CHITARRA - GUITAR

YORK ANDREW BEST BOOK & CD GUITAR TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

YORK ANDREW, BEST. CD TAB.

Introduction to Sunburst~Sunburst
Sunday Morning Overcast
Muir Woods
In Sorrow's Wake
Lullaby
Faire
Waiting for Dawn
Marley's Ghost
Reflections
King Lotvin
Numen
Emergence
Chilean Dance

Price: €99,99
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PETTEWAY AL CELTIC BLUES BEYOND CD GUITAR TABLATURE DADGAD Tuning DADDAD DGCFAD CHITARRA

PETTEWAY AL, CELTIC, BLUES AND BEYOND. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO PER CHITARRA CON CD E TABLATURE

After Dark
Alphonso Brown is Back
The Darkest Hour
E Funk
Lightning Rod
Meant to Be
Meant to Be
She Moved Through the Faire Slinky Soozie
Smoky Mountain Morning
Spindrift
St. Clair's Rag
Station to Station
The West Wind
Tony's Rag

Acoustic Masterclass Series: Al Petteway -- Celtic, Blues, and Beyond
SERIES: Acoustic Masterclass
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
VERSION: Guitar TAB
FORMAT: Book & CD
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guitar arrangements transcribed by the artists themselves, in standard notation and tab. Each edition includes a masterclass-style CD in which the artist walks you through the key aspects and techniques for each arrangement.

Al Petteway has a unique solo guitar style that mixes varied influences, from folk and Celtic music, to R&B and blues. Includes: After Dark * Alphonso Brown Is Back in Town * The Darkest Hour * E Funk * Eureka Hotel * Lightning Rod * Meant to Be * Requiem * She Moved Through the Faire * Slinky Soozie * Smoky Mountain Morning * Spindrift * St. Clair's Rag * Station to Station * The West Wind * Tony's Rag.

 

ACOUSTIC MASTERCLASS

16 SOLO GUITAR MASTERPIECES
DAZZLING CONTEMPORARY FINGERSTYLE GUITAR
MASTERCLASS CD INCLUDED


Acknowledgments
Thanks to all the folks who helped make this project a reality.
Years ago, after hearing a tune on one of my early albums, James Jensen of Solid Air Records
had the idea for me to do a blues-oriented recording. The resulting solo guitar project, Shades
of Blue, would not have happened without him.
Aaron Stang of Warner Bros. Publications has been a great inspiration during this project and
its sister DVD. His kind patience and knowledge of guitar were instrumental in making it all
come together.
Frank LaRouche helped immensely by transcribing my music so that the folks at Warner Bros.
Publications would have something from which to work.
And finally, my wife, Amy White, helped every step of the way by being my best ~usical editor
and my best friend.

TRANSCRIBED BY: FRANCOIS LaROUCHE

Introduction
A number of varied techniques are represented in this book. Some come directly from my
blueslrock guitar past and others from playing lute in the university madrigal group or playing
funk bass with a top-40 dance band during the '70s. My acoustic guitar career began with some
serious flatpicking of bluegrass, newgrass, and swing during the '80s and eventually led to writing
and interpreting Celtic music for fingerstyle guitar in the '90s. I'm always amazed at how much of
each style stays with me when I sit down to write or arrange a tune for fingerstyle guitar.
Playing Celtic music in DADGAD tuning taught me new ways to approach the guitar and brought
me full circle to the blues and rock styles of my youth. I was struck with how easy it was to play
these styles on an acoustic guitar when three of the strings are tuned down a whole step and the
bottom two strings make an open fifth. Suddenly, I could bend notes as I did on electric guitars,
and with a bit of practice, I could even add bass and drum parts to accompany myself. A whole new
world opened to me.
Most of the tunes in this book are from my Shades of Blue album on Solid Air Records. I let the spirit
of improvisation carry me many times during the recording of that album, and most of the tunes
are played a bit differently each time I revisit them. In addition, there are three pieces that are more
from the Celtic side of the spectrum and are also included on the DVD Celtic, Blues and Beyond.
These tunes also differ somewhat from my original recordings. The important thing is to get the
melody and the feeling in each of the tunes. The rest is up for grabs. I think it's always best for each
guitarist to reinterpret the tune to fit his or her style and showcase his or her own strong points.
In every case, however, it is important to set up a hierarchy within the parts of an arrangement. The
melody is always played loudest, the bass line a bit softer, and the chord flll notes softer yet. This
approach helps separate the different parts and make everything clearer and easier to listen to.
Ballad tunes should be played as if they were being sung. The music should breathe and not feel
restricted by the meter.
The next few pages contain specific notes about each of the tunes included in this collection. I hope
you enjoy everyone of them.
AI Petteway

