Mandolino

GYPSY SWING MANDOLIN PLAY-ALONG VOLUME 5 CD TABLATURE MANDOLINI SPARTITI BASI LIBRO

GYPSY SWING, MANDOLIN PLAY-ALONG VOLUME 5. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA GYPSY CON CD.
CD DI BASI.
SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO CON:
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

Series: Mandolin Play-Along
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB
Composer: Various

The Mandolin Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily. Just follow the written music, listen to the CD to hear how the mandolin should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. Standard notation and tablature are both included in the book. The CD is playable on any CD player, and is also enhanced so Mac and PC users can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing the pitch!

Songs include: After You've Gone • Avalon • China Boy • Dark Eyes • Indiana (Back Home Again in Indiana) • Limehouse Blues • The Sheik of Araby • Tiger Rag (Hold That Tiger).

Inventory #HL 00702521
ISBN: 9781458413949
UPC: 884088601577
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
48 pages 

Prezzo: €21,99
€21,99

Celtic Mandolin Play-Along Volume 2 CD TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI BASI MANDOLINO MUSICA IRISH

Celtic Mandolin Play-Along Volume 2. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA CON CD DI BASI.

SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE. 

Series: Mandolin Play-Along

Format: Softcover with CD - TAB

Composer: Various

 

The Mandolin Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily. Just follow the written music, listen to the CD to hear how the mandolin should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. Standard notation and tablature are both included in the book. The CD is playable on any CD player, and is also enhanced so Mac and PC users can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing the pitch!

Songs: A Fig for a Kiss • The Kesh Jig • Morrison's Jig • The Red Haired Boy • Rights of Man • Star of Munster • The Star of the County Down • Temperence Reel.

24 pages

 

Song List:

A Fig For A Kiss

The Kesh Jig

Morrison's Jig

The Red Haired Boy

Rights Of Man

Star Of Munster

The Star Of The County Down

Temperence Reel
 

Prezzo: €21,99
€21,99

METODO DI MANDOLINO AUTODIDATTA LIBRO CD TABLATURE SPARTITI METODO ITALIANO BETTELLI

METODO DI MANDOLINO AUTODIDATTA. LIBRO CD TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA CON CD.

SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO.

ACCORDI PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

LIBRO IN ITALIANO

Autore: Roberto Bettelli
Editore: Volontè & Co.
Pagine: 80
Formato: libro + CD

Descrizione breve

Un metodo che insegna in modo semplice e chiaro le tecniche strumentali e le nozioni teoriche musicali di base e che, grazie anche all'uso dell'intavolatura, mette in grado di suonare in breve tempo. All'interno, tutti i generi musicali più importanti: classico, blues, rock, jazz e bluegrass. Oltre 30 trascrizioni di brani famosi tratti dal repertorio tradizionale e pop, scale, accordi e arpeggi saranno utile e importante strumento di esercitazione. Il Cd allegato è un ottimo strumento didattico che contiene brani ed esercizi presenti nel testo in versione “base con melodia” e “base senza melodia”. Per imparare a suonare il mandolino, divertendosi con alcune delle melodie più famose come The Enterteiner, Tarantella, Yesterday, Il Padrino, Mando Boogy Blues, Aria sulla Quarta Corda, Besame Mucho, Brazil, Jazz Moon, Midnight in Paris, Cielito Lindo, Stille Nacht e tante altre ancora. 

LE SCALE

GLI ACCORDI

GIRO ARMONICO

GIRO ARMONICO DI DO

GIRO ARMONICO DI SOL 

GIRO ARMONICO DI RE

GIRO ARMONICO DI FA

TRIADI MAGGIORI, MINORI, DIMINUITE, SETTIMA, 

RIFF ROCK

BLUES SCALE

IL BLUEGRASS

IL RITMO BLUEGRASS

MELODIA

IL MANDOLINO CLASSICO

IL TREMOLO

ARIA SULLA QUARTA CORDA, BACH

ARPEGGI

PRELUDIO, BACH

MANDOLINO SOLO

IL JAZZ

LE SCALE

GLI ACCORDI JAZZ 

 

1 Lo Strumento
Breve Storia del Mandolino......................................
Le Parti del Mandolino..................................................
2 La posizione del Mandolino
Posizione da seduti.........................................................
Posizione in piedi..............................................................
La Posizione della Mano Destra...........................
La Posizione della Mano Sinistra.........................
3 Accordare il Mandolino
Accordare con il CD...................................................
Accordare con la Tastiera.......................................
Accordare con il Diapason....................................
Accordatore Elettronico...........................................
4 Teoria Musicale
Alcune Nozioni di Teoria Musicale...................
Il Tempo.................................................................................
Figure e valori...................................................................
Le Battute o Misure.....................................................
Il Punto di Valore............................................................
I Tempi 4/4, 2/4, 3/4, 6/8.......................................
Le Terzine.............................................................................
Le Note Sopra e Sotto il Rigo............................
Il Tono e il Semitono....................................................
Le Alterazioni ....................................................................
5 Le Note sulla Prima Corda
Le Note sulla Prima Corda - Es. 1, 2.............
6 Le Note sulla Seconda Corda
Le Note sulla Seconda Corda
“INNO ALLA GIOIA”......................................
“MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB”................
7 Le Note sulla Terza Corda
Le Note sulla Terza Corda
“JESSE JAMES”...............................................
8 Le Note sulla Quarta Corda
Le Note sulla Quarta Corda
“OH! SUSANNA”............................................
9 La Scala di Do Maggiore
La Scala di Do Maggiore
“AURA LEE”...........................................................
“LITTLE BROWN JUG”.....................................
“TURKEY IN THE STRAW”...........................
“OLD MCDONALD HAD FARM”..............
“JINGLE BELLS”................................................
“MINUETTO”..........................................
10 La Scala di Sol Maggiore
La Scala di Sol Maggiore
“WE WISH YOU A
MERRY CHRISTMAS”.......................................
“JESUS, JOY OF MAN’S DESIRING”...31
11 La Scala di Fa Maggiore
La Scala di Fa Maggiore
“LOCH LOMOND”.................................................
12 La Scala di Re Maggiore
La Scala di Re Maggiore
“THE BLARMEY PILGRIM”............................
Indice 

