TRASCRIZIONE

NIRVANA UNPLUGGED IN NEW YORK GUITAR TABLATURE SPARTITI LIBRO-All Apologies-Come As You Are-

NIRVANA, UNPLUGGED IN NEW YORK. TAB.

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Nirvana

Matching folio with 14 songs, Also includes photos from the now infamous MTV sessions. 64 pages

Songlist:
(New Wave) Polly
About A Girl
All Apologies
Come As You Are
Dumb
Jesus Doesn't Want Me For A Sunbeam
Lake Of Fire
Oh Me
On A Plain
Pennyroyal Tea
Plateau
Something In The Way
The Man Who Sold The World
Where Did You Sleep Last Night

Price: €27,99
€27,99

OASIS DEFINITELY MAYBE Guitar Recorded Version TABLATURE SPARTITI LIBRO-Cigarettes & Alcohol

OASIS, DEFINITELY MAYBE. TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Oasis

Matching folio, including:

Bring It On Down
Cigarettes & Alcohol
Columbia
Digsy's Diner
Live Forever
Married With Children
Rock 'N' Roll Star
Shakermaker
Slide Away
Supersonic
Up In The Sky

80 pages

Price: €35,99
€35,99

OSBOURNE OZZY DIARY OF A MADMAN GUITAR TABLATURE LIBRO-Flying High Again-S.A.T.O.-Tonight-SPARTITI

OSBOURNE OZZY, DIARY OF A MADMAN. TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Personality
Publisher: Cherry Lane Music TAB
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne

The classic heavy metal album, featuring the amazing guitar work of the legendary Randy Rhoads1956-1982. Includes all the songs from the album, including:

Believer
Diary Of A Madman
Flying High Again
Little Dolls
Over The Mountain
S.A.T.O.
Tonight
You Can't Kill Rock And Roll

78 pages

Price: €99,99
€99,99

OSBOURNE OZZY BLIZZARD OF OZZ Play It Like It Is TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI CHITARRA ACCORDI

OSBOURNE OZZY, BLIZZARD OF OZZ. BOOK SCORE WITH GUITAR TABLATURE

BOOK OF HEAVY METAL MUSIC.

SHEET MUSIC FOR VOICE AND GUITAR.

CHORDS, STANDARD NOTATION AND TABLATURE.  

Series: Play It Like It Is
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne

Note-for-note transcriptions with tab for Randy Rhoads' brilliant guitar work on all 9 songs from Ozzy's 1981 solo debut. Includes an interview with Ozzy entitled "Randy Rhoads Remembered". 72 pages.

Crazy Train
Dee
Goodbye To Romance
I Don't Know
Mr. Cowley
No Bone Movies
Revelation (Mother Earth)
Steal Away (The Night)
Suicide Solution

Price: €99,99
€99,99

OSBOURNE OZZY NO MORE TEARS BAND SCORE GUITAR TABLATURE CHITARRA BASSO BATTERIA VOCE PIANOFORTE

OSBOURNE OZZY, NO MORE TEARS. OFF THE RECORD TAB.

Price: €199,99
€199,99

OSBOURNE OZZY BEST OF GUITAR TABLATURE Flying High Again-No More Tears-Mama I'm Coming Home

OSBOURNE OZZY, THE BEST. TAB.

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne

The new edition of this excellent Ozzy collection features brand new transcriptions and engravings! Includes straight-from-the-record, note-for-note tab transcriptions for 14 hits from the King of Darkness, Also includes photos.

Bark At The Moon
Black Sabbath
Crazy Babies
Crazy Train
Flying High Again
Goodbye To Romance
I Don't Know
Mama, I'm Coming Home
Mr. Cowley
No More Tears
Paranoid
Shot In The Dark
Suicide Solution
War Pigs (Interpolating Luke's Wall)

120 pages

Price: €31,99
€31,99

OSBOURNE OZZY OZZMOSIS GUITAR TABLATURE BOOK CHITARRA LIBRI SPARTITI ZAKK WYLDE STEVE VAI

OSBOURNE OZZY, OZZMOSIS. Dove poteva lavorare, e passare così le lunghe e afose estati inglesi, il piccolo quattordicenne Ozzy, o almeno così vuole farci credere, se non al macello e al crematorio! E in mezzo a coltelli, sangue e cadaveri, che si formerà la sua psiche, sullo sfondo di buoi squartati. Da noi si fanno i tre mesi come cameriere, bagnino, e noi vogliamo continuare a rimanere mediterranei. John Michael Ozzy è nato a Birmingham il 3 dicembre 1948; durante una estenuante serie di numerosi concerti negli Stati Uniti del 1996 è stato "costretto" a fingere di cantare, mentre chi lo faceva per lui era nascosto dietro gli altoparlanti. TAB.

