FRED SOKOLOW

THE ROOTS OF JAZZ GUITAR songs and licks Fred Sokolow CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI

THE ROOTS OF JAZZ. CD TABLATURE
The songs and licks that made it happen. 

Dinah
East Of The Sun (And West Of The Moon)
Honeysuckle Rose
I'll Remember April
Rose Room
Yesterdays

The Roots of Jazz Guitar
Series: Guitar Collection
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB
Composer: Fred Sokolow
Inventory #HL 00699082
ISBN: 9780793577347
UPC: 073999990829
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
64 pages

A complete survey of jazz guitar, its pioneers and how it developed. Includes: six note-for-note transcriptions of famous standards pivotal to the genre; instruction in the essential playing styles; the history and development of jazz guitar; biographies of the pioneering artists; a recording of the songs, exercises, and licks; and more.

Songs include:

- Dinah (Eddie Lang)

- East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) (Barney Kessel)

- Honeysuckle Rose (Charlie Christian)

- I'll Remember April (George Van Eps)

- Rose Room (Django Reinhardt)

- Yesterdays (Wes Montgomery).

64 pages.

 

MUSCAL INTRODUCTION
A LOOK AT THE ROOTS OF JAZZ GUITAR
At the beginning of the twentieth century, New Orleans bands began combining two traditions: They
borrowed some repertoire from European bands, which often included strings, horns, and a piano,
and performed classical pieces, polkas, mazurkas, sentimental ballads and waltzes. They also imitated
Southern string bands, sometimes called "spasm bands," which consisted of guitars, banjos, violins,
mandolins and string bass, and who played ragtime, blues, jigs and reels. New Orleans bandleaders
like Buddy Bolden and Kid Ory used all these instruments and fused the musical styles, and
their music began to be identified as "jazz."
Johnny St. Cyr, who played with Kid Ory, Jelly Roll Morton and many of the New Orleans bands,
was typical of the first jazz guitarists: he was a four-string banjo player who played guitar as a sideline.
Seldom soloing, he strummed four-beats-to-the-bar and provided bands with a rhythmic backbone.
In pre-microphone days, banjo was audible over loud horns; guitar did not cut it. But in the
'20s, as phonograph recordings gained popularity, the guitar became more prominent. It was easier
to record than banjo.

HOT JAZZ: GUITARIN THE '20s
Jazz was the hot popular dance music of the decade that is often called "The Jazz Age."
Accomplished pickers like Roy Smeck, Nick Lucas and Lonnie Johnson performed the first melodic
guitar solos on records in the 1920s. These versatile players played popular tunes, blues and
whatever the traffic would bear, sometimes fingerpicking but usually flatpicking scales, chords and
arpeggios. But most performing guitarists in jazz bands simply strummed chords, until Eddie Lang
came along.
Lang performed with many of the popular ensembles of his day, including the Goldkette Orchestra,
Red Nichols and the Five Pennies, Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby. One of the first studio guitar
aces, he accompanied most of the stars of his era on records. Live and in the studio, Lang combined
rhythmic strumming with a melodic soloing style, opening up new possibilities for a whole generation
of guitarists. When he died, in 1933, he left a recorded legacy of ensemble work, solos and duets
with Lonnie Johnson and with lifelong musical companion, violinist Joe Venuti. He inspired countless
jazz banjoists to play guitar, and to be melodic as well as rhythmic. The guitar became a soloing
voice in jazz.

