BEGINNING FINGERSTYLE BLUES GUITAR Arnie Berle Mark Galbo CD TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA SPARTITI
BEGINNING FINGERSTYLE BLUES GUITAR, Arnie Berle, Mark Galbo. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE .
LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES CON CD .
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE .
About Beginning Fingerstyle Blues Guitar For guitar. Instructional and Blues. Beginner. Instructional book and examples CD. Guitar tablature, standard notation, chord names, guitar chord diagrams and instructional text. 96 pages.
With guitar tablature, standard notation, chord names, guitar chord diagrams and instructional text. Instructional and Blues.
A step-by-step method for learning this rich and powerful style. Takes you from the fundamentals of fingerpicking to five authentic blues tunes.
BEGINNING FINGERSTYLE BLUES GUITAR
Series: Music Sales America
Publisher: Music Sales America
Format: Softcover with CD – TAB
Authors: Arnie Berle, Mark Galbo
A step-by-step method for learning this rich and powerful style. Takes you from the fundamentals of fingerpicking to five authentic blues tunes. Includes graded exercises, illustrated tips, plus standard notation and tablature.
Inventory #HL 14003799
ISBN: 9780825625565
UPC: 752187713906
Publisher Code: AM71390
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
98 pages
One day back in March of 1988 a oung man named Mark Galbo
THE BLUES
Well before the beginning of the twentieth century there existed in America a large body of music performed by black people for black people. It included minstrel shows, work songs, field cries or hollers, and spirituals. However, at some time during the 1890s no one knows any exact dates-another kind of music could be heard in rural areas of the Deep South. This new music came to be called "the blues" sometime around 1900. Ma Rainey, quoted in Sandra R. Lieb's excellent biography Ma Rainey, Mother of the Blues, says that she first heard the word "blues" applied to a song she heard sung by a little girl on a street corner in 1902. Although the blues emerged from all over the South, many of the most important and influential blues musicians came from Mississippi. There, scores of impoverished, wandering performers accompanied themselves on the guitar at turpentine and lumber camps, roadside cafes, railroad stations, and street corners. Out of many a few were recorded and have become famous among aficionados of early blues. Bluesmen like Charlie Patton, Robert Johnson, Son House, and Bukka White helped develop a style known as country blues which has been copied over and over again throughout the world. Country blues were about unrequited love, loneliness, troubles at work, the desire to travel (I got to keep movin), or of specific events. "Backwater Blues" told of a flood on the Mississippi River. Other songs were about legendary personalities like C.C. Rider and Stagger Lee.
The early street musicians would sing their stories, adapting the musical form to their lyrics. It might have taken them nine, twelve, thirteen, or any number of measures to get through a verse. Their melodies were simple, direct, and elemental; their accompaniments often consisted of nothing more than a single chord or a repeated riff. However, the spread in popularity of the blues led inevitably to its modification and standardization. Ever larger numbers of phonograph owners picked up an interest in the blues and favored records that were to their own tastes. Bands began to play the blues not just as accompaniments but as instrumental pieces. W.C. Handy, who came to be known as "the Father of the Blues," wrote down songs so that they could be published and sold as sheet music. Handy himself receives credit ...
Contents
Origins Of The Blues
Preparing To Play Our First Blues
Preparing To Play A Blues In G
Preparing To Play A Blues In E
Melody Notes
Eighth Notes, Dotted Notes, And Syncopation
Blue Notes
Fretting-Hand Techniques
Picking-Hand Techniques
Playing Chords In The Higher Positions
Vamps
Singing The Blues
Five Blues Pieces
CONTENTS:



