CHITARRA - GUITAR

GUITAR JOURNALS BLUES. Mel Bay CD TABLATURE

GUITAR JOURNALS BLUES. 120 pagine. CD TABLATURE

Product Description:
Mel Bay's latest series, Guitar Journals, is the ultimate eference guide of studies and solos in several different genres. This fantastic blues volume contains exercises on barre chords, power chords, progressions, strum patterns, hammer-ons, pull-offs, bends, double stops, scales, licks and also a wide variety of tunes. Perfect for the student to professional musician's everyday use! All music in notation and tablature. Hard cover, covered spiral binding and premium stock paper make this a volume so beautifully printed and bound and containing so much valuable information that you will treasure it for years to come!

- Ultimate guide of blues exercises and solos and perfect reference manual for everyday use
- Barre chords, power chords, progressions, strum patterns, hammer-ons, pull-offs, bends, double stops, scales, licks AND a wide variety of tunes
- Ideal for the student to professional musician
- Beautiful hard cover with covered spiral binding and premium paper
- Companion recording
- In notation and tablature


Format: Book/CD Set
Series: Guitar Journals

Contents:


Rhythm Guitar
The Blues Progression
Like A Shadow
Strum Patterns
Baby Don't Love Me
6/8 and 12/8 Blues
Barre Chords
Power Chords
Smithfield Boogie
Good Mornin Blues
Midnight Drive
Blues Comping
Why Do You?
Doubling The Bass Line
Turnarounds
The Tie
The Hammer-On
The Pull-Off
The Slide
The Bend
Double Stops
The Blues Scale
Mixolydian Mode
Blues Licks
The Easy Chair
Slow Blues Solo
Rhythm and Brews
Fingerpicking Solos
Steady Bass Solo No. 1
Steady Bass Solo No. 2
Alternating Bass Style
Blues In E
Boogie Woogie Bass Style
Boogie Woogie Solo
Frankie and Johnny
Bill Bailey
Franklin Blues
Bob's Blues
Frogs For Snakes
Hurt So Good
St. James Infirmary
Skip On Home
Slide Guitar
Motherless Children
Good Morning Little School Boy
Open G Tuning
Burning House
Jubilee Jamboree
Open E Tuning
Red and Blue
Still Staggerin
Black-Jack
L & N Blues
Kick Around Rag
Goin To Bullhead City
Tywhoppity

Prezzo: €24,95
€24,95

CHRISTMAS MUSIC FOR ELECTRIC GUITAR John Kiefer LIBRO CD TABLATURE SCHIACCIANOCI CIAIKOWSKY

CHRISTMAS MUSIC FOR ELECTRIC GUITAR, John Kiefer. Quattro miniature da Tchaikovsky Nutcracker Suite, Johann Pachelbel Canon, ecc. CD TABLATURE.

LIBRO DI MUSICA CLASSICA, PER CHITARRA ELETTRICA CON CD.  
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE. 

Libro contiene principalmente la musica Natalizia classica, trascritta per una, due, o tre chitarre elettriche.Queste trascrizioni sono dotate di notazioni standard e tablature e predisposte per essere eseguite con pick, o hybrid picking. Anche se certi pezzi arrangiate per la chitarra standard, altri richiedono la chitarra elettrica o la chitarra con cutaway. La registrazione presenta l'esecuzione di tutti brani del libro con una e massimo otto chitarre che suonano contemporaniamente. Le ultime quattro tracce del CD presentano certe tracce precedenti senza la prima chitarra così usando questi tracce uno può fare esercizi o suonare con CD. Le brani selezionati sono: "Carol of the Bells", Quattro miniature dal "Lo Schiaccia Noci" di Tchaikovsky , Kannon di Johann Pachelbel e altri.


Product Description:This book features Christmas music of primarily classical origins, transcribed for one, two, or three electric guitars. These transcriptions were notated in standard notation and tablature and are meant to be performed with a pick, or using hybrid picking. Even though a few of the pieces may be played on a standard guitar, the others require an electric guitar or a guitar with a cutaway. The recording features performances of all of the music in the book with anywhere from one to as many as eight guitars sounding simultaneously. The last four tracks of the CD feature certain previous tracks with the first guitar omitted. By using these tracks as accompaniment one can practice or perform with the CD. Selections include Carol of the Bells, Four miniatures from Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite, Johann Pachelbel's Canon, and more.