Prezzo: €19,99
€19,99

LEARN TO PLAY BLUES MANDOLIN STEVE JAMES 2 DVD TABLATURE Jackson Stomp-Prater Blues-Corrina,Corrina-Sittin' on Top of the World-Long as I Can See You Smile-Texas Tommy

LEARN TO PLAY BLUES MANDOLIN, STEVE JAMES. 2 DVD VIDEO WITH BOOKLET WITH TABLATURE

Learn to Play Blues Mandolin
2-DVD Set

Series: DVD/Instructional/Folk Instrmt
Publisher: Homespun Video
Format: DVD - TAB
Artist: Del Rey
Author: Steve James

DVD One: Steve James teaches the scales, chords, lead riffs, rhythm comping, turnarounds and other essential techniques for playing traditional blues and old-time string band music. Songs: Divin' Duck Blues - The Lonesome Train That Carried My Gal Away - more. 60-MIN. DVD - INCLUDES CHORDS, DIAGRAMS, MUSIC + TAB - LEVEL 2

DVD Two: Steve James brings learning mandolinists more of the funky, old-time songs that made his previous instructional DVD on this instrument so popular. He covers blues scales, chord patterns, walking lines, arpeggios, accompaniments, and great tunes, including: -Jackson Stomp,  -Prater Blues, -Corrina,Corrina, -Sittin' on Top of the World, -Long as I Can See You Smile, and -Texas Tommy. 60 MIN - LEVEL 3 - INCLUDES MUSIC & TAB

Inventory #HL 00642068
ISBN: 9781597732406
UPC: 884088242336
Publisher Code: DVDJMSMN23
Width: 5.25"
Length: 7.5"

Prezzo: €69,99
€69,99

NORTHERN ITALIAN & TICINO REGION FOLK SONGS FOR MANDOLIN-Carlo Aonzo-Ponzoni-Borsani CD TABLATURE

NORTHERN ITALIAN & TICINO REGION FOLK SONGS FOR MANDOLIN. Carlo Aonzo, Clara Ponzoni, Giorgio Borsani. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA DEL NORD ITALIA, CON CD.

SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TESTO IN ITALIANO E INGLESE.

Ticino is a small area at the southernmost tip of Switzerland on the border with Italy. The Ticino region was actually part of Italy until a few centuries ago. The mandolin arrived in Ticino through immigrants and their music, and put down important cultural roots there. The mandolin style in Ticino is a link to the old Italian folk music tradition, which has been largely lost in Italy and throughout other parts of the world. This book is a collection of some of the most famous pieces from this vast historical repertoire. The collection includes lots of popular folk songs, virtuosic pieces by original mandolin composers, as well as an original Aonzo composition. The book is presented in English and in Italian while the music is in standard notation and mandolin tablature. 

INTRODUZIONE
In una piccola regione a sud della Svizzera, proprio al confine con l'Italia, c'è il Ticino.
Questo piccolo territorio fino a pochi secoli fa era parte dell'Italia, per cui ha mantenuto
svariate sfumature di cultura italiana, pur facendo parte della Svizzera.
Il Ticino (come il resto della nazione) ha avuto un grande sviluppo industriale ed economico
a partire dalla fine del 1800. Di conseguenza si è trasformato da terra di emigranti
(i ticinesi emigravano verso le Americhe) a terra di immigrazione. E probabilmente
è proprio grazie all'immigrazione di tanti italiani che il mandolino è arrivato in
Ticino, e qui ha messo delle importanti radici, essendo tra i principali rappresentanti
del patrimonio culturale locale. In Ticino infatti vi è un'alta densità di musicisti e di
orchestre a plettro.
La musica mandolinistica ha una grande tradizione come musica d'aggregazione e di
festa. Ancora oggi nasce in modo spontaneo tra musicisti ed appassionati che si trovano
per passare qualche momento in allegria, e viene arricchita con mandolini, chitarre,
contrabbasso, canto, fisarmonica e altri strumenti. Questo modo di suonare che si va
perdendo in Italia ed in altre parti del mondo, resta attuale in Ticino. Polche, canzonette,
valzer, mazurke, arie d'opera, serenate risuonavano e risuonano ancora fino a
tarda ora nei luoghi di ritrovo. Il tutto accompagnato da buon vino e cibo tradizionale.
Oltre alla musica spontanea, vi sono molte orchestre mandolinistiche, che affrontano
repertori scritti per questo tipo di formazione (di cui non è nostro obiettivo parlare in
questo libro).
Il repertorio spontaneo è piuttosto vasto, e legato all' abilità e alle conoscenze dei singoli
musicisti. Si va da canzonette popolari (molte delle quali di autore sconosciuto) a
compositori originali per mandolino, passando da musica tramandata per tradizione
orale (molti musicisti non sapevano leggere la musica) fino a repertorio di grande virtuosismo.
Fonti importanti sono state le riviste pubblicate in Italia da fine 1800 che
avevano cadenza di solito bisettimanale e che gli abbonati aspettavano con trepidazione
("Il plettro", "Il mandolino", e altre).
L'intento di questo lavoro e' quello di trasmettere agli appassionati mandolinisti di
tutto il mondo, la cultura musicale del Ticino e lo spirito allegro e cordiale che caratterizza
la Svizzera italiana.
NOTE DEGLI AUTORI
Nella musica popolare raramente l'esecutore legge la notazione musicale; i brani vengono
imparati, arrangiati ed eseguiti ad orecchio. Spesso accade, quindi, che le note
scritte siano solo una traccia e l'interpretazione sia ogni volta diversa.