THE '30s SWING ERA
During the swing or big-band era, guitarists in popular swing orchestras played rhythm. Count
Basie's guitarist, Freddie Greene, never played a solo. Some guitarists like Carl Kress, Dick
McDonough, George Van Eps and George Barnes followed Eddie Lang's lead and created beautiful,
harmonically rich, chord-based soloing styles. They recorded solos, duets and small ensemble "listening"
(not dancing) records for jazz afficionados. Like Lang, they usually played Gibson L-5 archtop guitars.
Meanwhile, inspired players like Snoozer Quinn, Teddy Bunn and Oscar Aleman (who played an allmetal
National guitar) helped develop the art of single-note jazz soloing throughout the '30s. But the
creative genius who caught most listeners' and players' ears was the Belgian gypsy, Django Reinhardt.
The first international jazz star, Reinhardt rose to fame playing with his "quintette" in Paris. Although
his own style and his duets with violinist Stephane Grappelli were admittedly based on the
LangNenuti model, he took single-note guitar soloing to new heights. His ad-lib improvisations were
fiery, tender, incredibly inventive, and he always swung. Budding country, blues and jazz guitarists
memorized his solos.
 

DINAH, EDDIE LANG

Born into a musical Italian family October 25, 1902 in Philadelphia, Salvatore Massaro studied violin
and music theory at age seven. By his teens he was playing four- and six-string banjo in pop
orchestras, often with his boyhood friend, violinist Joe Venuti. Venuti claims Lang was self-taught,
and the only guitarist he recalls Lang mentioning as an inspiration was Segovia. When asked who
Lang imitated, Venuti said "Who else was there? Eddie started it all."
In 1924, using the name of boyhood baseball hero Eddie Lang, he joined the Mound City Blue
Blowers, a sort of jug band, as a guitarist. The recordings he made with them demonstrate why
Lang is said to have legitimized guitar as a jazz instrument: instead of simply strumming the chords,
he played several chords per measure, and peppered his backup with bass runs, passing tones,
arpeggios, single-string fills, bluesy string-bending and harmonics.
In the next several years, Lang was increasingly in demand as a performer. He played with the big
bands of Jean Goldkette (where he befriended Bix Beiderbecke), Roger Kahn, Adrian Rollini, and
Paul Whiteman. Although he was capable of reading music, Lang played by ear. During his tenure
with Whiteman, he kept a piece of paper the size of a business card in his pocket that contained on
it (in markings only decipherable by Lang) everything he needed to know about Whiteman's musical
repertoire. When Whiteman's singer, Bing Crosby, went solo, Lang became Crosby's guitarist and
appeared with him in the 1932 film, The Big Broadcast.
One of the first versatile studio guitarists, Lang recorded with Red Nichols and His Five Pennies,
Cliff Edwards (known as Ukulele Ike), AI Jolson, Ruth Etting, Sophie Tucker, the Boswell Sisters,
Emmett Miller and a host of blues singers, including Bessie Smith, Victoria Spivey and Texas
Alexander. His technique was most audible when he recorded solo (often composing his own
songs), and in duets with Joe Venuti or with small ensembles such as Venuti's Blue Four or Blue
Five. These were probably the first listening (not dancing) jazz recordings. Using the name "Blind
Willie Dunn," he recorded memorable duets with guitarist Lonnie Johnson, the other guitar giant of
the '20s, who, like Lang, played both blues and jazz.
By 1933, when Lang died of complications from a tonsillectomy, most jazz bands had switched from
banjo to guitar, and most guitarists were playing the archtop, F-hole instrument Lang preferred.
Using blues and classical techniques, he inspired the first generation of jazz guitarists, most of
whom agree: Lang laid the groundwork for jazz guitar.

PERFORMANCE NOTES
"Dinah" features Lang's backup and lead styles. It has a typical pop song structure, and in 1928 Joe
Venuti's Blue Four, recording for Okeh Records in New York City, gave it the usual jazz treatment
(see as follows). Released in Europe by Parlaphone, it was one of the "chamber jazz" sides that
made Venuti and Lang internationally famous. The quartet consisted of Venuti, Lang, a pianist and
baritone sax.

SONG STRUCTURE AND THE JAZZ TREATMENT
Like many pop tunes, "Dinah" has an AABA structure:
• An eight-bar section ("A part") is played twice in a row, with a slightly different ending the second time.
• An eight-bar bridge follows (that's "B").
• The "A part" is repeated.
 

