melody with it." By age 12,John
was singing "Good Mornin' Miss Carrie," "Satisfied,"
Frankie and Johnny," and other non-blues songs at house
parties, sometimes working with a fiddler. His gentle voice,
relaxed feel, and light, idiosyncratic fingerpicking made
his music far better suited for front-porch listening than
cornfield stomps. Some nights, he remembered, he and a
pal would awaken the neighbors with their playing. "We go
along to people's private homes, way in the night, midnight,
one o'clock. 'Serenadin" we call it. We knew you well, we
tip up on the porch and we'd wake you up with music. Well,
you might lay there and listen, you might not get up and ask
us in. Sometimes you'd get up and say come on in."
Once, when he was asked about the first blues he'd learned,
Hurt played "Lazy Blues," a simple, original arrangement
in E major that had more in common with Memphis players
than Delta musicians such as Robert Johnson:
"Wake up in the morning, a towel tied round her head,
When you speak to her, she swear she almost dead"
During "Talking Casey," Hurt used a slide to imitate bells
and quote familiar melodies-a technique similar to Blind
Willie McTell in Atlanta-while thumbing train rhythms on
his bass strings. He composed in many keys-E, A, 0, and
G,which was especially convenient for a strong alternating
bass-but unlike many Delta musicians seemed to prefer C.
Much of his music was probably a souvenir of his childhood.
Asked by a white landlord how he created melodies,
Hurt responded, "Well, sir, I just make it sound like I think it
ought to."
After his father passed away, John helped his mother
raise cotton, corn, and potatoes. To make ends meet, he
sometimes hired himself out to a neighboring farm, while
his mother washed clothes and cooked. During 1915,Hurt
worked for the Illinois Central jacking up and leveling...

EARLY MASTER'S of AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR Rev. Gary Davis
Book & CD (F3176GTA)

EDITED AND TRANSCRIBED BY STEFAN GROSSMAN
The Early Masters of American Blues Guitar series provides the unique opportunity to study the true roots of modern blues. Stefan Grossman, noted roots-blues guitarist and musicologist, has compiled this amazing collection of 26 songs, transcribed exactly as performed by blues great Mississippi John Hurt. In addition to Stefan's expert transcriptions, the book includes 2 CDs containing John Hurt's original recordings so you can experience the music as it was originally performed.

Each book in the Early Masters series contains the original artist's performances, transferred
from vintage 78s. These original recordings are apiece of musical history, and the only way to
hear and appreciate the powerful feel and impact of these pivotal, early music giants.

ALSO AVAILABLE IN THE EARLY MASTERS OF AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR SERIES 

Prezzo: €27,99
€27,99

KEB' MO' selections from JUST LIKE YOU LIBRO GUITAR TABLATURE Just Like You-Angelina-Lullaby Baby Blues-Every Morning

KEB' MO', selections from KEB' MO' and JUST LIKE YOU. TABLATURE

LIBRO CON TABLATURE PER CHITARRA. 

Series: Authentic Guitar-Tab EDITION INCLUDES COMPLETE SOLOS
Modern acoustic blues from the H.C. Handy Award winner for Acoustic Blues.

Titles are:

* The Action
* Angelina
* Dirty Low Down and Bad
* Every Morning
* Hand It Over
* Just Like You
* Lullaby Baby Blues
* More Than One Way Home
* Perpetual Blues Machine
* She Just Wants to Dance
* That's Not Love
* You Can Love Yourself.

Prezzo: €130,00
€130,00

LONNIE JOHNSON STEFAN GROSSMAN'S EARLY MASTERS AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR CD TABLATURE

LONNIE JOHNSON, STEFAN GROSSMAN'S EARLY MASTERS OF AMERICAN BLUES GUITAR. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES, CON 2 CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

Stefan Grossman's Early Masters of American Blues Guitar: Lonnie Johnson
Lonnie Johnson / transcr. Stefan Grossman

ORIGINAL RECORDINGS

SERIES: Stefan Grossman’s Early Masters of American Blues Guitar
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD

The Early Masters of American Blues series provides the unique opportunity to study the true roots of modern blues. Stefan Grossman, noted roots-blues guitarist and musicologist, has compiled this fascinating collection of 16 songs, transcribed exactly as performed by legendary blues master Lonnie Johnson. In addition to Stefan's expert transcriptions, the book includes a CD containing the original recordings of Lonnie Johnson so you can hear the music as he performed it.