CARLO AONZO
Concertista di fama internazionale si è affermato anche tra i principali divulgatori del mandolino classico italiano. Diplomato in mandolino con il massimo dei voti e la lode al Conservatorio di Padova, ha collaborato con numerose istituzioni musicali incluse la Filarmonica del Teatro alla Scala di Milano, e la Nashville Chamber Orchestra (Usa).
Ha vinto, tra gli altri, il primo premio speciale "Vivaldi" alla Vittorio Pitzianti National Mandolin Competition di Venezia, e il primo premio alla Walnut Valley National Mandolin Contest, Winfield, Kansas. Ha registrato per l'americana Mel Bay, un concerto-video sulla storia del repertorio per mandolino solo (Carlo Aonzo: Classical Mandolin Virtuoso) , i progetti discografici "Serenata" (Acoustic Music, Germania), "Traversata" (Acoustic Disc, Usa), "Antonio Vivaldi-Concerti per mandolino e orchestra" (Edt, Torino), nel 2007 l'album "Kazè", nel 2008 "Il mandolino italiano nel Settecento", e nel 2010 "Fantasia Poetica". E' titolare di un corso annuale a partecipazione internazionale a New York e nel 2006 ha fondato l'Accademia Mandolinistica Internazionale Italiana.
Come ricercatore si occupa delle origini e della storia del proprio strumento, ha collaborato con il New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians ed ha curato edizioni musicali per la casa editrice Bèrben.

GIORGIO BORSANI
Nato a Como (Nord Italia), ha intrapreso gli studi di chitarra classica all'età di 12 anni, diplomandosi presso il Conservatorio "Giuseppe Nicolini" di Piacenza. Ha all'attivo diverse collaborazioni con formazioni cameristiche, anche in qualità di solista, ed è membro di alcune orchestre a pizzico in Svizzera e Italia. Accanto all'attività concertistica affianca quella didattica, ha insegnato in diverse scuole di musica e si occupa dellaformazione strumentale in formazioni mandolinistiche in Svizzera e collabora nell'organizzazione di corsi di musica nazionali ed internazionali. Si occupa inoltre dell'organizzazione di concerti e rassegne musicali ed ha conseguito la Laurea in Economia per le Arti, la Cultura e la Comunicazione.

CLARA PONZONI BORSANI
Nata e cresciuta in Svizzera, ha iniziato da bambina 

lo studio del mandolino nell'ambito delle Orchestre
Mandolinistiche locali, proseguendo poi gli studi con Carlo Aonzo.
Suona in alcune Orchestre Mandolinistiche, in Du.
classico con chitarra (Duo Vivace) e in qualità di solista a
orchestre da camera.
nrepertorio spazia dalla musica popolare a quel!.
contemporanea. Tiene regolarmente concerti in Svizzera ed all'estero.
Oltre all'attività musicale, si occupa di insegnamento e di organizzazione di coro
di musica nazionali ed internazionali quale collaboratrice del Maestro Aonzo. 

POLCA E MARCIA
La polca è un ballo in 2/4. La musica è veloce e si danza in coppia.
Non è chiaro quale sia la sua origine. Si ritiene che, come indica il suo nome, derivi da una danza
polacca che si è diffusa velocemente in tutta l'Europa.
Nelle serate conviviali viene eseguita molto spesso proprio per il suo carattere allegro e vivace.
Anche la marcia è una composizione musicale in 2/4, che si differenzia dalla polca per l'origine.
Infatti, come suggerisce il nome, non è stata pensata per la danza ma per scandire il passo delle
sfilate delle bande militari. Anche il repertorio bandistico fa parte della cultura popolare ed è
t{uindi vicino alla musica mandolinistica.
E importante segnalare che spesso nella musica popolare la stessa melodia sia d'uso in diversi
luoghi ma con titoli ed attribuzioni diverse. Si tratta di musica tramandata oralmente la cui paternità
resta ignota o ambigua.

LA SISINA
In Ticino la composizione di questa di polca viene attribuita a Pasquale Sisini (Mendrisio/CH 1902-1997). Il
collegamento tra il titolo ed il presunto autore è evidente. Della stessa melodia sono presenti però delle tracce
nel nord-est d'Italia (Trentino), dove viene chiamata "Polka Gilardengo" (Libro a pagina 109: Giacomo
Sartori e l'Associazionismo Mandolinistico in Italia fra il XIX e il XX secolo, a cura di Antonio Carlini, Ed.
Akademos 1999).
Un collega musicista che ha conosciuto e suonato personalmente con Sisini conferma con orgoglio che la
musica è stata composta da lui.
Questo dimostra che è davvero difficile conoscere con esattezza la paternità di alcune melodie.

POLCA DEL DORIN
Questa polca è di autore ignoto. Viene chiamata "Polca del Dorin" per identificarla dalle altre polche, proprio
perché questo famoso mandolinista ticinese (Isidoro Frigerio, Riva San Vitale/CH 1908-1988) la suonava
molto frequentemente.

OH KATIA
Motivo popolare di origine sconosciuta, tra i più diffusi nella musica popolare.

AL GROTT DEL FIN
Remo Giambonini (Gandria/CH 1911-1997) è stato uno tra i più importanti compositori ed orchestratori
ticinesi di musica per mando lino.
Giambonini ha studiato armonia e contrappunto ed ha suonato in tante orchestrine in salotti, alberghi e
balere di tutta Europa, con un repertorio musicale immenso (operette, musica da ballo, classica e popolare).
Era un musicista poliedrico, negli strumenti e negli spartiti.
La sua grande preparazione musicale è evidente nelle sue composizioni popolari che contengono una grande
ricchezza musicale.
Nella musica popolare infatti, oltre a canzonette piuttosto semplici, sono presenti brani molto virtuosi.
La composizione è stata dedicata al grotto (osteria) del padre (Il Grott del Fin) che si trovava sulle rive del
lago di Lugano.

SCUGNIZZA
Il termine "scugnizzo" nel dialetto napoletano indica un bambino monello e dispettoso che passa le giornate
per le strade di Napoli.

NINAPANCHA
Brano popolare probabilmente di origine spagnola. Suonato sia in duo sia con orchestra.
 