Product Number: 98673BCD
Format: Book/CD Set

Prezzo: €21,99
€21,99

THE SALUTATION Collection Christmas Carols from England Duck Baker CD TABLATURE FINGERSTYLE GUITAR

THE SALUTATION, A Collection of Christmas Carols from England, Ireland, Scotland, Sweden, Germany, Italy and France, ARRANGED FOR FINGERSTYLE GUITAR, Duck Baker. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE .

LIBRO DI MUSICA FOLK, CON CD .

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :

PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.


Product Description:
This collection of carols arranged for guitar solo brings together twenty-four melodies that have had broad appeal through the ages. They were a spontaneous expression of musical joy that occurred over much of northern Europe in the fifteenth century, coinciding with the dawning of the modern age and the ending of the long medieval night. The selections include universal favorites, some tunes which are popular in their native lands and reasonably well-known elsewhere, and others which are unfamiliar even in their homelands. Some familiar texts, including "Away in a Manger" and "Angels from the Realms of Glory," have been set to different tunes. Notes on the origin of each tune are included. Written in notation and tablature. The companion CD features performances of all of the tunes, with some grouped into medleys.

Product Number: 99815BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 078662602X
UPC: 796279040402
ISBN13: 9780786626021
Series: Non-Series
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.

Contents:
Song Title: Composer/Source:
A Virgin Most Pure arr. Duck Baker
Angelus Ad Virginum arr. Duck Baker
Es Ist Ein' Ros' Entsprungen arr. Duck Baker
Furry Day Carol arr. Duck Baker
Good Christian Men Rejoice arr. Duck Baker
I Saw Three Ships arr. Duck Baker
Il Est Né arr. Duck Baker
In Bethlehem arr. Duck Baker
Let All Earthly Flesh Keep Silent arr. Duck Baker
Noël Nouvelet arr. Duck Baker
O Come, O Come Emmanuel arr. Duck Baker
Patapan arr. Duck Baker
Rorate arr. Duck Baker
The Bagpipers' Carol arr. Duck Baker
The Blessed Virgin's Lullaby arr. Duck Baker
The Boys' Carol arr. Duck Baker
The Holly and the Ivy arr. Duck Baker
The Salutation arr. Duck Baker
The Snow Lay on the Ground arr. Duck Baker
The Wexford Carol arr. Duck Baker
Trettondedagsmarschen arr. Duck Baker
What Is This Fragrance? arr. Duck Baker
While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks arr. Duck Baker

Prezzo: €45,99
€45,99

25 GREAT COUNTRY GUITAR SOLOS Dave Rubin-Hal Leonard CD TABLATURE SPARTITI LIBRO

25 GREAT COUNTRY GUITAR SOLOS. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA COUNTRY CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

Transcriptions · Lessons · Bios · Photos
Series: Guitar Book
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Dave Rubin

From Merle Travis and Chet Atkins to Vince Gill and Brad Paisley, this book/CD pack offers an inside look at the genesis of country guitar. Provides solo transcriptions in notes & tab, lessons on how to play them, guitarist bios, equipment notes, photos, history, and much more. The CD contains full-band demos of every solo in the book, and features Amazing Slow Downer software so Mac and PC users can adjust the recordings to any tempo without changing pitch!

Country music has come a long way since Ernest Tubb's "Walking the Floor Over You," featuring Fay "Smitty" Smith (staff guitarist at Dallas radio station KGKO) on electric guitar, became a hit in 1941. At that time, amplified guitars were not allowed at the famed Grand Ole Opry, but Nashville's conservative powers that be recognized commercial potential when they heard it, and so lifted that antiquated ban in 1943. And when the Francis Craig Orchestra likewise passed that magic million mark with "Near You," in 1947, Nashville's modem era commenced.

The guitar has always the backbone of country music, even when it was used mainly to provide rhythm for fiddlers. But with the emergence in the late 1940s of Merle Travis and Chet Atkins-electric country guitar's foremost pioneers-the instrument was suddenly elevated to a new iconic status. In the early 1950s, pickers such as Jimmy Bryant, Joe Maphis, James Burton, and Hank Garland, all of who were blessed with amazing chops, far outpaced blues and many jazz musicians. And while that esteemed group was clean and fast, each successive generation of players, from Jerry Reed and Albert Lee to Jerry Donahue, Danny Gatton, and Brent Mason, among others, were often even cleaner and faster.