One of the most influential blues artists of the 20th century, Lonnie Johnson began his 50-year music career in the early 1920s, and continued to perform and record until his passing in 1970. Recording both as a soloist and with legends like Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, and Eddie Lang, Lonnie Johnson's influence can still be heard today, from the work of blues guitar greats like T-Bone Walker and B.B. King, to a whole new generation of blues players.

INTRODUCTION

by Stefan Grossman
I grew up in New York City. During the 1960s I had the
unique opportunity to see and study with a host of great
blues guitar players: Mississippi John Hurt, Son House,
Skip James, Fred McDowell, Mance Lipscomb, Bukka
White, and especially Rev. Gary Davis.
I spent several years traveling up to the Bronx every
weekend to learn guitar from Rev. Davis. He had a vast
repertoire of songs and guitar styles and a memory that
was as sharp as a razor. He would talk about recordings
and performers of country bluesmen from the 1920s and
1930s. Usually he was disdainful of their talents-Blind
Lemon Jefferson could play the guitar but he cried when
he sang; Blind Boy Fuller couldn't play the guitar and
needed lessons; using a bottleneck was cheating. But
Rev. Davis had his own guitar heros-Blind Blake had a
sportin' right hand, Willie Walker was a guitar giant and
onnie Johnson was the king of the fretboard.
s a teenager, I absorbed each word and note of Rev.
Davis as the gospel. I bought blues albums, searched for
old 78s, and went to clubs to see blues guitarists. Gerdes
olk City was a center for concerts in New York City and
one week I discovered that Lonnie Johnson would be
playing there. With great eagerness I went down to see
he "king of fretboard."
onnie was playing a cheap electric guitar and using
a plectrum. His blues were a combination of late 1940s
&B tunes and folk blues played in a very diluted
ashion. His singing had a cocktail lounge edge. All in all
I was disappointed. I saw and heard nothing that I would
ant to play.
uring the next few years, I saw Lonnie Johnson in
arious blues festivals and club appearances. I was
ever impressed but in the back of my mind I had Rev.
avis' unequivacable recommendation that Lonnie was
one of the best that had ever played the blues.
Nhat a fool a teenager can be! If only one of my record
ollector friends would have played me some of Lonnie's
great instrumental tracks from the 1920s, I might have
een converted on the spot! As was, I didn't really
delve into Johnson's playing until 20 years later. During
e 1960s, Lonnie's brand of blues was out of fashion
with both record collectors and blues enthusiasts. The
Delta blues was high on everyone's mind and guitar
playing fingers. The steady flow of melodic riffs and
runs that Lonnie recorded in the 1920s/1930s were too
sophisticated and jazz oriented for blues guitarists and
record collectors.
Many of the fingerstyle blues guitarists of the 1960s
eventually got interested in single-line improvisation and
electric blues styles. This usually started with studying
B.B. King and then Albert King and Freddie King. The
road travelled backwards in time from players of the
'60s to '50s (T-Bone Walker) to '40s (Charlie Christian)
and eventually ended in the '30s and '20s with Lonnie
Johnson. The roots of modern electric blues and rock
guitar can be found in the playing of Lonnie Johnson.
Lonnie was sadly overlooked in his later years by blues
and guitar playing historians. He was never interviewed
in depth about either his life or his guitar techniques.
What a crime; especially as his guitar playing has so
many mysteries.
When listening to Lonnie's early great recordings, one
is struck with how spectacular, complex and innovative
they are. What is very unusual is that the tonality and
key is the same for so many tunes. He might have his
guitar tuned low, or play it with a capo, or use a twelve
string instead of a six string but the chord shapes are
always based around the key of D. Document Records
(Eipeldauerstr. 23/43/5, A-1220 Vienna, Austria) have
released a 7-volume CD set Lonnie Johnson-The
Complete Recorded Works (each CD containing over 20
titles) and within those 140 plus tracks, you will only find
3 or 4 tunes in a key other than D! Yet, Lonnie's recording
output in the 1940s and 1950s has little in common
with blues in D, and he in fact rarely played in that key
or style during these years. I personally CCllHlUlcile
another guitarist whose style and technique changed so
dramatically, especially after it was so widely acclaime
and imitated. This is a very strange phenomenon that
only Lonnie could have helped us to understand.
There are a host of great instrumentals and blues
accompaniments that Lonnie recorded in the '20s and
'30s. This book presents a collection of 16 instrumental
 