Al Grott del Fin - Remo Giambonini

Carnevale di Venezia - Arr. Carlo Munier - CON ANCHE LA PARTE DELLA CHITARRA, NO TABLATURE. 
Cesarina - Cesare Pezzolo
Czardas - Vittorio Monti
Graziella - Pino Guerra
L’Alborela - Remo Giambonini
La Sisina - Traditional
Nina Pancha - José Garcia
Ninna nanna - Giuseppe Aonzo
Oh Katia! - Traditional
Polca del Dorin - Traditional
Scugnizza Remo - Giambonini
Speranze perdute - Alessandro Morelli
Tarantella - Raffaele Calace - CON ANCHE LA PARTE DELLA CHITARRA, NO TABLATURE.  
Tra veglia e sonno - Luigi Canora
Vulcano - Mario Cavallari

Prezzo: €32,99
€32,99

TRADITIONAL SOUTHERN ITALIAN MANDOLIN AND FIDDLE TUNES JOHN LABARBERA CD TABLATURE

TRADITIONAL SOUTHERN ITALIAN MANDOLIN AND FIDDLE TUNES JOHN LABARBERA. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA CON CD.

SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO.

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.


Product Description:
The first and foremost Italian mandolin book dedicated to the traditional music from Southern Italy. Written in standard notation and mandolin tablature with guitar and mandolin chord accompaniment, this book introduces the reader to the various authentic folk songs from the regions of Campagnia, Calabria, Puglia, Sicily and Sardinia. With detailed descriptions of the songs and dances, historical and technical information about tarantella and pizzica music, the book will increase the knowledge and repertoire of Italian folk music for both beginners and professional musicians alike.

The book provides an excellent foundation needed to play in the style of the music. With preparatory technical studies, the student will learn the Italian style of tremolo, picking, and rhythms that accentuate the music. Together with the accompanying CD, the student will be able to play along and follow the precise nuances that distinguish the music.

- The first and foremost Italian mandolin book dedicated to the traditional music from Southern Italy.
- Written in standard notation and mandolin tablature, with guitar and mandolin chords
- The reader will learn authentic folk songs, together with historical and technical information about tarantella and pizzica music
- For beginners and professional musicians who want to expand their repertoire of Italian folk music
. The first and foremost comprehensive mandolin book focusing on traditional Southern Italian folk music
- Teaches playing techniques and historical information about the mandolin, tarantella and Italian folk music
- An important asset for beginners to professional musicians interested in expanding their knowledge and repertoire of Italian folk music.

About the Mandolin
The eapolitan Mandolin, also known as the round back or bowled back mandolin, may have descended from the tenth century when similar instruments such as the Ud were first introduced through Arabic culture in Southern Italy. Throughout medieval and renaissance Europe, these instruments evolved and developed their own unique playing styles and various terms were used to describe them such as: lute, quintern, chitarra, and pandora. An instrument referred to as the mandola first appeared in Italian documents in Florence in the late sixteenth century. Manuscripts about the Italian Commedia dell'Arte also referred to it as an instrument used by .Scappino' , one of it's stock comic characters and the most musical of the Commedia troupe. Even the great violin maker, Antonio Stradivari, was also responsible for making an instrument called the mandolino, however at that time the instrument had five courses and gut strings and could be considered a soprano lute. B the sixteenth century, Naples was the cultural capital of Southern Italy and its style of music and instruments influenced all of Europe. The use of metal strung, plectrum instruments had already been popular in Naples with instruments such as the colascione and the chitarra battente and were used to accompany popular songs and dances. It was not until the major developments in construction made by Neapolitan luthiers in the eighteenth and nineteenth century, that the mandolin continued to be successful. One of these first important luthiers was Gaetano Vinaccia whose instruments were widely in use during the 1740's. However, his son Pasquale, could be credited for redesigning a mandolin around the 1830's which used eight metal strings, or four courses, was played with a plectrum made of tortoiseshell instead of a quill and was tuned in fifths, (g,d,a,e) similar to the violin. Because the mandolin was now fitted with steel strings, an influence that might have come from new innovations on the piano and violin, Vinaccia also changed the construction of the instrument in order to fit the tension of the strings and to produce more volume. Thus, the modem mandolin was born. The instrument became known as the Neapolitan Mandolin especially because of its popularity in and around Naples and it's success as quickly influencing the rest of the world. B the late 1800's, mandolins were very much in demand and with the rise of Italian immigration to America, mandolins were being manufactured in the United States. Italian luthiers were working for larger manufacturers uch as Lyon and Healy of Chicago and the C.P. Martin company in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. Some of these lutbiers tried to work on their own and set up shops in downtown New York City where the Italian population as the greatest. One of them was Angelo Mannello, who emigrated to New York from Naples in 1885. The standard Neapolitan design had not changed much since Vinaccia until 1898 when Orville Gibson, an inentor from upstate New York, came up with a successful design of a mandolin with a flat back. The idea of a flat back had been unsuccessful before and not very popular. Gibson finally got his patent in 1902 and the flat back mandolin began to flourish and seep into the mainstream of American music. There have been many debates since that time over the preference and sound of the two instruments. Whatever your preference, you will find the music in this book to be very rewarding as you enjoy playing authentic tunes from Southern Italy.

 