Concomitantly, rock 'n' roll and rockabilly gained footing, and over time infiltrated the somewhat staid Nashville culture. This cultural phenomenon most significantly expanded country music's instrumental parameters, manifesting itself not only in longer and more aggressive distorted guitar solos, but also in more powerful chord progressions extending beyond the genre's typical I-IV-V changes and 2/4 time signatures. By the 1980s, country music made the leap from honky tonks and the Opry to arenas and stadiums, starring blackhatted "cowboys" with sharp-shooting lead guitarists. Purists may have been given pause, but the effect has been one to give country music heretofore undreamed of popularity among a younger demographic while providing a smooth test track for Nashville cats to bum the windings off their strings.

About the CD

This book's accompanying audio CD includes all twenty-five solos performed note for note with a full band and is playable on any CD player. For PC and MAC computer users, the CD is enhanced with Amazing Slow Downer software so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch!

The time code shown at the start of each solo transcription indicates the point at which the solo begins in the original recording.

All music on the CD performed by:

Guitar: Doug Boduch

Bass: Tom McGirr and Eric Hervey

Keyboards: Warren Wiegratz

Drums: Scott Schroedl

Recorded, mixed. and mastered by Jim Reith and Jake Johnson.


Inventory # HL 00699926
ISBN: 1423426401
UPC: 884088145125
Width: 9
Length: 12
104 pages


Contents:
 

SONG - GUITARIST - YEAR

Smoke, Smoke, Smoke (That Cigarette) - Merle Travis - 1947
Sugarfoot Rag - Hank Garland - 1949
Golden Rocket - Hank Snow - 1950
Chinatown, My Chinatown - Chet Atkins - 1953
Foggy Mountain Special - Lester Flatt - 1954
Stratosphere Boogie - Jimmy Bryant - 1954
Flying Fingers - Joe Maphis - 1957
Folsom Prison Blues - Luther Perkins - 1957
Hello Mary Lou - James Burton - 1961
I've Got a Tiger by the Tail - Don Rich - 1965
The Only Daddy That Will Walk the Line - Wayne Moss - 1968
Honky Tonk Night Time Man - Roy Nichols - 1974
East Bound and Down - Jerry Reed - 1977
Country Boy - Albert Lee - 1979
Highway 40 Blues - Ray Flacke - 1982
Mountain Music - Jeff Cook - 1982
That's the Way Love Goes - Reggie Young - 1983
Please, Please Baby - Pete Anderson - 1987
Elmira St. Boogie - Danny Gatton - 1991
Here's a Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares) - Wendell Cox, Richard Bennett - 1991
Mercury Blues - Brent Mason - 1992
One More Last Chance - Vince Gill - 1992
Hellecaster Theme - Will Ray - 1993
The Claw - Jerry Donahue - 1998
The World - Brad Paisley - 2005

Conclusion
About the Author

Guitar notation Legend

Prezzo: €26,99
€26,99

BACKUP TRAX: BASIC BLUES FOR GUITAR Dix Bruce BOOK & CD TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA LIBRO

BACKUP TRAX: BASIC BLUES FOR GUITAR. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI PENTAGRAMMA TABLATURE.

Learn to play 14 classic blues the best way--by doing! This book and CD provide your backup band as you explore Country and Urban, Acoustic and Electric, Delta, Texas, Chicago, Slide Guitar, Alternate Tuning, Traditional, and Modern styles in many different major and minor keys and in a variety of tempos. Melodies are first presented on the recording at a slow speed with just guitar, then repeated at regular speed with the band. Finally, you can play along with the hot blues rhythm section alone, and you’ve got the makings of a dynamite blues jam session. You’ll play all the leads and solos! Repeat a tune or passage as many times as you want at slow or regular speed. We’ll jam all night long! Beginners and intermediate players can practice basic skills. Advanced players can hone their improvisation chops. The split track recording allows you to hear either just the melody from one speaker, just the rhythm section from the other, or both for maximum flexibility and specific study. The book includes melodies, chord diagrams and guitar tablature.