 

The Compositions

After Dark
This one is a relatively straightforward jazzy blues built from a melody and bass line. Note that the
first section is played with a swing feel as if the tune were in 12/8. The second part is played straight
and a bit faster. The transition back to the swing feel happens over a few measures and should be
gradual and smooth.

Alphonso Brown Is Back in Town
My name really is Alphonso Brown Petteway. I always fancied Alphonso Brown as my funk bass playing alias. The primary techniques used in this tune combine a funk bass sensibility with blues licks.
The hardest part (and the most satisfying) is keeping that downbeat happening at all times. The
intro and the funky rhythmic patterns that occur throughout the piece use a technique I came up
with to imitate bass and drums playing together. My right hand maintains a constant slap on the
strings by playing notes on the downbeat with the back of my nails and by pulling the string away
from the fingerboard with the flesh of my finger for any notes on the upbeat. With the addition of
hammer-ons and pull-offs, this technique can result in an incredible groove. You can teach yourself
this technique by playing simple melodies on one string while maintaining the downbeat hit on the
strings. It's not easy, but once you get it, you'll be able to improvise easily. During the main section
of the tune, I use a pretty straightforward technique of muting the bass string with my right-hand
palm while playing blues licks with my fingers. There's lots of bending and snapping going on.

The Darkest Hour
This one is a total improvisation. I used the trick of tuning the entire guitar down a step so that I
could bend the strings further and with more expression.

E Funk
Again the hierarchy of melody, bass, and chords comes into play. The "x" represents a rhythmic hit
on the strings. You can execute the funky bass lines by pulling the string away from the fingerboard
and letting it slap down for the note to sound. This technique takes very little effort but results in a
nice loud slap sound.

Eureka Hotel
Here's a great use for DADGAD tuning: Play the melody in parallel octaves on
three pairs of strings. The repeating bass notes on the downbeat keep this tune
rolling along, and the melody comes right out of the chords. Many times, my
fingers are holding down the entire chord even when I play only one or two notes
of it. That way, I'm safe if I hit one of the other strings by accident or if I want to
fill out the chord a bit more.

Lightning Rod
This tune evolved from an exercise I wrote for my students to teach them how
to jam with themselves. Learning to playa repeating quarter note on the low
E string while improvising on top can lead to hours of fun.


Meant to Be
In DADGAD, the key of Am lends itself nicely to blues styles. On this tune, I set up a rhythmic
pattern with my right hand hitting the strings on beats 2 and 4 rather than on every beat. This
creates a nice backbeat to play the melody over. The same technique is used as in "Alphonso
Brown," where any notes that fall on 2 or 4 must be played with the back of the nails to maintain
the rhythmic pattern. Many times I'll stretch notes up without releasing them or start
notes at the top of a stretch and bring them down. Both of these techniques sound great on
acoustic guitar.

She Moved Through the Faire
Traditionally sung a cappella, this melody in the Mixolydian mode falls nicely under the fingers
without having to change positions. Remember to breathe and let the tempo relax at the ends of
phrases. These kinds of tunes just don't sound right if they are played with a metronomic feel. In
measure 23, the triplet can be played by alternating the thumb and first finger or using all three
fingers on the right hand in quick succession on the one note.

Requiem
This tune needs lots of space as well. The ornaments are very Celtic, but the chord structure is not.

Slinky Soozie
I cheated on this one by tuning the entire guitar down a whole step. Many of my favorite blues
techniques involve stretching pairs of strings. On an electric, it's easy, but with a wound mediumgauge
third string on an acoustic, it's nearly impossible unless you tune down. Since I wanted
to play in standard tuning, this meant tuning down all six strings. It really feels slinky when
you do this.