Price: €29,99
€29,99

WESTERN SWING GUITAR Fred Sokolow Guitar Recorded Version BOOK TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA

WESTERN SWING GUITAR. sokolow. 25 titoli. TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Composer: Fred Sokolow
Western Swing was born in the '30s and is still going strong! This book includes 25 swingin' classics, including the solos of the best guitarists from yesterday and today, such as Chet Atkins, Ray Benson, Vince Gill, Roy Lanham, Marty Stuart and more. Includes a special introduction to Western Swing guitar styles. 136 pages

Songlist:
Across The Alley From The Alamo
A Big Ball In Cowtown (We'll Dance Around)
The Blues Come Around
Bring It On Down To My House
Cajon Stomp
Choo Choo Ch' Boogie
Corrine Corrina
Don't Let Go
Faded Love
Fat Boy Rag
Hesitation Blues
Hide Your Face
Honky Tonkin'
My Bucket's Got A Hole In It
My Window Faces The South
Red Wing
Right Or Wrong
San Antonio Rose
A Six Pack To Go
Smoke, Smoke, Smoke (That Cigarette)
Stay A Little Longer (The Hoedown Fiddle Song)
Steel Guitar Rag
Won't You Ride In My Little Red Wagon
Yearning (Just For You)
You Waited Too Long

Price: €39,99
€39,99

SWING GUITAR Fred Sokolow MUSICA CD TABLATURE LIBRO CHITARRA SPARTITI Take The 'A' Train

 

SWING GUITAR, Fred Sokolow. A String Of Pearls -Choo Choo Ch' Boogie -Go Daddy-O -I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me) -In The Mood -It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) -Jersey Bounce -Jump, Jive An' Wail -Just A Gigolo -Route 66 -Sentimental Journey -Since I Don't Have You -Take The 'A' Train -Tuxedo Junction -Zoot Suit Riot. Basi Jam play-along. CD TABLATURE

Series: Guitar Educational
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Fred Sokolow
HL00695604

Learn to play swing rhythm and lead guitar in the style of the masters! With this book / CD pack you get: transcriptions of 15 original hit recordings from the classics of the 1930s and '40s to the revival of the '90s; performance notes to help you understand the solos; instruction in comping patterns and chord embellishment; a history of swing guitar; and more. Songs, The accompanying CD includes full-band demos of all the songs, with guitar parts isolated. 80 pages