Welcome to BackUp TRAX: Basic Blues - 14 pieces carefully chosen to represent a variety of tunes and keys encountered in the basic blues repertoire. BackUp TRAX: Basic Blues is a sampler of Country and Urban Blues, Acoustic and Electric Blues, Delta Blues,Texas Blues, Chicago Blues, Slide Guitar Blues, Traditional and Modem Blues in many different major and minor keys. Each tune is played by a crack backup band: guitar, bass, drums, keyboards and harmonica, which is sure to inspire you to play your best. Each tune is presented at the slow speed fIrst, followed by the regular speed version with melody, and fmally, the regular speed version where you supply all the leads. In each case the melody is panned to the right channel to allow you to isolate it as you study. The rhythm section is panned to the left channel (guitar on the slow versions, most of the band on the regular speed versions) so that you can also isolate it.Tuning tones are included at the beginning of the CD. Tips for working with BackUp TRAX: Basic Blues I designed BackUp TRAX to be a rhythm section for players of all abilities to jam along with and work out their soloing ideas. Though BackUp TRAX are not intended to be method books for improvising in the given style,! will offer suggestions here and there on how to approach the individual tunes. There are many good blues guitar methods on the market which examine the scales, chords and other elements that make up the style.The most important thing, though, is for you to play what you feel and discover your own voice in the process. This process is analogous to learning a new language: melodies, riffs, keys, and scales are your musical vocabulary, grammar and syntax. Along the way you'll experiment with different elements and discover how to combine them in ways that feel most natural to you and express your feelings best. The goal is to make the process second nature by training your head, fmgers, and soul in the mechanics of playing your instrument in your style. Ultimately it'll become as automatic as speech.Along the way, the most important thing is to have fun as you take the music wherever you want it to go. Here are a few suggestions for working with BackUP TRAX: Basic Blues. 1) Before you play, familiarize yourself with the melodies and chord progressions of each tune by listening and reading along. 2) Once you're acquainted with the tunes, memorize the melodies while playing along with the slow version of the piece. Gradually work your way up to the regular speed version. Knowing a song's melody and chord progression is essential in the improvisation process. Older blues and jazz players I know refer to improvisation as "takeoff," where the melody is the starting point for elaborating or "taking off" from the tune and inventing new melodic ideas. 3) Analyze the chords. All of the tunes are written with the classic chord progressions and in the various styles of basic blues. You'll find that the blues repertoire, literally thousands of tunes, is largely based on a very few distinct chord progressions combined in different ways to make up most of the tunes. Because of this simplicity of form, the blues genre is universal the world over. Recognizing these progressions is essential to understanding how a tune works and how it relates to other similar tunes. Note the number of measures in the form, for example, twelve bar blues, sixteen bar blues, or twenty four bar blues. Identify the key a tune is in and whether it's major or minor. Learn to recognize the elements of the progression and which chords are played where. For example, "two measures of I (one) followed by two measures of IV (four)." It's especially important to identify the chords by their Roman numeral names, which defIne a chord's function in a progression and key as opposed to their letter names which reveal much less.You'll also fInd that most professional musicians refer to chords in keys by their Roman numerals. It's a clear and concise way to communicate on stage and makes transposing from one key to another much easier. It all begins with the major scale. Look at the C major scale below with its notes (also called "scale degrees") numbered. Notice that we use Arabic and not Roman numerals. Generally Arabic numerals are used to name notes in a scale, Roman numerals to name chords in a key. "Wh" and "1/2" identify the whole and half step intervals between the notes of the major scale. Each major scale has seven different notes, "do" to "ti;' and seven different chords built on and named by them. This will remain the same for every key. 

Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 0786676698
UPC: 796279105545
ISBN13: 9780786676699
Series: Building Excellence Audio Series

Contents:

CD CONTENTS:
HOW BACKUP TRAX WORK:
FORWARD TO BACKUP TRAX
INTRODUCTION TO BACKUP TRAX: BASIC BLUES
CHORD, SCALE, & TRANSPOSITION CHART
MEMPHIS MINNIE BLUES (Uptempo Country Blues)
BORN TO DIE (Bottleneck/Slide)
WHEN I LAY MY BURDEN DOWN (Gospel/Country Blues)
KISSIN’ AIN’T NO CRIME (Medium 1950s R & B Rock Blues)
T-MODEL FORD BLUES (Shuffle)
C MINOR BLUES (Slow Modern/Urban Blues)
HONEY BABE (Uptempo Texas/Country Blues)
THE HIGHWAY BLUES (Slow Shuffle)
JUMP BLUES (Fast 1940s Rhythm & Blues)
FROGS FOR SNAKES (Very Slow Texas/Delta Blues)
G MINOR BLUES (Medium Modern/Urban Blues)
TUXEDO BLUES (Rock & Roll Rhumba)
ROCKABILLY BOOGIE (Very Fast Rockabilly)
CREAM IN MY COFFEE (Jazz Blues)
AFTERWARD
THE BAND
GUITAR CHORDS USED IN BACKUP TRAX: BASIC BLUES
BLUES GUITARISTS

Prezzo: €18,99
€18,99

JAZZ STANDARDS FOR SOLO GUITAR 13 Chord-Melody Jamie Findlay CD TABLATURE CHITARRA SPARTITI

JAZZ STANDARDS FOR SOLO GUITAR, 13 Jazz Favorites Arranged for Chord-Melody Guitar. Jamie Findlay. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA :

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE .  