EDITED AND TRANSCRIBED BY STEFAN GROSSMAN

The Early Masters of American Blues Guitar series provides the unique
opportunity to study the true roots of modern blues. Stefan Grossman, noted
roots-blues guitarist and musicologist. has compiled this fascinating
collection of 16 early blues guitar classics as performed by the legendary
Lonnie Johnson. In addition to Stefan's expert transcriptions, the book
includes a CD containing the original recordings so you can experience
the music as it was originally performed.

Titles:

Mr. Johnson's Blues
Love Story Blues
To Do This, You Got to Know How
Blues In G
Away Down In the Alley Blues
Sweet Woman You Can't Go Wrong
I'm So Tired of Living All Alone
Bitin' Flea Blues
Life Saver Blues
Blue Ghost Blues
Uncle Ned Don't Use Your Head
Cat You Been Messin' Aroun'
There Is No Justice
Go Back to Your No Good Man
Stomping 'Em Along Slow
Woke Up With the Blues In My Fingers

Each book in the Earlv Masters series contains the original artist's performances, transferred
from vintage 78s. These original recordings are a piece of musical history, and the only way to
hear and appreciate the powerful feel and impact of these pivotal, early music giants.

Prezzo: €29,99
€29,99

JOHNSON ROBERT THE NEW TRANSCRIPTIONS-Sweet Home Chicago-Ramblin' On My Mind-Come On In My Kitchen

JOHNSON ROBERT, THE NEW TRANSCRIPTIONS. SHEET MUSIC BOOK with GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES,

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA CON :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

32-20 Blues -Come On In My Kitchen -Cross Road Blues (Crossroads) -Dead Shrimp Blues -Drunken Hearted Man -From Four Until Late -Hell Hound On My Trail -Honeymoon Blues -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 -Last Fair Deal Gone Down -Little Queen Of Spades -Love In Vain Blues -Malted Milk -Me And The Devil Blues -Milkcow's Calf Blues -Phonograph Blues -Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil) -Ramblin' On My Mind -Stones In My Passway -Stop Breakin' Down Blues -Sweet Home Chicago -Terraplane Blues -They're Red Hot -Traveling Riverside Blues -Walkin' Blues -When You Got A Good Friend -32-20 Blues -Come On In My Kitchen -Cross Road Blues (Crossroads) -Dead Shrimp Blues -Drunken Hearted Man -From Four Until Late -Hell Hound On My Trail -Honeymoon Blues -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 -Last Fair Deal Gone Down -Little Queen Of Spades -Love In Vain Blues -Malted Milk -Me And The Devil Blues -Milkcow's Calf Blues -Phonograph Blues -Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil) -Ramblin' On My Mind -Stones In My Passway -Stop Breakin' Down Blues -Sweet Home Chicago -Terraplane Blues -They're Red Hot -Traveling Riverside Blues -Walkin' Blues -When You Got A Good Friend. TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Robert Johnson

Description
Every Robert Johnson song in standard notation and guitar tablature. Includes an in-depth introduction, extensive performance notes, lyrics and photographs of the greatest of the Delta Blues pioneers.