The Swing Era and the Swing Revival

Swing was America's pop music from the mid-1930s to the late 1940s. Some bands (like
Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw) were sweeter and milder, while others (like Benny Goodman and
Count Basie) were hotter and wilder. Some featured hot, improvised solos-the horn players
were the stars-and others strictly read the arrangements. But they all played dance music and
performed for jitterbugging and lindy-hopping couples. In the early 1930s, African-American
bands like those of Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Fletcher Henderson launched the swing
era, and predominantly white bands like those of Benny Goodman, the Dorseys, and Harry
James made it a mainstream pop phenomenon.
A typical swing band consisted of a rhythm section (piano, guitar, bass, and drums), four or
five saxophones, the same number of trumpets and likewise trombones, and at least one vocalist.
The leader was usually a virtuoso player, and expert arrangers made up intricate charts in
which horn sections often played repetitious, rhythmic riffs in counterpoint to one another.
As World War II ended, the popularity of the big bands waned. (In 1946, eight major big
bands folded!) Smaller, more rhythm 'n' blues-oriented combos like Louis Jordan and the
Tympany Five came on strong to take their place. The new music was still horn- and riff-driven,
but bands emphasized boogie-woogie, a strong backbeat, and simpler, bluesier chord progressions.
It led to rock 'n' roll in less than a decade. If you were a teenager in 1954, swing was the
"square" music your parents liked!
But what goes around comes around, and in the late 1980s a swing revival was bubbling up
all over the U.S. By the early 1990s, most large cities in the country had at least one nightclub
where swing bands played, and dancers dressed in retro styles displayed the steps they had just
learned at the swing-dance lesson that preceded the live band. (In between dances, instead of
holding a cigarette and cocktail, the hoofers had a towel and a bottle of Evian!) Groups like
Squirrel Nut Zippers, the Brian Setzer Orchestra, the Royal Crown Revue, and Big Bad Voodoo
Daddy had hit singles and albums, were featured in major films, and even played at the World
Series halftime show (a sure sign of popular acceptance). Most of these new bands were smaller
than the Dorseys' or Ellington's, and they borrowed as much from Louis Jordan and Louis Prima
as they did from Benny Goodman. But by the turn of the new millennium, the message was unmistakable:
swing was back.
The Role of Guitar in Swing
During the original swing era, guitars were acoustic. Charlie Christian introduced the electric
guitar to big band music in 1939 when he joined Benny Goodman's band, but by the time it
took hold in other bands, the swing era was nearly over. Most players favored arch-top, F-hole
guitars like the Gibson L-5 and the Epiphone Broadway or Emperor. (Epiphone was not owned
by Gibson in those days.) These guitars had no cutaway, and their purpose was to provide fourbeats-
to-the-bar rhythm. Since single-note guitar solos could hardly be heard above a horn section,
chords-rather than hot licks-were the guitarist's main tools. The steady chunk-chunkchunk
of the guitar kept the rhythm section flowing.
Often, when swing guitarists "comp" (play chord backup to a vocalist or soloist), theyembellish
the basic chord progression. Going beyond chord ornamentation (e.g. playing a G9 instead
of a G7), they improvise whole progressions that are not found on sheet music, to make
the music hip (or "hep," as they said during the swing era). So in order to comp in the authentic
swing style, the guitarist who is unschooled in jazz needs some hip ness (hepness?) lessons!

Choo Choo Ch' Boogie - Louis Jordan and The Tympany Five, 1946
Go Daddy-O - Big Bad Wodoo Daddy, 1995 
I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares For Me) - Spencer Williams, 1956
In The Mood - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1939
It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - Duke Ellington - Sophisticated Ladies, 1932
Jersey Bounce - Benny Goodman, 1942
Jump, Jive An' Wail - Brian Setzer Orchestra - Louis Prima, (1956) 1998
Just A Gigolo - Leonello Casucci, 1930 
Route 66 - Nat Cole Trio, 1946
Sentimental Journey - Les Brown and his Orchestra, 1943
Since I Don't Have You - Brian Setzer Orchesta, (1959) 1988
A String Of Pearls - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1942
Take The 'A' Train - Duke Ellington - Billy Strayhorn - 1941
Tuxedo Junction - Glenn Miller Orchestra, 1940
Zoot Suit Riot - Cherry Poppin' Daddies - 1997 - Steve Perry

Price: €199,99
€199,99

SMITH ELLIOTT-SONGBOOK-GUITAR TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI CHITARRA NOTE ACCORDI MUSICA

SMITH ELLIOTT, SONGBOOK. TABLATURE

 

Series: Guitar Collection
Format: Softcover - TAB
Artist : Elliott Smith
Arranger : Fred Sokolow

 

A fixture on the Portland indie music scene, singer-songwriter Elliott Smith was introduced to the mainstream via his Oscar-nominated song -Miss Misery from the Good Will Hunting soundtrack. This collection features that song and 17 others, from his first CD, through tracks released after his tragic and untimely death. Includes: Angeles -Clementine -Everything Means Nothing to Me -Pretty (Ugly Before) -Say Yes -Son of Sam -Waltz #2 (XO) and more, plus a discography and an intro. 80 pages

 