... As Lomax discovered in the 1950's, traces of every period in Italian history could still be heard in the folk music. The songs that have survived clearly have passed the test of time. Some of the songs such as the "Antidotum Tarantulae" and the Neapolitan villanelle we know are from the 1600's and have the characteristics of renaissance music. I was very fortunate to have learned many of these songs while living in Italy during the early 1970's, when there was a resurgence of interest in traditional music. At that time, the Neapolitan composer and director Roberto De Simone and his group, La Nuova Compagnia di Canto Popolare, had led the way by performing and recording songs from the region of Naples. With new arrangements he brought forward many unknown traditional songs based on his research. Many of the tunes in this book were taught to me as I sat down with my guitar and mandolin in an apartment in Florence with the street musicians who later formed the musical group Pupi e Fresedde. They were all from the south of Italy and began singing their traditional songs on the streets and piazzas of Florence, just as it might have been in the sixteenth century. Joining their original troupe and performing and touring with them all over Europe and on the east coast of the United States for several years, I began to realize the vast repertoire of songs that existed and how much of it had been past down by oral tradition. It also gave me an excellent opportunity to be part of the tradition itself and inspired me to continue researching more about this music as well as understanding how it was to be played with the right feeling and gusto. Upon my arrival back to the United States in 1979, I had felt so enriched by the experiences I had in Italy performing and recording with Pupi e Fresedde on the album La Terra Del Rimorso (Divergo-Polygram, DVAP 029), that I wanted to bring to American audiences these beautiful melodies and rhythms. (I was sure that my Italian grandparents would have been proud of
me). Also for the Italian-American community, I felt it was important to re-connect this music that many had forgotten upon their arrival in the new world. That year, I formed the group I Giullari di Piazza in New York City, (my home town) together with the Italian actor Claudio Saponi, from RIMINI, who was a highly trained actor in Italian theater especially the Commedia del'Arte, and with Alessandra Belloni from Rome, Italy. With all of the music I had learned in Italy, I began to teach musicians this repertoire while making my own arrangements as well as writing new compositions inspired on the traditional forms. At first the American audiences were not accustomed to this kind of Italian music and most people wanted us to play the standard Italian music that had already been absorbed into the I mainstream. The Tarantella was only known as an Italian wedding dance and no one had ever heard of a Pizzica or Tammurriata. However, the musicians that I photo: Colita, Barcellona (Spagna) first started to teach this music to were very supportive and eager to learn all about the music and traditions connected to it. During the early 1980's the group I Giullari di Piazza were beginning to make these songs heard to new audiences in New York and throughout the States, presented in theatrical productions which included music, theater and dance. In 1986, I had the great opportunity to work together and tour with one of the most famous singers of traditional Sardinian music, Maria Carta. Known throughout the world for her haunting and heart felt interpretation of Sardinian music she had often been described as Italy's Joan Baez. I had already been familiar with the unique guitar playing style while living in Italy, however working with her on a tour of just voice and guitar forced me to pay close attention to the fine articulation necessary for Sardinian music. She had also taught me so many beautiful songs during our rehearsals, that I cherish them like precious little jewels.

 

Product Number: 21488BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 078667783X
UPC: 796279106283
ISBN13: 9780786677832
Series: Non-Series
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.
Date Published: 4/27/2009

Format: Book/CD Set


Contents:
Song Title: Composer/Source:
Abballati, Abballati
Alla Carpinese
Alziti Bbella
Angelare
Antidotum Tarantulae (part 1)
Antidotum Tarantulae (part 2)
Bo e la ri-bo
Cu Ti Lu Dissi
Danza Siciliana
Fasola Siciliana
Figghia di'n Massaru
Fischiettando
Fronni d'Alia
II Ritornello delle Lavandaie del Vomero
La Ndrezzata
La Palumella
La Procidana
La Sant Allegrezza
La Zita Passa
Marenaresca
Matajola
Motivo di Cantastorie
Pizzica-Pizzica
Pizzicarella
Pizzicarella Mia
Ricciulina
Serenata Amalfitana
Sonos E Memoria
Tammurriata
Tarantella dell 600
Tarantella di Ogliastro
Tarantella Nfuocata
Tarantella Paesana
Villanella Ch all Aqua Vai
Volumbrella
Vurria Addeventare

92 PAGES

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CONSTRUCTING A BLUEGRASS MANDOLIN Roger H Siminoff Hal Leonard liuteria LIBRO COSTRUZIONE LIUTERIA

Constructing a Bluegrass Mandolin

LIBRO DI LIUTERIA PER LA COSTRUZIONE DEL MANDOLINO.

CON PROGETTI COMPLETI. SCALA 1:1


The Ultimate Bluegrass Mandolin Construction Manual
Series: Book
Publisher: Hal Leonard
Format: Softcover
Author: Roger H. Siminoff

The Ultimate Bluegrass Mandolin Construction Manual is the most complete step-by-step treatise ever written on building an acoustical string instrument. Siminoff, a renowned author and luthier, applies over four decades of experience to guide beginners to pros through detailed chapters on wood selection, cutting, carving, shaping, assembly, inlays, fretting, binding and assembly of an F-style mandolin. A special highlight is an in-depth chapter on the art of tap tuning. This fully-illustrated manual boasts more than 250 photos, a full-color section on the staining and finishing processes, numerous detailed illustrations, and a bonus set of 20 full-size blueprints. Spiral bound.
Inventory #HL 00331088
ISBN: 9780634062858
UPC: 073999323030
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
160 pages

Mandolin Reference
Series: Reference
Publisher: Hal Leonard Corporation
Format: Softcover
Composer: Roger H. Siminoff

This beautifully detailed manual gives clear, step-by-step directions from raw materials to a magnificently finished mandolin through the use of simply-stated texts, photos and templates. Written by one of America's foremost authorities on acoustic instruments. 56 pages, spiral bound, including 19 full-sized blueprints covering each phase of construction. Also features a glossary of terms which enable the reader to more easily follow the instructions.

145 pagine più 20 pagine di progetti a grandezza naturale.

 

A COMPLETE TECHNICAL GUIDE by ROGER H. SIMINOFF

Contents:

FOREWORD
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
INTRODUCTION
The Instrument
Woods
Wood Species
The Structure
Properties
Tools
Fixtures
Templates
Glossary

CHAPTER 1 - THE NECK
The Truss Rod
Squaring The Neck
Peg head Scroll Strengthener
Peghead Veneer
Squaring The Back Of The Peghead
Peghead Venner (Back)
Shaping The Peghead
Machine Holes

CHAPTER 2 - THE BODY
The Block Set
The Body Form (jig)
The Rim (sides)
Locking Up The Rim
The Top Plate
Gluing The Backs
Cutting The Proper Shape
Carving The Plates
Carving Concept
Carving The Scrolls
Preparing The F-holes
Tone Bars
The Lining
Attaching The Lining
Neck Location (top plate)
Attaching The Top Plate
Removing The Body From The Form
Tap Tuning

CHAPTER 3 - ATTACHING THE NECK
Cutting The Neck Joint
Gluing On The Bottom Lining
Gluing In The Neck
Locking In The Neck
The Dovetail Method
Attaching The Backboard

CHAPTER 4 - PREPARATION FOR BINDING
Remove Excess Wood
Sanding The Instrument
Preparation For Binding
Binding
Peg head Binding Notch
15th Fret Cross Piece
The Corner Protectors
Applying The Binding