Smoky Mountain Morning
This Celtic-sounding piece evolves into more of a mountain tune complete with the sound of
a frailing banjo. DAD GAD tuning is wonderful {or these kinds of things because of its modal
character. The melody in the frailing section is played with the thumb while the backs of the first
and second fingernails are used to strum in a down-up pattern creating a banjo-like drone.

Spindrift
The right-hand arpeggio in measures 3 and 7 is played T 1 2 3 2 1 T. Practice this
move slowly until it becomes relaxed and flows easily from the tips of your fingers.
I used this arpeggio to relax my right hand when warming up since it's almost
impossible to do when the muscles in your hand are tensed.

St. Clair's Rag
Simple alternating bass lines drive this Am rag.


Station to Station
The technique used here is the same as the one in the second half of "Smoky Mountain
Morning:' The melody is played in octaves, and the chords are strummed with the fingertips
using a down-up pattern. The intent is to imitate a train speeding up to full speed before pulling
into the next station. The rhythm should be kept even as it speeds up and then slows down. On
some of the double-stops, use vibrato to emulate a slide guitar.

Tony's Rag
This one is just a fun rag based on thousands of similar rags I've heard. The time signature says
4/4, but it feels more like it is in 2/4 when played up to speed. If you tap your foot, tap on beats
1 and 3 instead of all four to get this feel. Pay close attention to the cascading line that appears in
measures 43 and 44. It's a tricky one since some of the higher notes are played on the lower
strings. Using open strings in conjunction with fingered notes can be really effective, especially
in fast passages like this one.

The West Wind
Better known as an Irish tune called "The South Wind," this old Celtic piece is claimed under
different names by all of the Celtic nations. Since I learned it from a piping record, it had a
decidedly Scottish flavor. One of the typical musical figures in Scottish music is the "Scottish
Snap." Typically written as a 16th-dotted-eighth-note pattern, it appears here as a 32nd-dotted16th-
note figure due to the tune being transcribed in 6/8 rather than 3/4. It still sounds exactly
the same.

Outro
DADGAD Tuning Track
DADDAD Tuning Track
DGCFAD Tuning Track
Standard Tuning Track

Introduction :
Performance Notes
After Dark
Alphonso Brown Is Back in Town
The Darkest Hour
E Funk
Eureka Hotel
Lightning Rod
Meant to Be
She Moved Through the Faire
Requiem
Slinky Soozie
Smoky Mountain Morning
Spindrift
St. Clair's Rag
Station to Station
Tony's Rag
The West Wind
Title
Contents
Page CD Track

 

AI Petteway
The Guitarist
AI Petteway has played music professionally since he was 12 years old, performing nearly
every type of popular, folk, and classical music. Though his primary instrument has always
been the guitar, he has also studied lute, string bass, percussion, and music composition. His
compositions for acoustic fingerstyle guitar are strongly influenced by his love of Celtic
music and his own roots in folk, rock, and blues. His recordings, music books, and instructional
videotapes have helped to win him international acclaim and appearances on National
Public Radio. Before relocating from Takoma Park, Maryland, to the mountains of western
North Carolina, AI was awarded 45 Wammies by the Washington Area Music Association,
including the top honors of Artist of the Year and Musician of the Year. He was the recipient
of two Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Awards for Music Composition and has
performed at the Vice President's Residence and the White House. His playing is featured on
more than 60 recordings by some of the world's best-known folk and Celtic musicians, and
his music is heard daily between segments on NPR. He performs extensively with his wife,
Amy White. He teaches private lessons and records acoustic music in their home studio in
Fairview, North Carolina. He is also the Guitar Week coordinator for the world-famous
Swannanoa Gathering music camp at Warren Wilson College near Asheville, North Carolina. 

 

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THE ART AND CRAFT OF MAKING CLASSICAL GUITARS Manuel Rodríguez FLAMENCO chitarra classica liutaio

THE ART AND CRAFT OF MAKING CLASSICAL GUITARS, Manuel Rodríguez.