 

JAZZ STANDARDS
13 Jazz Favorites Arranged for Chord-Melody Guitar

Series: Guitar Solo
Format: Softcover Audio Online – TAB
Composer: Various
13 solo jazz arrangements in notes & tab, with online audio access to demo recordings. Includes: All of Me • Blame It on My Youth • Edelweiss • If I Loved You • It Might as Well Be Spring • Misty • My Favorite Things • My Foolish Heart • Some Enchanted Evening • Stella by Starlight • Take the “A” Train • Yesterdays • Younger Than Springtime.

TITOLI : 

All Of Me
Blame It On My Youth
Edelweiss
If I Loved You
It Might As Well Be Spring
Misty
My Favorite Things
My Foolish Heart
Some Enchanted Evening
Stella By Starlight
Take The “A” Train
Yesterdays
Younger Than Springtime


Inventory #HL 00700174
ISBN: 9781423430438
UPC: 884088161453
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
96 pages

Prezzo: €29,99
€29,99

DADGAD ENCYCLOPEDIA Jim Goodin CD TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA LIBRO ACCORDATURA LIBRO

DADGAD ENCYCLOPEDIA, JIM GOODIN. LIBRO CON CD E TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA PER CHITARRA IN ACCORDATURA DADGAD, CON CD.
SPARTITI CON ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

Product Description:
Whether guitarists are new to open-tunings or already working with them, fingerstyle specialist Jim Goodin offers a progressive look at the popular D-based harp-like tuning. Classical, Celtic, blues, folk, gospel and several original compositions are represented in the 15 notation/tablature arrangements each arranged proportionately to offer beginning, intermediate and advanced fingerstyle players opportunities to grow their technique. Interspersed with the song arrangements are sections featuring major and minor scale studies and popular folk and jazz style chords. Includes a 15-track CD produced at Will Ackerman's Imaginary Road Studio where the book's arrangements were recorded. To round out this robust offering Jim includes thoughts about the origin of DADGAD, the songs, his technique with special how-to features such as one on playing natural and harp style harmonics and recommended listening CD's to expand listening knowledge on this tuning.

Product Number: 99934BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 0786676159
UPC: 796279103374
ISBN13: 9780786676156
Series: Encyclopedia
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.
Date Published: 1/16/2008
184 PAGES

Contents:

Opening Thoughts
Tuning Techniques - from “standard (EADGBE)” to DADGAD in seconds
Familiar Chords in DADGAD
Evolving the Fretboard I - The Majors
Passage (A Simple Study) – CD track 1
Fairest Lord Jesus – CD track 2
The Pretty Girl Milking the Cow – CD track 3
Who was Turlough O’Carolan?
Si Beag Si Mhor – CD track 4
Planxty Safaigh – CD track 5
Chords of Change, Chords of Growth
Evolving the Fretboard II – The Minors
Quiet Moments – CD track 6
Moroccan Bluz – CD track 7
Thoughts on Music and Seeking Your Voice
(Floating) About the Clouds – CD track 8
For Blues, for Jazz and I-IV-V
Evolving the Fretboard III - The Majors
Playing Harmonics - Natural and Artificial
Quarrel with the Landlady and Standing at the Gate – CD track 9
Arkansas Traveler - CD track 10
Chords of Color
Evolving the Fretboard IV - The Minors
Farewell to Music - CD track 11
Hypnosis - CD track 12
Experience a Jim Goodin Guitar Workshop
Prelude in G Major - CD track 13
The Eagle - CD track 14
Sleep My Wee Child - CD track 15
Suggested Listening
About Jim Goodin
Acknowledgements
The Making of the CD
A Note About the Photographs
Closing Thoughts

Prezzo: €31,99
€31,99

BLACK SABBATH LICK LIBRARY LEARN TO PLAY DVD GUITAR-Iron Man-Paranoid-War Pigs-SWEET LEAF DVD

BLACK SABBATH, LICK LIBRARY LEARN TO PLAY. GUITAR TECHNIQUES. Iron Man -Paranoid -Sabbath Bloody Sabbath -Sweet Leaf -War Pigs. DVD

DVD DI MUSICA, LEZIONE PER CHITARRA.

Learn the monster riffs, wailing leads and thundering chords that laid the foundations for metal as we know it, as Danny Gill presents five songs by Black Sabbath.