CHAPTER 5 - INLAY DECORATION
Decorations
Cutting Pearl
Installation Of Pearl Inlay

CHAPTER 6 - THE FRETBOARD
Fretboard Preparation
Inlaying The Fretboard
Installing The Frets
Binding The Fretboard
Position Dots

CHAPTER 7 - ATTACHING THE FRETBOARD
Fretboard Extender
Corner Fillers
Attaching The Fretboard
Dressing Up The Frets

CHAPTER 8 - PRE·FINISH ADJUSTMENTS
Final Sanding
Final Tuning
CHAPTER 9 - COLORING
Staining Procedure
Curly Maple Grain Contrast
Sunburst Shading
Cleaning The Binding

CHAPTER 10 - FINISHING
Lacquer
Preparation For Spraying
Wet Sanding
Polishing

CHAPTER 11 - HARDWARE
Scraping The Fretboard
The Nut
String Notches
The Bridge
Fitting The Bridge
String Notches (bridge)
The Tailpiece
The Tuning Machines
The Pickguard
Adjustments

HAL LEONARD PUBLISHING CORPORATION
 

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MANDOLIN BLUES From Memphis to Maxwell Street, Rich DelGrosso. CD TABLATURE

MANDOLIN BLUES From Memphis to Maxwell Street. CD TABLATURE

Mandolin Blues

From Memphis to Maxwell Street
Series: Mandolin
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Rich DelGrosso

Travel back in time as acclaimed mandolinist Rich DelGrosso, author of the best-selling Hal Leonard Mandolin Method (00695102), traces the history and music of America's rich blues tradition through the eyes of the mandolinist. Follow the lives of players like Yank Rachell, Howard Armstrong and Charlie McCoy, and then learn their timeless music with standard notation, tablature, and an accompanying full-band CD of all the tunes in the book.

Inventory #HL 00695899
ISBN: 9780634072499
UPC: 073999178531
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
80 pages

 

Acknowledgments

Many thanks and hugs for my fiancee, Lisa Henry, for always standing by me, supportive and patient whenever I get into the "mando zone." Baby, you're the best!

It was my late wife Maureen who taught me to write music more than thirty years ago. She opened up my world of opportunity and I will always be grateful. Thank you, sweet Mo.

Thanks to James "Yank" Rachell and W Howard Armstrong for sharing their music and experience with me. Our times spent together changed my life as a musician. They were my teachers, my mentors. Howard inspired me both in my music and my art, and his gentle and warm spirit carried me through some tough times. I miss them both greatly.

This project could not have been completed without the help and support of my colleague and good friend Ernie Scarbrough. His skill as a musician and recording engineer pulled this work togetherl In addition to riding the console, he played bass and drums on the tracks. Ernie, 1 can't thank you enough! Thanks to Hal leonard for the opportunity to bring this great music to the world. After so many years and countless articles in magazines, it is great to now have it all in one volume. And this is only the tip of the iceberg. Thanks to my many students who work with me in chipping away at the ice. There is so much good music to discover as we study the past together. irresistible music, skilled players, and passionate artists, who can ask for more?

 

About the Author

Rich DelGrosso is the leading proponent and expert on mandolin blues. The Blues Foundation in Memphis, TN, nominated him for a 2006 Blues Music Award in the Best Instrumentalist category According to Mark Hoffman, co-author of Moanin' at Midnight, the Life and Times of Howlin' Wolf, Rich DelGrosso is "the greatest living blues mandoman, the best since Yank." He has performed at clubs and festi\'als for the past thirty years, mentored by and performing with blues and string-band legends James "Yank" Rachell and Howard "louie Bluie" Armstrong. A respected writer in the blues realm, Rich's work has appeared in Living Blues, Mandolin World News, Frets, Mandolin Magazine, and Footsteps. He has been a writer for Blues Revue magazine since 1991 and an associate editor since 1996. A renowned teacher, his latest workshops have included the Telluride Blues and Brews, the Centrum Blues Workshop in Port Townsend, WA, and Mandolin Camp North, in Boston, MA. He received the "Keeping the Blues Alive" award (KBA) in 1989 from the Blues Foundation for his work coordinating

the Augusta Heritage Arts: Bluesweek. Rich will return as coordinator of Bluesweek in 2007. As his fans will tell you, this is not the same old blues. DelGrosso has a sound all his o,vn. As Przemek Draheim of "The Voice of the Blues" (Radio Bravo, Torun, Poland) wrote, "The sound of your axe is one of the coolest things l've heard in blues' It is old-school, rooted in history, but forging new ground. Rich can stand with any guitar slinger, and he often does!"

Rich's new release, Get Your Nose Gutta My Bizness! featuring Pinetop Perkins, James Harman, and Doug Macleod, is available. Bizness was reported on the Living Blues Top 15 radio charts for

the first four months after its release in the fall of 20051

For more info on Rich DelGrosso

 

From Memphis to Maxwell Street

the intro to DelGrosso's book by Hal Leonard Pub.

 

“They were led by a long-legged chocolate boy and their band consisted of just three pieces, a battered guitar, a mandolin and a worn-out bass . . . thump. thump, thump went their feet on the floor. Their eyes rolled. Their shoulders swayed . . . it was not really annoying or unpleasant. Perhaps ‘haunting’ is a better word . . .”

 

The words of W.C. Handy, band-leader and composer in 1903, describing one of his first encounters with the “blues.” The story continues with the trio exciting the crowd and earning more tip money than Handy’s band. Handy decided to add the “blues” to his repetoire resulting in his claim to be the Father of the Blues.

 

This is the story of the black mandolinist in America. In the hands of the black string band performers, the mandolin was there to nurture the infancy of ragtime and blues. It’s crisp, tenor voice was a perfect complement to the guitar and piano and its soaring tremolos energized the jug and street bands of the Deep South. An inspiration to composers Scott Joplin and W.C. Handy, the mandolin helped to shape the music that would gradually evolve into rock and jazz and their descendants.