Rich in beauty, sound and history, Manuel Rodríguez and Sons' classical and flamenco guitars have been lovingly hand-crafted in Madrid since 1905. The company's remarkable creations are just as acclaimed today, capturing the 2000 Player's Choice Award from Acoustic Guitar magazine for its nylon-string model. New from Hal Leonard and for the first time available in English, The Art and Craft of Making Classical Guitars presents master luthier Manuel Rodríguez's thoughts on the history of the instrument he loves, and how the guitar attained its prominent position among musical instruments. Filled with fabulous historical photos, priceless memorabilia, abundant diagrams and more, the book covers topics such as the art and development of the guitar, materials used in construction, and much more. Essential for all admirers of the guitar. 168 pages.

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JUBER LAURENCE THE GUITARIST ANTHOLOGY VOL.2 CD TABLATURE SPARTITI CHITARRA LITTLE WING

JUBER LAURENCE, THE GUITARIST ANTHOLOGY VOL.2. CD TABLATURE

Dancing On Streams -Different Times -Leaning Post -Liquid Amber -Along The Way -Love At First Sight -Buffalo Nickel -Cannery Row -Catch! -The Green Kitchen -The 5:55 -Breaking Point -Eye of the Storm -I Saw Her Standing There -Little Wing.

Acoustic Masterclass Series: Laurence Juber -- The Guitarist Anthology Vol. 2
By Laurence Juber
SERIES: Acoustic Masterclass
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & CD

Guitar arrangements transcribed by the artists themselves, in standard notation and tab. Each edition includes a masterclass-style CD in which the artist walks you through the key aspects and techniques for each arrangement.

Laurence Juber, the former lead guitarist for Paul McCartney and Wings, is the premier solo acoustic guitarist of our generation. This new anthology contains 16 of LJ's most popular solo guitar pieces, in DADGAD, CGDGAD, and standard tuning. All are transcribed by LJ himself, including his classic arrangements of the Beatles' "I Saw Her Standing There," Jimi Hendrix's "Little Wing, " and Eric Clapton's "Layla." Also included is a masterclass-style CD, in which LJ walks through the key aspects and techniques for each arrangement. Songs include: Dancing on Streams - Different Times - Leaning Post - Gate 43 - Liquid Amber - Along the Way - Love at First Sight - Buffalo Nickel - Cannery Row - Catch! - The Green Kitchen - The 5:55 - Breaking Point - Eye of the Storm - I Saw Her Standing There - Little Wing.

Includes the Following Selection:
Title Composer

ALONG THE WAY
LAURENCE JUBER

BREAKING POINT
LAURENCE JUBER

BUFFALO NICKEL
LAURENCE JUBER

CANNERY ROW
LAURENCE JUBER

CATCH!
LAURENCE JUBER

DANCING ON STREAMS
LAURENCE JUBER

DIFFERENT TIMES
LAURENCE JUBER

EYE OF THE STORM
LAURENCE JUBER

GREEN KITCHEN
LAURENCE JUBER

I SAW HER STANDING THERE
LENNON, JOHN/MCCARTNEY, PAUL
(is not presented on CD)

LAYLA
CLAPTON, ERIC/GORDON, JIM

LEANING POST
LAURENCE JUBER

LIQUID AMBER
LAURENCE JUBER

LITTLE WING
JIMI HENDRIX
(is not presented on CD)

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
LAURENCE JUBER

THE 5:55
LAURENCE JUBER

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CHITARRA CLASSICA DA STUDIO modello PROFESOR A SANCHEZ-Solid top-rosewood-TASTIERA IN EBANO

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Antonio Sanchez 'Profesor' Classical Guitar, Model no. 1020

The materials used in the 'Profesor' line are superior to the Estudio models and the instruments produce an excellent sound for the home or small concert hall.

Solid Top
Rosewood Back and Sides
Ebony Fingerboard
Gold plated machine heads

CRAFTSMANSHIP GUITARS

Concert, S.A. was created in 1984 in Valencia by the Spanish Luthier Antonio Sánchez after many years' experience working in different guitar factories. During his almost twenty years of factory existence, Antonio Sánchez dedicated this time to study and to try and improve the qualities of the instrument. This study and his investigations with different materials and designs has led to Antonio Sánchez’s guitars being respected and admired all around the world.

The continuous improvement of the instrument is still the main concern for the Sanchez guitar factory. Mr. Sánchez personally selects different woods as well as being involved in the natural drying process which can last more than one year. Of course, he also supervizes the entire production process of the 'Estudio' models as well as the personal construction of the most prestigious guitars models too.