A must-have for all blues guitarists, this exciting publication is the most complete Robert Johnson collection ever! It includes note-for-note transcriptions in notes & tab for all 29 songs ever recorded by this elusive legend, plus two alternate takes. Newly discovered authentic tunings and capo placements are also part of the package. Also includes an introduction. 200 pages

Table of contents:

Come On In My Kitchen
Cross Road Blues (Crossroads)
Dead Shrimp Blues
Drunken Hearted Man
From Four Until Late
Hell Hound On My Trail
Honeymoon Blues
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
Last Fair Deal Gone Down
Little Queen Of Spades
Love In Vain Blues
Malted Milk
Me And The Devil Blues
Milkcow's Calf Blues
Phonograph Blues
Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped The Devil)
Ramblin' On My Mind
Stones In My Passway
Stop Breakin' Down Blues
Sweet Home Chicago
Terraplane Blues
They're Red Hot
32-20 Blues
Traveling Riverside Blues
Walkin' Blues
When You Got A Good Friend

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

Acoustic guitar magazine, ROOTS AND BLUES FINGERSTYLE GUITAR. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA BLUES, CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TECNICA, OPEN TUNINGS, SLIDE, 

 

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 TABLATURE

Acoustic Guitar Private Lessons
Series: Guitar Collection
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB
Arranger: Steve James
PRIVATE LESSONS

25 SONGS TO PLAY
BLUES, RAGTIME, COUNTRY
Learn the Traditions techniques, and tunes

OPEN TUNINGS 
SLIDE
From the publishers of ACOUSTIC GUITAR MAGAZINE

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

It's been well over three decades since I started playing the guitar. From the outset, my creative point of departure has always been American folk, blues, and old-time country styles. This fascination with our musical roots has persisted throughout my career as a performing and recording artist, writer, and teacher. I've had occasion to playa lot of styles of music, from bluegrass to rockabiIly to contemporary folk ... bar-walkin' R&Bwith sax legend Clifford Scott to Chicago blues with Buddy Guy and full-on rock 'n' roll with Bo Diddley. It always seemed that, no matter what the style, the basic musical vocabulary always came straight from the roots.

I've been a contributing editor to Acoustic Guitar magazine since the publication started in 1990, and, in recent years, I've also served as an instructor/performer at several guitar festivals that the magazine has sponsored in the San Francisco Bay area Whether writing an article or teaching a guitar clinic, my approach to presenting this material encompasses technique, repertoire, and history, along with anecdotes and lore concerning the music and musicians. Roots and Blues Fingerstyle Guitar takes a similar approach, incorporating all these elements into one book and CD.

A large part of this text is an instruction manual for the beginning- and intermediate-level fingerstyle guitarist. Twenty-five tunes are transcribed in tablature and notation along with chord diagrams and explanatory notes. These include my own arrangements for blues, rags, and country themes along with excerpts from the recorded works of some roots guitar pioneers. Specific techniques are pointed out as they occur in the music. The accompanying CDcontains recorded examples from the songs as they are transcribed, played slowly and up to tempo with reference pitches for retuning where needed. Although the material is not necessarily sequenced in order of difficulty, starting with the first chapter and playing through the basics is suggested regardless of experience level.

The balance of the book is history, homily, and hooraw in various combinations. Members of my audiences often tell me that the stories about this music and the many remarkable people and circumstances that have contributed to its development over the years make the songs more real to them. Likewise, students seem more motivated to learn and practice when they feel like the tunes are old friends (which they are). This is good, because learning to play this style is largely a function of dogged, repetitive reptile-brain, your-dinner's-getting-cold practice. The good old southern American big-thumb guitar method is originally a rural art, so it doesn't take a socio-ethnologist to figure out that the early practitioners were farmers like Mance Lipscomb and Sam McGee. Pitching hay or plowing with a mule isn't as easy on the mitts as a pre-recital warm-up; but what they lacked in interdigital articulation, the inventors of twang made up in pure squeeze powerNwhich came in handy at barn dances and country suppers where the first set was three hours long. Times have changed, but the musical work ethic persists. The express train and church bells sound of "Buckdancer's Choice" or the sledgehammer Delta crunch of "Roll and Tumble" doesn't cascade from the box with the first love pat. One way I've found to keep things jolly while working on the cusp of carpal tunnel syndrome is to recall a few of the things I've heard or experienced over the years while passing up hot meals and paychecks to verify drawled rumors about primal string noise to be heard at the fourth house after the pavement stops. So these pages include excerpts from the well-thumbed old travel guide that leads to this music. When their honky-tonk and rock 'n' roll progeny came down the road with the first electric line, some of these tunes were already rocking on the porch saying: "What took you so long?" Steve James, Texas