 

At this point in the American timeline, Memphis, Tennessee, was the center of African-American culture and the crossroads for touring musicians. Players like Vol Stevens, Will Weldon, Eddie Dimmitt and Charlie McCoy added their string band skills to some of the bands of the day, like the Memphis Jug Band and the Mississippi Sheiks. From these collaborations came some of the popular blues/folk/bluegrass chestnuts like “Sittin’ On Top Of The World” and “Stealin.” Most people know of the legendary Chicago bluesman Muddy Waters. But only his hard-core fans are aware that on his first recording on Stovall plantation in Mississippi, Burr Clover Blues, Waters was a member of a string band, the Son Simms Four, with Simms on fiddle and Louis Ford on mandolin.

 

In the surrounding countryside other musicians and bands flourished. W.Howard Armstrong and Carl Martin and their Tennessee Chocolate Drops performed for medicine shows, parties and fish fries. Yank Rachell traveled about, playing the deep blues with his guitar partner Sleepy John Estes. Young Bill Monroe played guitar with a black fiddler named Arnold Schultz. Monroe then took the fiddle music of his Uncle Penn and the blues from Schultz and blended them together on the mandolin, creating a new American genre that came to be known as bluegrass.

 

As blacks migrated north to escape the social oppression and poverty of the South, the musicians were among the throngs settling in Chicago, St. Louis, New York and Detroit. The players from Memphis and Mississippi traveled due north to Chicago, and Handy’s Park in Memphis was replaced by the Maxwell Street market as the street-scene-center for the blues folks. Carl Martin and Johnny Young were often seen playing the mandolin with the harmonica and guitar players of Chicago’s Southside. Young often played electric mandolin with Muddy Waters and piano great Otis Spann. Waters had relocated to Chicago, where he popularized the electrified blues combo sound, which was copied by embryonic rockers both in the States and the UK. Blues Rock fans are aware that the greatest rock and roll band, the Rolling Stones, started as a blues band playing “old school” blues covers. Brian Jones, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were aware of their roots. They asked Ry Cooder to play Yank Rachell-style mandolin licks on their early cover of Robert Johnson’s “Love in Vain (Let It Bleed, London Records nps-4).”

 

As more players pick up the mandolin, interest in the work of these seminal artists is growing. In the hands of Ry Cooder, Steve James, Andra Fay, Billy Flynn and others mandolin blues lives today. Everywhere I go people comment on the sound of my playing or on my writing for Mandolin Magazine. They want to know where it comes from.

And so the story begins.

 

Hampton Institute Hampton, Va. (circa 1898)

Library of Congress, Prints & phographs

 

The Mandolin in America

The mandolin was in fashion. It was the "rage."

Italians who emigrated from Europe to the u.s. in the 1850s comprised the largest Italian population outside of Italy. They introduced the mandolin to North America. Its popularity as a parlor instrument blossomed quickly and strains of mandolin waltzes, light classical pieces, marches, rags, and cakewalks filled the air of the eastern cities. Women added decorated mandolin cases to their accessories instead of purses. It was "in."

Scott Joplin, one of Americas most prolific and famous ragtime piano composers, was inspired by the bowl-back, eight-stringed instrument when he penned "The Entertainer." As Peter Gammond described this piece in Scott Joplin and the Ragtime Era, he noted that "the first strain [contains] octave chords with an added interior third, although not easy to play, probably have the intended effect of imitating mandolin chording." Joplin dedicated "The Entertainer·' to "Mr. James Brown and his mandolin club." In 1890, American luthiers Lyon and Healy employed Italian and Spanish craftsmen, and by 1897, they were making 7000 mandolins per year! The inexpensive instrument spread across the country and Cleveland and Kansas City were considered mandolin "strongholds." Sears and Roebuck and Montgomery Ward added mandolins to their catalogues as the instruments spread in popularity. In 1914, James Reese Europes African- American Clef Club orchestra was the first to present "pop" music at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Backed by drums, basses, pianos, violins, woodwinds, and twenty-sewn harp Guitars were forty-seven mandolins

 

Blue Notes, Seventh Chords, Bars, and Back Beats

What is the blues' You would be amazed to hear that even blues fans don't agree on a definition. For some it is strictly racial in origin, music born out of slavery, oppression, and deep poverty. For others it is music that expresses "blue" emotions, or the poetry of the blues. The record industry focused on these criteria as they waxed the early performers, even though these same artists were professional, versatile, and open-minded, playing every type of music under the sun. Imagine Muddy Waters singing a show tune; he did, but it wasn't what the record company wanted. Record vendors likewise struggled with the genre, finding it often difficult to draw the lines between jazz and blues and blues and rock. The racists of the South recognized the sexual energy of Elvis' blues as they tried to ban his imitation of the blues singers he grew up with in Memphis. So the debate rages on, but not for us. We will operate with a working definition of the blues, or what it means when you take the bandstand and say "let's playa blues."

Analyzing the blues style from a music-theory perspective, it's all about:

• Blue notes

• Harmonies based primarily on seventh chords

• Specific predictable progressions (l2-bar, 8-bar, etc.)

• Rhythms driven by back beats

Armed with these simple tools, you can jam on a blues with anyone.

 

Blue Notes

Blue notes gave the style its name. These notes are the flatted third, fifth, and flatted seventh scale degrees. Today there is plenty of music that employs the flatted third, fifth, and flatted seventh, but in the blues, emphasis on these notes and how they sound dissonant against major scale tones creates the "blues mood." In any given blues, the blue notes are not used exclusively and are often replaced by their natural counterparts, but by giving them more force and duration at key points in a progression, the music is given more feeling and soul. Check out the following scales. The parent major scales are shown first and are followed by the parallel blues scales.

 

The term "blue note" is sometimes used to describe the tonal area that exists in between the flatted and natural notes. Blues players and singers often bend or slide between these tones-particularly between the natural and flatted third-which creates a major to minor shift. Or happy to sad. This is another distinct blues characteristic.

 

Maxwell Street

From the 1920s to the present, Maxwell Street in Chicago has served as LheBeale Street of the North. At the crossroads where the poor African-American community merged with the jewish, Maxwell Street was bustling with commerce and music. It was home for many of the people who migrated north and had enjoyed the open-air markets of their birthplaces in the South. It was where musicians met to play and form associations. This led to the great blues bands of Chicago's Golden Age. Muddy Waters lived on West 13th Street, just a few blocks from the market. He and jimmy Rogers could be heard on the street on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, competing with the squeals of children as they raced about in and out of the merchant stalls, surrounded by the smoke from the pork chop and sausage stands. Snooky Prior and Floyd jones bragged of collecting more money in their buckets than they could ever make in a night at a club.