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne
Matching folio to his latest, including:

Denial
Ghost Behind My Eyes
I Just Want You
My Jekyll Doesn't Hide
My Little Man
Old L.A. Tonight
Perry Mason
See You On The Other Side
Thunder Underground
Tomorrow

88 pages

Price: €139,99
€139,99

OSBOURNE OZZY RANDY RHOADS TRIBUTE TABLATURE Believer-Crazy Train-Dee-Flying High Again-Iron man

OSBOURNE OZZY/RANDY RHOADS TRIBUTE. TABLATURE

Ozzy Osbourne - Randy Rhoads Tribute

Series: Guitar Personality
Publisher: Cherry Lane Music TAB
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne
Artist: Randy Rhoads

Matching folio to the sensational live album, featuring: Suicide Solution - Believer - Iron Man and more. Plus feature story and photos.

Inventory #HL 02507904
ISBN: 9780895243478
UPC: 073999079043
Publisher Code: 7904
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
128 pages

 

In virtually every tune, the listener can hear evidence of Randy's
elaboration and embellishment of the basic song structure with
countless additional fills, extending and intensifying existing sections
with interesting new material. All the familiar Rhoads-isms
are here but more plentiful: long, elastic bends, wailing artificial
harmonics, switch flipping, pick slides, portamento glissandi, pull off
flurries, trills and whammy bar manipulations uf all lypes. Tn
"Crazy Train" Randy elaborates on the basic song structure by
adding two solos to the form which function as intro and outro,
respectively. These new solo sections were given a freer treatment,
producing statements which were more like an assortment of fills
and noises than the constructed solos he was famous for.
Randy approached his solos in two ways. The first being a stylized
classical concept of reproducing/duplicating the melodic and
rhythmic entity intact, with little or no obvious variation. The solos
to "I Don't Know," "Crazy Train," "Mr. Crowley," "Flying High gain,"
"Revelation (Mother Earth)," "Steal Away (The Night)" and
"Goodbye to Romallce" all share this approach. The second is one
in which he paraphrases while extemporizing/improvising on the
underlying solo mood, structure and thematic content. This more
liberal attitude is employed in the solos of "Believer," "Suicide
solution," "iron Man," "Children of the Grave," "Paranoid" and
''No Bone Movies," where fragments from the original solos serve
as inspiration for further invention.
Throughout his live performance, Randy used sound effects from
his pedal board coloristically to add new dimension to the song
(e.g. the final chorus of "I Don't Know," where the wah-wah is
heard prominently as a filter sweep) or to generally enhance solo
lines and chord textures. His well-known arsenal of processors:
wah. flanger, fuzz, chorus, EQ, echo and delay was exploited to
an even greater extent than in the studio.
Included in this collection is Randy's unaccompanied guitar solo
which evolves from the closing bars of "Suicide Solution." The
elaboration begun in the internal solo hints at the mood and substance
of an a cappella spot, particularly in the usage of exotic
intervals (tritones), feedback, quick ascending and descending
phrases and whammy bar sounds. The unaccompanied solo combine
virtuoso flash techniques with melodious episodes, culminating
in a mixture of compositional and jammed styles. Key elements
in thi solo are: extremely fast minor pentatonic riffs which are
moved through related tonal centers, muted flurries, diminished
7th arpeggio out-lines, scalar, triadic and chromatic runs, double-
handed sequences and whammy bar growls and dives.
It is immediately obvious that the Black Sabbath selections in
this set were particularly conducive to Randy's style by virtue of
several aspects-the darker, quasi-classical (early Eurometal) mood
in modality and melodic content; the heavier driving rhythm feel
(much like his own riffs); and the backing chord progressions for
solos, which complemented his penchant for signature melodic rolling
scale passages and use of minor and exotic line forms_ This
suited his guitar playing more aptly than the pop-rock leanings of
his Quiet Riot material, which relied in great part on I IV V chord
progressions depictive of the major mode. In "Children of the Grave"
the background harmony for the solo is 1 vi vii, an Aeolian chord
pattern, which seems to coax out of Randy the trademark style he
developed with Ozzy. The solo to "Paranoid," again built over a
driving minor riff, combines, humorously, Chuck Berry unison bend
sequences with "outside" scale excursions, bent tap-ons and
machine-gun quick picking ostinati. A clear example of Randy
Rhoads' rootsier rock 'n' roll/blues side can be heard throughout
the straight ahead rocker "No Bone Movies," which finds him using
ideas from the basic A pentatonic/blues vocabulary effectively.
Furthermore, a solid rock 'n' roll 12/8 triplet phrasing indicative
of blues shuffle rhythm and soloing over a simple 1 IV chord progression
strengthens this impression.
Possibly the most unique and unexpected treasure on this album
is the personal experience offered the listener to join Randy in the
studio during the tracking of "Dee. "Here we share intimate moments
of a thoughtful performance, resulting in two foundation tracks being
laid down, over which he added over-dubbed voices to create the
familiar masterpiece. Admirers of Rhoads' studio technique will
appreciate the insights, informality and candor of this all-too brief
session with Randy.
In re-evaluating his contributions, it becomes apparent that
Randy Rhoads' work is still as moving and significant as it was
over five years ago. It is interesting to see the seeds Rhoads planted
take root and bear fruit in so many contemporary guitarists' styles.
His pioneering of the fusion of high-tech heavy metal with classical
and exotic musics redefined and revitalized the idiom of modern
rock guitar. For those who never had the opportunity to see or hear
this star shine so brilliantly, and for those who wish to remember,
this final encore deserves a standing ovation. We applaud you, Randy and Ozzy!
 