INTRODUCTION

Elliott Smith said that the Beatles' multi-faceted White Album inspired him to be a musician, so it's not surprising that the six albums he released during his short life (1969-2003) reveal an eclectic, varied musical taste. Pop, folk, classical, and punk sensibilities abound. Lyrically, the songs are full of pain, disillusionment, and despair, but also beauty, humor, and sometimes hope. Above all, the nihilism and anguish of his words are belied by the musical craftsmanship he poured into his compositions and performances, both live and recorded. He wrote every song on his albums, played most of the instruments, sang all the lead vocals, and most of the vocal harmonies. The obvious commitment he made to his art is in itself a statement of hope and value. In the early 1990s, when Smith's band Heatmiser was building a following in Portland, his girlfriend talked him into sending a demo of eight original songs he had cobbled together on borrowed equipment to Cavity Search Records; so began his career as a solo artist. Four years later, in 1998, he signed with DreamWorks. Smith came close to achieving pop stardom. His song, "Miss Misery" was nominated for a "Best Original Song" Oscar in 1998 for its use in the film Good Will Hunting. He appeared on Saturday Night Live, The Letterman Show and other TV shows, and by the time of his death in 2003, he had attained quite a large following as an indie-pop hero. Two biographies have been written and a number of tribute albums have been released by other indie artists, as well as tribute songs by Rilo Kiley, Third Eye Blind, Ben Folds, Rhett Miller, Earlimart, and others. He continues to inspire a great amount of web activity among his fans. Smith's main instrument was guitar, but he also played bass, drums, clarinet and had some classical piano chops (there's a YouTube video of him playing Rachmaninoff). He performed both as a solo acoustic act and with a full band on electric guitar. He usually played with his fingers, in a unique style that blended folk/blues fingerpicking with strumming. A Dylan "Don't Think Twice" influence is evident in songs like "Somebody That I Used to Know" and "Memory Lane," while "Condor Avenue" is reminiscent of Simon and Garfunkel. The a copella "1 Didn't Understand" shows his classical roots (as well as an affinity for the Beatles and the Beach Boys). Other, fullyproduced rock offerings like "Son of Sam" and "Pretty (Ugly Before)" reveal all kinds of pop influences spanning the Sixties, Seventies, Eighties, and Nineties. Smith also employed some unusual open guitar tunings that added to the individuality and uniqueness of his sound. Despite the indie and punk influences in Smith's music, his songs are more harmonically complex than most pop or rock. There are more chords per tune, including jazz or orchestral chords, more unique and rambling progressions, and ascending or descending bass lines. Above all, he created his own sound (which he described as "impressionistic") and presented his work with the commitment and passion of a genuine, authentic artist. This book is an offering to make his music and guitar styling accessible to his fans, to keep his songs circulating, and to spread the word about the legacy he left behind.

 

CONTENTS

Introduction

Discography

Arranged by fred Sokolow

Song List: - ALBUM

Angeles - Either/Or

Ballad of Big Nothing - Either/Or

Between the Bars - Either/Or

Bottle Up & Explode - XO

Clementine - Elliott Smith

Condor Avenue - Roman Candle

A Distorted Reality Is Now a Necessity to Be Free - From a Basement on the Hill

Everything Means Nothing to Me - Figure 8

I Didn't Understand  - XO

Memory Lane - From a Basement on the Hill

Miss Misery - Good Will Hunting Original Soundtrack

Needle in the Hay - Elliott Smith

Pretty (Ugly Before) - From a Basement on the Hill

Rose Parade - Either/Or

Say Yes - Either/Or

Somebody That I Used to Know - Figure 8

Son of Sam - Figure 8

Waltz #2 (XO) - XO

 

GUITAR NOTATION LEGEND 80

 

Editorial assistance provided by Ronny Schiff

Cover photo by Autumn de Wilde

 

ISBN 978-1-4234-4013-0

HAL-LEONARD CORPORATION

7TT7 w. BLUEMOUND RD. P.O. Box 13819 MILWAUKEE, WI 53213

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