In this unique tutorial DVD, Gill provides a note-by-note guide to the innovative and hugely influential guitar playing of Tony Iommi. Get a close look at Iommi's celebrated technique as you learn every detail of five skull-crushing Sabbath classics, including the songs Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, Iron Man and Paranoid.

Iron Man
Paranoid
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Sweet Leaf
War Pigs

Prezzo: €39,99
€39,99

HALL JIM A Step-by-Step the Styles and Techniques of a Jazz Guitar Genius Signature Licks CD TABLATURE

HALL JIM, A Step-by-Step Breakdown of the Styles and Techniques of a Jazz Guitar Genius, Signature Licks.

SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE.

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 


Series: Signature Licks Guitar
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Adam Perlmutter
Artist: Jim Hall

Discover the quiet elegance of one of jazz guitar's most renowned players with this Signature Licks book/CD pack. Each song chapter contains in-depth analysis and audio with slow demos. 80 pages

 

 

INTRODUCTION

Jim Hall (1930-) was steeped in classical music before he came to jazz. Hall attended the Cleveland Institute of Music, then moved to Los Angeles, California, where he studied nylon-string guitar with Vincente Gomez. While on the West Coast, he began to make a name for himself as a jazz guitarist, playing in the quintet of drummer Chico Hamilton, from 1955 to 1956, and in the trio of reed player Jimmy Giuffre, from 1956-1959. He also worked with modern improvisers such as pianist John Lewis and alto saxophonist Lee Konitz, and in 1960 toured South America (where he was exposed to bossa nova) with singer Ella Fitzgerald.

Around the same time, Hall moved to New York City, where through several intense collaborations, he was established as one of the world's most sophisticated jazz guitarists. From 1961 to 1962, he was a member of the tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins's great quartet, with which he recorded the seminal album The Bridge. In the '60s Hall coled a quartet with trumpeter Art Farmer; he also recorded with the quartet of alto saxophonist Paul Desmond and found ideal duet partners in pianist Bill Evans and bassist Ron Carter. With Evans, Hall recorded two albums, Undercurrent (1962) and Intermodulation (1966), two of the most intimate and beautiful recordings in all of jazz. (From Intermodulation, see the transcription of "My Man's Gone Now," on page 34.) It was while performing in these fertile contexts that Hall found his own voice, an understated modern style characterized by melodic finesse, harmonic sophistication, and structural awareness-a logical extension of the language developed by such jazz-guitar pioneers as Charlie Christian, Wes Montgomery, and Django Reinhardt. This approach has been of profound influence to countless modern guitarists, including Hall's student Bill Frisell, who sounds radically different than Hall, but has a strikingly similar guitar conception. Hall's approach is best witnessed on the excellent albums he has recorded under his own name, including Concierto (1975), Jim Hall Live! (1976), and All Across the City (1989), transcriptions from all of which can be found on the following pages.

Besides being one of jazz's premier guitarists, Hall is a celebrated arranger and composer. In 1997, he won the New York Jazz Critics Circle Award for Best Jazz Composer/Arranger; his composition for jazz quartet and string quartet, "Quartet Plus Four," earned the Jazzpar Prize in Denmark, and his works for string, brass, and vocal ensembles can be heard on the albums Textures (1997) and By Arrangement (1998). In 2004, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra debuted Hall's Peace Movement, a concerto for guitar and orchestra, dedicated to the cause of international harmony. That same year, for all his accomplishments as a composer, arranger, and performer, Hall was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.

One of Hall's most recent projects, Hemispheres, was recorded with Bill Frisell and features one disc of duets and a second disc that adds the rhythm section of bassist Scott Colley and drummer Joey Baron. The album is available at Hall's Web site where a fan can catch of glimpse of what goes into the creation of the guitarist's recent projects. Meanwhile, when not composing or working with his own trio, Hall-ever the adventurous artist-has been playing with various modern improvisers, including saxophonists Joe Lovano and Greg Osby, and guitarist Pat Metheny. For now in the sixth decade of his career, Hall remains as vital a musician as ever.

