ACOUSTIC GUITAR MAGAZINE ACOUSTIC GUITAR SLIDE BASICS David Hamburger CD TABLATURE METODO

ACOUSTIC GUITAR MAGAZINE PRESENTS SLIDE BASICS. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE.

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA SLIDE CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TECNICA CHITARRISTICA, 

Le tecniche principali per lo slide blues, e per scivolare in altri generi. 9 Lezioni, 15 canzoni complete. Single string melodies, working in the thumb, open g tuning and closed position, pull-offs hammer-ons and blue notes, turnarounds and moving basslines.

Series: Guitar Educational
Publisher: String Letter Publishing
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: David Hamburger


David Hamburger, leading sideman, solo performer and teacher, guides players through this complete introduction to bottleneck slide guitar playing with progressive lessons in open tunings and fingerstyle technique, tips on slide guitars and gear, technical exercises, and full songs. The accompanying CD features all of the music played slowly, then up to tempo. In standard notation with tablature and chord diagrams.
Bitten by the blues bug? If you have always wanted to explore the haunting sounds of acoustic slide guitar, or are looking to brush up on your bottleneck basics, this easy-to-follow, step-by-step CD lesson book will have you well on your way to mastering one of the great styles of American roots music. David Hamburger, a master teacher, sideman, and solo performer specializing in slide and Dobro, is uniquely qualified to offer you these nine progressive lessons on the fundamentals of acoustic slide guitar. 72 pages.

Contents
Lessons

GETTING STARTED :

Guitars, Slides, and Tunings,

le diverse accordature, i tipi di bottleneck, messa a punto per lo slide

Single-String Melodies

l'angolatura del bottleneck, muting, terzine,  


Working in the Thumb

OFFBEAT

MOVING AROUND THE NECK :

Open-G Tuning and Closed Position

Vibrato

Spicing Up Your Melodies

Shuffling in D

MORE TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES :

Travis Picking

Tampa Red


Pull-offs, Hammer-ons, and Blue Notes

lo slide di un quarto di tono, le "BLUE NOTES"

Turnarounds and Moving Bass Lines

SONGS:

Cucina Blues
Steady Now
Offbeat Blues
From Twelve to Seven
Transposin' and Tumblin'
Three-Note Jump
Two-Chord Draw
The Cover-up
Better Late Than Never
Slidin' and Frettin'
Since I've Laid My Burden Down
Blue Note Special
Muddy's Blues
Muddy's Blues #2
Goin' Back to Clarksdale

Your pull-offs will be only as clean as your technique is in general. That is, if you're
still hearing lots of other strings sound as you slide up on a particular string, you're
going to hear all those strings ringing open along with the one string you want to hear
when you lift the slide. So keep paying attention to your damping and muting. Also,
make sure you've really reached the fret you were aiming for before you actually lift
the slide from the strings. Unless you're going for a quarter-tone slide ...
 
 
QUARTER-TONE SLIDES
This concept is a little more tricky to communicate in print, and even if you listen to
the examples on the CD, you may find it difficult at first to hear the difference
between a quarter-tone slide and a half-tone slide. Still, it's an important sound, and
I wouldn't want you to come away from this book thinking, "Hamburger, that slacker,
he never even tried to explain quarter-tone slides." So here goes.
To begin with, remember that a one-fret distance on the guitar is called a half-step
or a half tone. So a quarter tone is just going to be half of that. "Dave," I hear you say,
"how am I supposed to play half a fret?" Well, say, what's that on your little finger? A
slide? Try this. On the third string, slide from the third fret completely up to the
fourth fret (Example 4a). That's a half-step (one-fret) slide, and if you play that over
a G bass, the B you're landing on will sound really bright and perfect as the major
third of a G chord.
Now slide from the third fret only halfway up to the fourth fret-to an imaginary
three-and-a-half fret (Example 4b). Over a G bass, that note won't quite sound major,
and it won't quite sound minor. Ifyou just stop right there in the middle, it won't quite
sound right, either. There's a blue note you're trying to find, and I can really only
describe it as being the note on the way to the major third. If you haven't lost your
patience with this project yet, try this last step: Start at the third fret again and slide
toward the fourth fret, but this time lift the slide from the strings somewhere between
your start at the third fret and your conclusion at the fourth, killing the note midflight.
You need to be damping behind the slide with your index finger so that lifting
the slide actually stops the note; otherwise you'll get a pull-off to the open G.
 
It's a tangy, ambiguous sound, and it does work as a pull-off to the open G string,
too. Let's try a few licks with this sound. In Example 5, almost all the action is in the
pickup before the downbeat. Example 6 also has a long pickup, this time with a pulloff:
make the two quick slides into the seventh fret, and on the second one, lift the
slide from the string to get the open G. This open note gives you time to jump down
with the slide to the third fret for the last move of the measure.
Prezzo: €22,99
€22,99
Articolo: 3291
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72