The workshop is situated in Paterna city and it has a staff of twenty craftsmen who have all had long experience in guitar manufacture. With around ten thousand guitars a year capacity of production it has been easy for them to maintain the most pure craftmanship tradition coupled with technological innovation in order to obtain a guitar of excellent technical and tonal characteristics. 

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DIORIO JOE, SOLO GUITAR CONCEPTS. DVD

DIORIO JOE, SOLO GUITAR CONCEPTS. DVD

CHORD FRAGMENTS
HARMONIES
ARRANGING SOLO PIECES
FILLS
COMPING
BASS LINES
INTERVALS
CHORD INVERSIONS
STADARDS: STELLA BY STARLIGHT -AUTUMN LEAVES.
running time: 51:23.

Product Description:
In this DVD guitar master Joe Diorio shares his thoughts and techniques on solo jazz guitar playing. Concepts covering the most crucial elements of solo guitar playing are taught in a relaxed atmosphere which also presents Diorio playing his own solo guitar arrangements. This is a must have DVD for any jazz guitarist. Diorio also shares his thoughts on tapping into ones inner creativity and expressing it in an original way on the guitar.

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VERHEYEN CARL-IMPROVISING WITHOUT SCALES-THE INTERVALLIC GUITAR SYSTEM OF CD TABLATURE

VERHEYEN CARL, IMPROVISING WITHOUT SCALES, THE INTERVALLIC GUITAR SYSTEM OF. CD TAB.

Product Description:
In this remarkable book, Carl Verheyen teaches his philosophy and techniques for improvising. Rather than hashing out scales, Carl teaches how to play lines with strong melodic content. By approaching melodies through intervals and chord qualities, infinite lines can be generated. Carl stresses the importance of collecting lines that can be used in improvised settings. These lines and examples will provide outstanding material for any guitarist yearning for melodic ideas and inspiration. Presented in standard notation and tab.

Contents:

01) In the Beginning --
02) The Integrity of the Line --
03) The Proximity Factor --
04) Make Music Sound Different --
05) The Lines --
06) The Intervals --
07) Melodic Direction --
08) Major Key LInes --
09) Minor Key Lines --
10) Dominant 7th Key Lines --
11) Coda --
01) In the Beginning --
02) The Integrity of the Line --
03) The Proximity Factor --
04) Make Music Sound Different --
05) The Lines --
06) The Intervals --
07) Melodic Direction --
08) Major Key LInes --
09) Minor Key Lines --
10) Dominant 7th Key Lines --
11) Coda

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MASTERS OF THE TELECASTER-ARLEN ROTH'S DVD METODO CHITARRA-banjo rolls-CHICKEN PICKIN LIBRO

MASTERS OF THE TELECASTER, ARLEN ROTH'S. 90 minuti, 30 pagine. Pedal steel bends, behind-the-nut bends, chicken pickin', rockabilly rhythm styles, blues techniques, shuffle patterns, full chord bends, banjo rolls. Styles of: Albert Lee, Danny Gatton, Keith Richards, Steve Cropper, James Burton, and many more, filmati e altro. Running time: 90 minutes. TAB. DVD

The Telecaster [TM] is the only guitar to have ever spawned its own cult of "Teleplayers." The Tele's raw, penetrating sound, combined with unique physical characteristics such as a deeply scooped headstock and placement of its volume and tone controls enable Teleplayers to exploit techniques and sounds not available on other guitars. In this presentation, Telemaster Arlen Roth teaches you all the classic licks and riffs of the great Telemasters, as well as techniques such as pedal steel bends, behind-the-nut bends, chicken pickin', classic rockabilly rhythm styles, blues techniques, shuffle patterns, full chord bends, banjo rolls, and more. Special DVD features include a tuning segment, a bonus performance by Albert Lee, a bonus lesson (behind-the-nut bends), and a sample lesson from the book/CD matching.

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KOCH GREG Guitar Play-Along Volume 28 LIBRO CD BASI TABLATURE BLUES-COUNTRY-METAL-ROCK

KOCH GREG, Guitar Play-Along Volume 28. CD TAB.