DISCOGRAPHY

The selections on the accompanying CD are based on the following recordings:

ALL ACROSS THE CITY-Concord Jazz: "Big Blues"

ALONE TOGETHER-Milestone: "Autumn Leaves," "St. Thomas-

BALLAD ESSENTlAL-Concord Jazz: "Prelude to a Kiss"

CONCIERTO-CTI: "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To"
(continua)


(All Of A Sudden) My Heart Sings - HAROLD ROME - 1941
Angel Eyes - MATT DENNIS - 1946
Autumn Leaves - JOSEPH KOSMA - 1947
Big Blues - JAMES S. HALL - 1978
My Man's Gone Now - GEORGE GERSHWIN - 1935
Prelude To A Kiss - DUKE ELLINGTON - 1938
St. Thomas - SONNY ROLLINS - 1963
Scrapple From The Apple - CHARLIE PARKER - 1957
Tangerine - VICTOR SCHERTZINGER - 1942
Things Ain't What They Used To Be - MERCER ELLINGTON - 1942 
Without A Song - VINCENT YOUMANS - 1929
You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To - COLE PORTER - 1942

 

ANGEL EYES
(Jim Hall Live!, 1976)
Words by Earl Brent
Music by Matt Dennis
Figure 3-lntro, Head, and Solo (Chorus 1)
While many of Jim Hall's studio recordings show the guitarist to be thoughtful and
well-mannered, in concert he has been known to play with abandon. This side of Hall can
be heard on Jim Hall Live!, one of his finest live recordings, taken from a series of dates
in 1975 at Toronto's Bourbon Street. The recording finds Hall in top form, paired with
bassist Don Thompson and drummer Terry Clarke.
One of the highlights of the album is a Latin-tinged take of the jazz standard "Angel
Eyes," which was originally a 32-bar AABA song. Hall & Co. double the tune's harmonic
rhythm, so that the form is now 64 bars in length. (A chord that originally occupied two
beats now gets four beats, an entire bar.) Hall starts things off by moving a barred Am7
shape in parallel fashion against the open A string, resulting in some interesting polychordal
harmony, such as the m/A chord (voiced A-A~-m-F, low to high) on beat 1 of bar
2 and the B/A (A-F~-B-m) on beat 1 of bar 4. He also throws various dominant and
diminished chord voicings into the mix, including the partial E7#9 (A~/m-D-G) in the last
part of bar 2 and mo (A~-D-F) on beat 1 of bar 6.
After closing out the intro with the same Am7 chord with which he started, Hall
takes the head (beginning at bar 17). He sticks pretty close to the original melody, adding
his own idiosyncratic touches here and there. One such Hall-ism involves placing an
octave-based idea at the end of a phrase-a striking, broken-octave fill appears in bars
23-24; a variation of this, in bar 39; and, in bar 72, a semi-chromatic descending line
played in fully voiced octaves. Throughout, there's a strong blues feel, especially in bar
32's fill, which comes from the A minor pentatonic scale (A-C-D-E-G), albeit unpredictably
ordered. A subtler touch involves ending certain phrases with a 12th-fret harmonic
on string 5 (see bars 30, 46, and 78), which lends a nice timbral contrast to the fretted
notes.
Beginning in bar 49, Hall uses a neat trick that effectively separates the bridge
from the A-section: while holding selected melody notes (upstemmed), he adds chord
stabs (downstemmed), not unlike a pianist would do with two hands. Also, Hall ventures
a little farther from the melody in this section-in bar 53, check out the improvised, angular
line that begins with a major 7th (B~to A) leap. These unique details give the listener
a taste of what's to come in Hall's excellent solo.
In the first A-section of his first chorus, Hall introduces an A minor pentatonic idea,
and then sees it through various permutations. He keeps it simple here; the only noticeable
jazzy melodic content is the Am11 arpeggio (A-C-E-G-B-D) in bars 108-109.
Throughout, Hall interjects some of the same chord voicings as found in the intro, most
often the E7=9chord. At the same time, he uses space wisely; for example, see the rests
in bars 107-108 and 116-117.
Hall steps out melodically in the bridge of the first chorus. In bars 122-123, he
plays a 6th-based motif that reappears later in the solo, and in bars 125-127, he smoothly
hits a variety of interesting note choices: the 7 (F#) on the Gm7 chord (the absence of
a pianist gives Hall harmonic leeway), the #9 (E~/m) on C7, and the #11 (B) on Fmaj7.
Beginning in bar 128, Hall plays a fleetingly-fingered line involving chromatic lower-neighbor
tones. This leads directly into a witty reference to Duke Ellington's "Raincheck" in bars
129-131. Quotation is an indispensable improvisational tool, and Hall masterfully adjusts
the melodic contour of "Raincheck" to suit the changes at hand, sailing with ease into the
b7 (A) of the B7 chord and the 3rd (G#) of the Emaj7 chord.