Believer
Children Of The Grave
Crazy Train
Dee
Flying High Again
Goodbye To Romance
I Don't Know
Iron Man
Mr. Crowle
No Bone Movies
Paranoid
Revelation
Steal Away (The Night)
Suicide Solution

128 pages.

Price: €59,99
€59,99

OSBOURNE OZZY RANDY RHOADS YEARS LIBRO CD CHITARRA TABLATURE S.A.T.O.-FLYING HIGH AGAIN-DEE

OSBOURNE OZZY, THE RANDY RHOADS YEARS. CD TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Educational
Softcover with CD - TAB
Composer: Aaron Rosenbaum
Artist: Ozzy Osbourne
Artist: Randy Rhoads

With note-for-note transcriptions of Randy Rhoads' searing guitar work, gear set-ups, performance notes, historical retrospective and a play-along CD, this info-packed book will teach you to play 72 licks from 11 of Ozzy's most recognizable

 

 

Few musicians in the history of rock have been as beloved — revered, really — as Ozzy Osbourne’s late guitarist and musical soul mate, Randy Rhoads.

Only 25 when he was killed in an airplane accident in 1982, Rhoads managed in a few short years to establish himself as one of the most innovative guitar players in the world. On landmark Ozzy songs like “Flying High Again,” “Crazy Train” and “Mr. Crowley,” the guitarist wowed the world with solos and rhythm playing that managed to be explosive and tasteful, and a classical sensibility that was his alone. His premature death only served to solidify his legend, and his many fans keep his memory and spirit alive.

Guitar World acquired a tape of a seminar given by Rhoads himself before an enthralled group of Randyphiles at Music City in Greensburg, PA, on Feb. 2, 1982, only six weeks before his death. Here is the transcription of the lesson presented that day, in which he reveals himself to be every ounce the dedicated — and utterly unassuming — guitar hero.

Whether fielding questions from the audience about the details of his rig or the complexities of his technique, Randy was the perfect gentleman. And as his opening statement to the audience reveals, he was modest and humble, qualities that, as much as his guitar playing, endeared him to his fans:

“This is only the second time I’ve ever done this, so please don’t expect me to just come out and handle things real well; I’m very nervous about speaking in front of people, so you’ll have to give me a hand by asking a lot of questions. I’ll do anything I can to help you out.”

What effects do you use when you play live?

I have a pedalboard that’s got an MXR Distortion +, an MXR 10-band equalizer, a chorus, an MXR stereo chorus, an MXR flanger, a Crybaby wah pedal and a Roland volume pedal. I used them much more in the past than I do nowadays, but now our sound man is starting to add a lot more up front. Sometimes I use them more for quiet rhythm parts, just to enhance the sound. I never use echoes or anything for leads.