 

LEARN TO PLAY THESE SONGS:

- Amos Johnson Rag - TRADITIONAL
- Bear Creek Hop - TRADITIONAL
- Blues In A 
- Buckdancer's Choice - SAM McGEE
- Buddy Bolden's Blues - TRADITIONAL
- Crow Jane - TRADITIONAL - arranged SKIP JAMES
- Guitar Rag - TRADITIONAL
- I Got To Cross That River Of Jordan - TRADITIONAL - BLIND WILLIE McTELL
- I Will Turn Your Money Green - FURRY LEWIS
- Jack O' Diamonds / Rye Whiskey - TRADITIONAL
- John Henry - TRADITIONAL
- Judge Harsh Blues - FURRY LEWIS
- Liberty - TRADITIONAL

- Milwaukee Blues - TRADITIONAL - CHARLIE POOLE
- Railroad Bill - TRADITIONAL 
- Railroad Blues - SAM McGEE
- Roll And Tumble Blues - HAMBONE WILLIE NEWBER
- Sebastopol - TRADITIONAL - HENRY WORRAL
- Spanish Fandango - TRADITIONAL - HENRY WORRAL
- Stack Lee's Blues - PORK CHOP
- Sugar Babe - TRADITIONAL - MANCE LIPSCOMB
- Take Me Back - TRADITIONAL
- Things About Comin My Way - TAMPA RED
- Way Out On The Desert - ROOSEVELT T. WILLIAMS 

 

Accessible, authentic arrangements

Standard notation, tablature, and chord diagrams

Vocal melodies and lyrics

CD with all the music played slowly and up to tempo

Background on the artists and songs

Historic photos

 

contents:
 
 CD Track List
 Introduction
 Music Notation Key
 Theory and Harmony Basics
 The Box in America (a Brief History)
 
FUNDAMENTALS
Alternating-Bass Fingerpicking
  Take Me Back
  Sugar Babe
  Milwaukee Blues
 
Open Tunings
  Sebastopol
  Spanish Fandango
 
Bottleneck Slide
 John Henry
 Railroad Bill
 
SONGS AND STYLES
Eight Views on the Blues
  Crow Jane
  Things About Cominl My Way
  Jack o' Diamonds
  Roll and Tumble
  Stack Leels Blues
  Blues in A
  Buddy Boldenls Blues
  Way Out on the Desert
 
Back to the Country
  Liberty
  Bear Creek Hop
  Amos Johnson Rag
  Guitar Rag
  I Got to Cross That River of Jordan
  Spanish Fandango
 
Naturals: Sam McGee and Furry Lewis
  Buckdancerls Choice
  Railroad Blues
  Judge Harsh Blues
 I Will Turn Your Money Green
 
FURTHER TRAVELS
Guitars and Gear
  Essential Recordings
  Reference Materials
  Acknowledgments
  About the Author
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WOLF HOWLIN', FEATURING HUBERT SUMLIN ON GUITAR. TABLATURE

WOLF HOWLIN', FEATURING HUBERT SUMLIN ON GUITAR. TAB.

Featuring Hubert Sumlin on Guitar
Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Howlin' Wolf

Includes transcriptions, performance notes and lessons for 13 classic blues songs, including, 72 pages

Table of contents
All Night Boogie
Baby How Long
Forty-Four
Going Down Slow
How Many More Years
Howlin' Blues
I'm Leavin' You
Killing Floor
Moanin' At Midnight
Poor Boy
Sitting On Top Of The World
Smokestack Lightning
Who's Been Talking

Prezzo: €20,99
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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. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH GUITAR 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

MUDDY WATERS - DEEP BLUES

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

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