 

 

THINGS AIN'T WHAT THEY USED TO BE (Jazz Guitar: Jim Hall Trio, 1957)
By Mercer Ellington
Figure 15-Head and Solo
While Jim Hall's style is strikingly modern, it is deeply rooted in the traditional
sound of the blues. This is especially apparent in Hall's interpretation of the Mercer
Ellington classic "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," from his 1957 debut album, Jazz
Guitar: Jim Hall Trio, on which "Tangerine" (see page 56) also appears.
"Things Ain't What They Used to Be" is based on a 12-bar blues in m major,
played here with a neat, overlapping pair of ii-Vs in bars 8-11 (F7-m7-Bm7-Ab7-m7).
Hall kicks things off by playing the head twice, the first time accompanied by bassist Red
Mitchell. The guitarist basically plays the melody as it was originally written but adds some
bluesy, grace-note flourishes: in the m7 bars, a whole-step slide, from B to the melody
note F; and on the double stops, a half-step approach tone to each lower note.
As Hall restates the head, beginning in bar 13, pianist Carl Perkins joins in on the
proceedings; notice the chromatically ascending 7~9 chords that Perkins substitutes in
bars 21 and 22. Hall starts his reiteration of the head the same way he originally played
it, but at the end of bar 20, he raises the intensity by playing the melody up an octave.
Then, beginning in bar 23, he sets up his three-chorus solo with a triplet-based line that
comes mainly from the m minor pentatonic scale (m-Fb-Gb-Ab-Cb).
In the first chorus, Hall improvises variations on the original melody. In bars 29
and 30, he plays major 3rd-based double stops from the m blues scale (m-Fb-Gb-Abb-
Ab-Cb), then, in bar 31, toys with both the b3rd(HIE) and 3rd (F) of the m7 chord using
single notes. In bar 35, over the m7-Bb7 change, Hall plays a series of dyads that actually
imply the progression m7-GI>-Gbm, with the 3rd (m and Bbbin the bass on the latter
two). Note the contrary motion between the lower and higher voices of the first two
chords.
Beginning at the end of his first chorus and extending through the first several
bars of his second, Hall has a conversation with himself, playing phrases that start and
stop on the first string's fourth-fret Ab, and are answered by phrases that start and stop a
perfect 5th lower, on the third string's sixth-fret m. In bars 40-43, Hall plays the note Eb
at two different positions-string 2, fret 4 and string 3, fret 8-requiring a large fret-hand
stretch, but the nice contrast in timbre is worth the effort. Hall begins to conclude his second
chorus in bar 44 with a predominantly pentatonic phrase.
In his third and final chorus, Hall makes the most out of a few simple phrases, the
first of which is stated in the first half of bar 49. Similar to one found in his first chorus, this
bluesy, ascending phrase contains both the b3 and 3, and is carried throughout the first
several bars. Bar 52 contains an interesting move: Hall slides, via a half step, into a dyad
(Cb-Eb)that implies a m9 chord (m-F-Ab-Cb-Eb), then plays a descending chromatic line
(Ab-Abb-Gb-F) that sets up a m9 chord partial (F-Cb-Eb). First appearing on beat 2 of bar
53, an eighth-note triplet line (Fb-m-B) is played (except for a break in bar 54) until the
beginning of bar 56, and answered in bar 57 by a time-honored, jazz-blues phrase.
Hall thinks more harmonically as he ends his solo, arpeggiating m (m-F-Ab) and
Gb (Gb-Bb-m) triads in bar 59, approaching each 3rd with a half-step grace note. Then,
on beats 1 and 2 of the final bar, Hall plays double stops, Ab-m and G-m, that imply mm7
(Bb-m-F-Ab) and Eb7 (Eb-G-Bb-m) chords, respectively, delaying the final ii-V
(Ebm7-Ab7) change by two beats.

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BLACKMORE RITCHIE-GUITAR QUICK LICKS CLASSIC ROCK-Key G-DVD LEZIONE CHITARRA DEEP PURPLE

BLACKMORE RITCHIE, GUITAR QUICK LICKS CLASSIC ROCK, Key of G. DANNY Gill. 123 minuti. DVD

DVD VIDEO LEZIONE DI MUSICA HARD ROCK. 

PER CHITARRA ELETTRICA, FRASI PRESE DAL CHITARRISTA DEI DEEP PURPLE E RAINBOW. 

Learn killer rock licks in the style of Ritchie Blackmore, one of the UK’s finest classic heavy rock guitarists! Also includes a blues guitar jam track. Lessons by Danny Gill

Each Quick Licks DVD includes an arsenal of licks in the style of your chosen artist to add to your repertoire, plus backing tracks to practice your new licks and techniques

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