Do you have a preamp built into your guitar?

No, I just have the Distortion + on the board, and I just keep that on all the time. My amps are Marshalls.

What speakers do you use in your cabinets?

I use Altecs. I prefer those to Celestions because they’re very bright, clean speakers. I found that Celestion speakers are pretty dirty, and if you add a fuzz box to them they’ll sound terrible.

Do you ever have trouble with feedback?

Yes, I have lots of problems there. For example, if you let go of the guitar for a second, it will feed back. You’ve got to play so that you’re covering your pickup. If I don’t want to do something quiet, I have to either use the volume pedal or click off the fuzz—otherwise my guitar will squeal. I’ve gotten used to playing that way.

Do you have a special tremolo unit on your Charvel Flying V?

Grover Jackson, who owns Charvel, builds the guitars himself for me, and I use his tremolo units. There’s no perfect tremolo, except for maybe a Floyd Rose, but Grover’s are very good. I have another Flying V, the polka-dotted one, but it isn’t a Charvel, and I do have tuning problems with it all the time.

What kind of music did you play when you first picked up the guitar?

I’m 25 now, so I don’t remember what I was playing when I was seven. I just played the guitar. One of the early things I remember was strumming [the flamenco guitar standard] “Malagueñia” on an old Spanish guitar. Later on I just started playing anything I heard on the radio: “Gloria” or “Louie Louie” or whatever.

What players did you admire growing up?

I get asked that all the time: “Who’s your favorite?” “What are your influences?” If you play long enough, your influences are bound to change. I never had a phonograph ’til I was, I think, 16, so I couldn’t just sit and copy my favorite players. I had to listen to the radio, and I liked whoever was good. One of my favorites was Mountain and Leslie West — those harmonics and that sustain. I just thought Leslie was the greatest. But now, I don’t have a favorite — I just like anybody who plays guitar.

Did you take lessons or were you self taught?

Mostly self taught. When I was young I took lessons—basic folk and classical training—then I started playing rock. I’m actually taking lessons now.

You’re taking lessons now?

I did when I was in England.

Who was your teacher?

Anybody. I just take lessons from anybody, like when I have a day off or something. I’ll find someone in town and just pick their brain.

Were you in other bands before you hooked up with Ozzy?

I was in a local band in L.A. called Quiet Riot for five years. I was still with them when I met Ozzy, so I had to leave. Other than that, I was just in some garage bands and other little things that didn’t work out.

Didn’t you put out a couple of records with Quiet Riot?

Yeah. We had a record deal, but we were very young and we lost the deal. It just fell apart. The records were later released in Japan. I was 17 years old and the producer wanted to make us sound very much like a pop band. I mean, if you hear it, there’s hardly any guitar on it.

What do you think of other guitarists, like Michael Schenker?
I think Michael Schenker is excellent, a great rock player. He’s very melodic and he plays with lots of feeling.

Are there any other players you’d put in that category?

Oh, I could name a hundred. I mean, everybody who’s out there is really good at what they do. Eddie Van Halen is fantastic, Ritchie Blackmore…

There are critics who accuse you of copying Eddie Van Halen. Are you influenced by him?

Well, we’re both from the same town and we were both in local bands. It seemed like everybody in L.A. was a lead guitar player, and we all played very similarly. Everybody used to say we all sounded very much the same.

What do you think of Angus?

Angus Young? I think what he does, he does great. He’s so into it.

Tony Iommi?

I didn’t know too much about Black Sabbath when I met Ozzy. That’s probably why I get along with Ozzy—we’re different and come from different musical backgrounds.

Does he ever talk to you about why he left Black Sabbath?

Oh yeah, all the time. I guess they just weren’t getting along. They had been together a long time—14 years or something like that.

When you write a lead, do you focus on the melody or go for more of a technical, dazzle-type thing?

It depends on what the progression is and what the mood of the song is. You have to put down something that suits the song well. I like to play melodically.

What would you say is important for having a good band?

Aside from being able to play well together, you all need to be on the same level mentally. If one guy wants to go out and earn money in a lounge and another wants to go out and do originals, then you’ve got a conflict. I think you should all want the same thing out of your band and like the same kinds of things. That’s a good start, I think.