The Guitar Play-Along Series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily! Just follow the tab, listen to the CD to hear how the guitar should sound, and then play along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book in case you want to sing, or to simply help you follow along. The audio CD is playable on any CD player. For PC and Mac computer users, the CD is enhanced so you can adjust the recording to any tempo without changing pitch!
8 songs from Favored Nations recording artist Greg Koch, including: Chief's Blues -Death of a Bassman -Dylan the Villain -The Grip -Holy Grail -Spank It -Tonus Diabolicus -Zoiks. 79 pages.

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OLD TIME COUNTRY GUITAR BACKUP BASICS, Joseph Weidlich. Hal Leonard TABLATURE

OLD TIME COUNTRY GUITAR BACKUP BASICS, Joseph Weidlich. 
Based on commercial recordings of the 1920's & early 1930's. TABLATURE 

Old Time Country Guitar Backup Basics
Series: Guitar
Publisher: Centerstream Publications
Author: Joseph Weidlich

This instructional book uses commercial recordings from 70 different “sides” from the 1920s and early 1930s as its basis to learn the principal guitar backup techniques commonly used in old-time country music. Topics covered include: boom-chick patterns • bass runs • uses of the pentatonic scale • rhythmic variations • minor chromatic nuances • the use of chromatic passing tones • licks based on chords or chord progressions • and more.

Inventory #HL 00000389
ISBN: 9781574241488
UPC: 073999501247
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
84 pages

In the rural setting of the South the singing of old songs was often unaccompanied. When music was played away from the home it tended to be for dancing or some kind of contest. The" core" instruments used were usually the fiddle and banjo, where the banjo "seconded" the fiddle. This style goes back to the early 19th century minstrel show [ca. 1843] whose standard instrumentation were the fiddle, banjo, bones and tambourine.

Fiddle. The principal instrument of the old-time music genre was the fiddle, seemingly always the lead instrument. The fiddle served several functions: to provide dance music, to provide accompaniment to the voice, or solo fiddle music without a particular social function, e.g., for their own enjoyment. The fiddle was particularly important in accompanying vocal music as it could be used to imitate, i.e., "double" the vocal line, thereby reinforcing the primary contours of the melody or to provide ornamentation, based on the melodic line. As the melodies of the songs became simpler, in the sense of using less vocal ornamentation, the fiddle style likewise became simpler. This transition was aided by the addition of the banjo and guitar, which provided additional decorative elements, thus freeing the fiddle to focus primarily on lead melodic functions.

Banjo. Besides the fiddle, the mountain banjo was the most important ensemble instrument, as it was used to reinforce the main notes of the melodies played by the fiddle. The banjo introduced a steady, strong rhythm to maintain the beat, so important when playing for dances. In fact, the clawhammer banjo style, in particular, was, and still is, highly regarded for this role. While the 19th century minstrel banjoists traditionally used two basic tunings (what today would be equivalent to the natural C tuning and open G tuning) an interesting feature of the Southern mountain banjo was the development of several additional tunings to suit the modal character of the traditional melodies being sung and played. Scholars seem to think that these systems of altered tunings HLP 8005 may have been worked out by the turn of the 19th century, perhaps influenced by open guitar tunings needed for playing certain parlor guitar songs (e.g., the Spanish fandango) and the beginning of the African-American blues guitar styles. These modal melodies would then be accompanied on the banjo so that the principal melodic notes could be played without the need to play harmonic chords or shift up and down the fingerboard, whose chord voicings would not be practical most of the time playing in these altered tunings (the newly introduced guitar would now supply this harmonic accompaniment). Occasionally, the banjo was used as a solo instrument on early commercial recordings (e.g., by Charlie Poole using fingerstyle techniques); however, its usual role was to support the fiddler. Guitar. While guitars had been available in the United States for most of the 19th century, principally in urban industrialized areas, e.g., by c.P. Martin, Ashborn, 55. Stewart, and Washburn, by the end of that century guitars were beginning to become available in even greater numbers, aided in part by a much improved mass transportation system, the advent of the industrial revolution, and mail-order houses like Sears Roebuck. In the last decade of that century the guitar was gaining rapidly in mass popularity due to its usage in mandolin bands, glee clubs, and university banjo bands, thus not just for use in its traditional 19th century environment, the parlor.