 

Photo by Kenji Oda

Bernard Abrams grew up on Maxwell Street in the 1920s. In 1945, he converted his home into Maxwell Radio, TV, and Record Mart, where he sold electric appliances and recordings. Inspired by the music he heard on the street, in the back room of his workshop he created the Ora Nelle label, named after Little Walter jacobs' girlfriend. It was a good business move at the time. The singers, wanting to promote their records, set up in front of the store and drew crowds. Some performers not on the label were still drawn to the store, folks like Elmore james, Aretha Franklin, and B.B. King. At one point Abrams was so successful that his neighbors called him the "Mayor of Maxwell Street" because he owned one square block of it. johnny Young was one of the first to record for Ora Nelle, but it did little to help his career. Pete Welding of Testament Records recorded Young with Otis Spann, Big Walter Horton, Little Walter jacobs, and Robert Nighthawk Young also played with Muddy Waters. These recordings feature some of the best Chicago blues-raw spontaneous, and strong-what Howard Armstrong would call the "low-down, diny blues."

At one point, in the early '70s, Mick jagger was spotted playing on Maxwell Street. The Stones, on tour, stopped in Chicago to explore the roots of their music. They visited and recorded at Chess Records, where they were surprised by Muddy Waters, who was painting the walls. jagger was strolling in the market when he stopped behind Nate's Deli, the "soul food" restaurant of the market. Someone handed him a guitar and he played for the people. Most of the locals didn't have any idea who he was, but they were no doubt amused by his accent.

Today there is a community of blues fans who are trying to preserve a small segment of the street. A new blue record store has opened in what was Leed's Mensware, next to Original jim's Hot Dog Stand at Halsted. This store is also the site for the Maxwell Street Historic Preservation Coalition, who has established a small museum. Piano C. Red and his Flat-Foot Boogie Band still work the street every Sunday, usually in front of the johnnie Dollar Thrift shop, one of 400 vendors open for business.

Maxwell is still the place to go to try out your chops and make a few bucks .

 

Contents

Introduction

The Mandolin in America

Blue Notes, Seventh Chords, Bars, and Back Beats

Scales.

12-Bar Blues in C ("Quick to the IV")

8- Bar Blues in G ("Circle of Fifths")

Duet in G

Duet in G (Triplets)

 

Rags, Drags, and Stomps

Coley Jones and the Dallas String Band

Dallas Rag

Jackson Stomp

Knox County Stomp

State Street Rag.

Vine Street Drag

 

Vol Stevens

The Jug Band

Vol Stevens' Blues

 

Memphis and Beale Street.

 

Will Weldon

Will Weldon's Blues

 

Eddie Dimmitt

Eddie Dimmitt's Blues

The Spectrum of Mandolins

 

Charlie McCoy

Charlie McCoy's Blues .

A Gig Is a Gig

 

W Howard Armstrong

Strings and Things

Betty and Dupree.

Howard Armstrong's Blues

Pulling Doors .

 

Carl Martin

 

Yank Rachell

Yanks Style and Technique

Yank Rachell's Blues

Early This Morning

A Mandolin for a Pig

 

Maxwell Street.

 

Johnny Young

Johnny Young's Blues

Young's 8-Bar Blues ..

Taking the Bandstand

 

Rich DelGrosso..

DelGrosso's Blues (It's Funk). .

Selected Discography

Mandolin Notation Legend

Tuning Track .

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BRAZILIAN MANDOLIN Almada CD TABLATURE MANDOLINO LIBRO SPARTITI

BRAZILIAN MANDOLIN, Almada. 18 pieces for guitar and mandolin, Tab. only for mandolin. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & TABLATURE .

Product Description:
The mandolin was brought to Brazil by Portuguese colonists in the 15th and 16th centuries, and eventually worked its way into traditional Brazilian music. The principal aim of this book is to present an overview of the several faces of the mandolin in Brazil. In this book's eighteen progressively arranged character studies, the mandolin student will find, besides a great number of aspects of the idiomatic technique of the instrument (i.e., changes of fingering positions, double stops, tremolos, arpeggios, legatos, chords, etc.), no less than fourteen different styles. All of the pieces are presented first in notation only as mandolin/guitar duets, followed by the mandolin part repeated with tablature.

Format: Book/CD Set

Song Title: Composer/Source:

Afoxé Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Baião Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Choro Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Choro #2 Carlos Almada
Coco Carlos Almada
Coco #2 Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Frevo Carlos Almada
Frevo #2 Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Guarania Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Lundu Carlos Almada
Maracatu Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Marcha-rancho Carlos Amada
Maxixe Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Maxixe #2 Carlos Almada
Modinha Carlos Amada
Polca Carlos Almada
Samba Flavio Henrique Medeiros
Valsinha Carlos Almada

Prezzo: €32,99
€32,99

MANDOLIN METHOD, SAM BUSH. TABLATURE TWO DVD VIDEO DIDATTICO LEZIONE METODO SPARTITI

MANDOLIN METHOD, SAM BUSH. WITH BOOKLET & TABLATURE. 2 DVD 

DVD VIDEO MOTODO DI MUSICA PER MANDOLINO. 

CON LIBRETTO DI SPARTITI PER MANDOLINO, CON TABLATURE.

TECNICA, METODO, DIDATTICO, LEZIONE , 


Two-DVD Set
Series: Homespun Tapes
Publisher: Homespun Video
Medium: DVD
Artist: Sam Bush

This brand new two-and-a-half hour course covers all aspects of the mandolin style and technique of one of the world's greatest players. Sam Bush performs and slows down traditional fiddle tunes and original instrumentals, giving detailed instruction on pick technique, rhythm playing, speed building, warm-up exercises, improvised soloing, equipment and much more.

2-DVD SET - INCLUDES MUSIC + TAB - LEVEL 3

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