Is it true that when you auditioned for Ozzy you didn’t even have to play? That you just plugged in your guitar and tuned up?

Yeah, it was even more embarrassing than this. [laughs] I thought I was gonna play with a band. All I brought was this little Fender warm-up amp. When I got there, everyone was behind the glass, and in the room was just me and my amp. And they said, “Okay, play.” And I thought, You’ve got to be joking. I mean, what could I play? I didn’t have any other musicians with me. So I just started warming up, then Ozzy said, “Yeah, you’re good.” I had only played for a few seconds. Then I got kinda mad and thought, Well, you haven’t even heard me yet.

Can you play some stuff for us now?

What would you like to hear?

How about the solo breaks in “Over the Mountain,” where you play the fast, unaccompanied licks?

The first lick in that section is played like this It’s in E minor. Then the next break is just a series of real quick pull-offs to open strings , with a tremolo bar dive added at the end. That’s all there is to it. There’s just one real lick in it; the rest is just, oh, noise.

Play the solo to “Revelation (Mother Earth).”

Okay. It’s in E minor and is very similar to a harmonic [minor] scale. It starts on E flat [D#] and goes up to E flat [D#] again at the very end. For the next lick, I use the edge of the pick to make the riff sound an octave higher. It sounds a lot different live, because I’m trying to slow it down so you can see what I’m playing. Then the next bit is played like this. The only weird notes in it are the E harmonic minor parts.

Could you play the fretboard-tapping riff from your “Flying High Again” solo?

Sure. You start with your left-hand index finger on C# [1st string/9th fret], and you tap with your right hand on a high A [1st string/17th fret]. When you move over to the B string, both hands move up one fret. You then repeat the process on the G and D strings, which finishes off the lick.
The next four bars of the solo are played exactly the same way, but begin down a fourth, in E. The same process is repeated, shifting up one fret as you move to each lower string.

What key is “Flying High Again” in?

It’s in A. When I play “Crazy Train” and then go to play “Flying High Again,” I’m a half-tone out.

Did you tune differently on Diary of a Madman as compared to Blizzard of Ozz?

Yes, we tuned down one half step when we recorded Diary.

Why?

When we were recording the second album, the tuner we had was miscalibrated, and I began to like the sound of being tuned down a half step for some of those songs. A lot of people tune down a half step, but I’d never done it before then. It gives a much heavier sound to the chords, and it just gives you a meaner sound, overall. When we play live, some of the songs are tuned down and some are not, so I use different guitars which are tuned accordingly.

Could you play the beginning of “Crazy Train”?

Yeah, sure.

Are you using a wah-wah on that part at the beginning?

No, just a distortion pedal.

How do you play the main rhythm part to “Crazy Train”?

Like this. The chord progression is A E/A D/A A; the open A string is played against all of the chord voicings. The fast lick at the end is played with pull-offs to open strings. At the end of the verse section, I use chordal inversions, like this. Each chord is played with the third in the bass [the major third appears as the lowest note in the chord voicing]. Here, the chord progression is A/C# E/G# D/F#, with the third of each chord played on the low E string.

How do you play the rhythm part to the section that leads into the chorus?

That part’s played like this. On the second verse, I add a riff when I get to the F#m chord at the end of the progression, like this.

How do you play that really fast, ascending lick during the second chorus?

That riff is sort of a “fake”; I don’t even do that lick live, because it sometimes sounds really sloppy. I used to play it live, though. It’s just an [arpeggiated] F# minor triad shape that slides up the neck chromatically [ascending one fret at a time], but I’m going to lie and say that it’s played perfectly. All it is is this, after which I hurry into a pick slide before the lick dies. When you play loud, you can get away with playing a lick like that without playing it perfectly.

Did you use tapping in the “Crazy Train” solo, too?

Yes, the solo begins with this tapped lick, after which I play a slow trill that slides down one whole step.

How do you play the last lick in the “Crazy Train” solo?

It’s in F# minor. I’m trying to remember it because I don’t do that run live anymore. To the best of my recollection, it’s played like this [FIGURE 4H]. The lick begins one and a half steps below F#, on D#. If you were to play the lick in A minor, it’d be done like this.

Is there a term that describes these kinds of riffs?

These riffs are all articulated with hammer-ons. I know of no other particular name to describe them.