String Bands. From the 1920s, with the introduction of the guitar into the string band ensemble, the emphasis, at least in terms of recording, shifted from providing music for dances to the accompaniment of vocal songs and fiddle tunes. That necessarily changed the function of the string band instruments, freeing up the ensemble for various duties. The guitar was now used to mark out the...


Joseph Weidlich [b. 1945] began his formal musical studies on the classic guitar. He moved to Washington, D.C. in 1972, from his native St. Louis, to teach classic guitar. He performed in several classic guitar master classes conducted by notable students of Andres Segovia (i.e., Sr. Jose Tomas [Spain], Oscar Ghiglia [Italy] and Michael Lorimer [U.s.]). He has also played renaissance guitar, renaissance lute, and baroque guitar.
In 1978,he completed research on and writing of an article on Battuto Performance Practice in Early
Italian Guitar Music (1606-1637), for the Journal of the Lute Society of America, 1978 (Volume XI). This
article outlines the various strumming practices, with numerous examples, found in early guitar
methods published in Italy and Spain in the early 17th century. In the late 1970she published a series
of renaissance lute transcriptions for classic guitar, published by DeCamera Publishing Company,
Washington, D.C., which were distributed by G. Schirmer, New York/London. The American Banjo
Fraternity published an article Joe wrote on James Buckley's New Banjo Book [1860]in their newsletter,
the Five-Stringer, #185, Double Issue, Fall-Winter 2000-01.
The banjo has also been no stranger in Joe's musical life. He began learning folk styles in the early
1960s during the folk music boom, later playing plectrum and classic banjo styles as well. His extensive
research in the history of minstrel banjo demonstrates how that style formed the foundation of
clawhammer banjo. Alan Jabbour, noted old-time fiddler, musicologist and former long-time director
of the Library of Congress' American Folklife Center, has said of Joe's book, The Early Minstrel Banjo:
Its Technique and Repertoire, that "our understanding of the minstrel banjo in the 19th century is greatly enhanced by the long labors you have devoted to the subject and the fine understanding you have brought to it."
Joe has collaborated with banjo builder Mike Ramsey (Chanterelle Workshop, Appomattox,
Virginia) in designing two prototype minstrel banjos based on the dimensions described in Phil Rice's
Correct Method [1858], as well as similar instruments made by William Boucher in Baltimore in the 1840s.
Also published by Centerstream Publishing are Joe's editions of a flatpicking guitar edition of
George Knauff's Virginia Reels [1839],believed to be the only substantial extant compilation of nineteenth-
century Southern fiddle tunes published prior to the Civil War (which includes songs later featured
in the early minstrel shows), Minstrel Banjo-Brigg's Banjo Instructor [1855],More Minstrel Banjo-
Frank Converse's Banjo Instructor, Without A Master [1865], Guitar Backup Styles of Southern String
Bands from the Golden Age of Phonograph Recordings, which features the guitar backup styles of Ernest
Stoneman's Dixie Mountaineers, the Carter Family, Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers,
Gid Tanner and the Skillet Lickers, and Jimmie Rodgers, often acknowledged as lithe father of country
music" and Painless Arranging for Old-Time Country Guitar.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Biography .
A Brief Introduction To "Old-Time Music" .
Introduction to Old-Time Country Guitar Backup Basics .
 
PART ONE: BACKUP BASICS .
Lesson 1 Boom-Chick Patterns .
Lesson 2 Alternating Between Root and Fifth of a Chord .
Lesson 3 6-7-8 Bass Run Connectors .
Lesson 4 Golden Age Lick ,
Lesson 5 Third of the Chord in Back-Ups .
Lesson 6 3-2-1 Bass Run Connector .
Lesson 7 Pentatonic Scale .
Lesson 8 Ascending and Descending Triad Usage .
Lesson 9 Reinforce Melodic Line .
Lesson 10 Scales .
Lesson 11 Chord Progression Lick .
Lesson 12 5-6-7-8Bass Run Connector .
Lesson 13 Varied Golden Age Lick .
Lesson 14 Leading Tone Usage .
Lesson 15 Concluding Thoughts .
 
PART TWO: .
Variations On Backup Basics
Transcribed from Commercial Recordings of the 1920s and Early 1930s
Epilogue.
Song Reference List 
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