Do you do any particular finger exercises before you go out on stage?

I have some exercises where I use the first, second and fourth fingers in order to warm up. Here’s one [FIGURE 5A] in which I’m just sort of “wandering around.”

It’s good to do exercises like this [FIGURE 5B] using “alternate picking” [down-up-down-up, etc.], and to keep speeding it up. I used to like practicing licks that contained a lot of hammer-ons, like these [FIGURES 5C and D], but I don’t do those things that much anymore. These licks are great, though, for warming up your fingers before a gig.

Could you show us those unusual chords in “Diary of a Madman”?

Sure. The song begins with an A [major triad], with the flatted fifth added to the chord. So, you’ve got the root note, A, the third, C#, then the flatted E, with the open high E on top. The sound of the Eb and the E together gives you that dissonant sound. As you can see, the notes on the D, G and B strings descend as the chords progress through the first five bars. This section ends with an arpeggiated Emaj9 [Eadd2] chord, with the seventh, D, dropped in at the end.

The verse section features virtually the same chords as those used for the first four bars of the intro, but played in a different time signature. This section ends with some different chords played in yet another time signature [6/8].

Then there’s the heavy, distorted riff which appears a few times during the song. Here’s how it’s played during the intro. Following the bridge and the interlude, I shift to this heavy rhythm guitar part. The last chord in bar 1 [the two-note Em] is very similar to C7, but I think of it as E diminished, as both chords are built from almost the same notes [both chords comprise the notes G, Bb and E].

Right before the interlude, I play a heavily distorted riff that is similar to the first heavy riff, which is in A minor, but is here transposed to E minor. This is followed by the interlude, which begins with an Em(add9) chord.

When you take your spotlight solo each night on stage, do you ever improvise or do you always play the same solo?

It’s basically the same. But it depends on the sound I have onstage: if it’s a bad sound, I just do a basic form of the solo. But if it sounds really good, I like to carry on with it.

 

SONG LIST:

CRAZY TRAIN
DEE
DIARY OF A MADMAN
FLYING HIGH AGAIN
GOODBYE TO ROMANCE
I DON'T KNOW
MR. COWLEY
OVER THE MOUNTAIN
REVELATION (MOTHER EARTH)
S.A.T.O.
SUICIDE SOLUTION

80 pages

Price: €59,99
€59,99

OSBOURNE OZZY THE VERY BEST OF techniques of Randy Rhoads-Jake E. Lee-Zakk Wylde CD SPARTITI

OSBOURNE OZZY, THE VERY BEST OF. A step-by-step breakdown of the styles and techniques of Randy Rhoads, Jake E. Lee, Zakk Wylde. CD TAB.

Description:
A step-by-step breakdown of the guitar styles and techniques of the late Randy Rhoads, Jake E. Lee and Zakk Wylde. Includes hits (with CD note for note performances) from the albums Blizzard of Oz and No More Tears. Great care has been taken to recreate the tones and mix of the original recordings, with one exception - the featured guitar part is isolated on the right channel, and the other instruments are isolated on the left channel. You may then listen to the guitar part for learning purposes, hear the entire band or play along with the backing tracks.

Rhoads:
-I don't know
-crazy train
-dee
-steal away (the night) live
-Iron man (live)
-Paranoid (live).

Jake E. Lee:
-bark at the moon
-killer of giants (Eb slack tuning)

Zakk:
-mama, I'm coming home
-no more tears (drop D tuning)

Arranged: Troy Stetina.
Explore the trademark riffs, solos and compositions of Ozzy Osbourne's famous sidemen: Randy Rhoads, Jake E. Lee and Zakk Wylde. This book/CD pack by Troy Stetina includes background notes, lessons and other helpful tips that will help you master 11 Ozzy favorites from his Black Sabbath and solo years. Features hands-on analysis of: Bark at the Moon -Crazy Train -Dee -I Don't Know -Iron Man (Live) -Mama, I'm Coming Home -No More Tears -Paranoid (Live) -Killer Of Giants -Steal Away (The Night). The CD includes full-band examples of each song. 64 pages.

Bark At The Moon
Crazy Train
Dee
I Don't Know
Iron Man
Killer Of Giants
Mama, I'm Coming Home
No More Tears
Paranoid
Steal Away (The Night)

Price: €29,99
€29,99
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