LIBRO CON DVD

RITMICHE E RIFF BLUES ALLA CHITARRA Schiarini, Carlo. In italiano. TABLATURE DVD

RITMICHE E RIFF BLUES ALLA CHITARRA Schiarini, Carlo. In italiano. TAB. DVD

Poiché nel blues non è solo questione di esecuzioni soliste, questo DVD vi permetterà di capire, suonare e creare dei riff, dei groove e delle ritmiche blues di grande effetto! Assimilerete quindi tramite numerosi esempi le progressioni armoniche specifiche del blues, gli shuffle, i cliché ritmici, il particolare movimento continuo della mano destra, gli interventi solistici in seno ad una ritmica, ecc. Tutto questo arricchirà notevolmente il vostro approccio della chitarra ritmica nel contesto della musica blues e delle sue diverse tendenze (binario, ternario, minore, ecc.). I play-back vi permetteranno di lavorare sulle diverse ritmiche, potrete in seguito personalizzarle, come se foste in un gruppo! DVD + Booklet

Prezzo: €36,99
€36,99

THE GUITAR PLAYER REPAIR GUIDE 3RD REVISED EDITION Dan Erlewine LIBRO DVD RIPARAZIONE

THE GUITAR PLAYER REPAIR GUIDE, 3RD REVISED EDITION. Dan Erlewine. DVD

LIBRO CON DVD.

Moltissimi suggerimenti, consigli, segreti per la regolazione e la cura del vostro strumento, come i famosi tubicini di plastica che Stevie Ray Vaughan usava al ponte per proteggere dalla rottura le corde; tutti i trucchi e le misure della Lucille. 


Series: Book
Publisher: Backbeat Books
Medium: Softcover with DVD
Author: Dan Erlewine
This expanded edition for beginners to experts is a step-by-step manual to maintaining and repairing electric and acoustic guitars and basses. Players learn how to set up a guitar and keep it in top form by mastering basic maintenance. Features an essential DVD that makes guitar maintenance easier than ever. New features include set-up specs of leading players; stronger coverage of guitar electronics, including pickups and wiring diagrams; and expanded coverage of acoustics. 322 pages

Book/DVD pack. Newly expanded edition of this indispensable step-by-step manual for maintaining and repairing electric and acoustic guitars and basses. Learn how to adjust your own truss rod, install tuners, close and glue cracks, replace a nut, make finish repairs, wind your own pickups, and much, much more. Content is now highlighted based on skill level: Basic, D.I.Y., and Deep. New features include stronger coverage of guitar electronics, including pickups and wiring diagrams and expanded coverage of acoustics. DVD features segments on: how to evaluate any guitar before buying, how to set your own intonation, how to install strings without damaging your guitar, more. 

In my boundless optimism, I expected clues to sonic miracles. I was talking to Bob Ezrin, who produced Alice Cooper, Lou Reed, Pink Floyd, Kiss, Peter Gabriel and many others, and, in the process, conjured some of the hippest guitar sounds ever blasted across the airwaves. Surely, there must have been some voodoo in his microphone selection, his mic placement and his choice and manipulation of preamps, compressors and other arcane signal processors. But Ezrin made it clear that everything started with the guitar itself. "An excellent setup is at the center of every good, complex guitar recording," he said. "The pickups must be in good shape, the electronics must be as clean as possible, and the fretboard must be buzz-free." At a time when the quality of inexpensive, off-the-rack guitars can be downright awesome, we tend to forget how a beautifully set up instrument-more specifically, one tailored to a player's every ergonomic desire and technical idiosyncrasy-can enhance a guitarist's tone and performance. Perhaps we also forget that some guitars have souls that influence our playing in mysterious ways. (Just ask Clapton about Blackie, or B.B. King about Lucille, or Brian May about his Red Special.) The lesson here is just because you can easily replace an instrument that's broken, cranky or sickly, it doesn't mean that you should. In some cases, a few simple repairs can bring a guitar back to life-or even make it better than ever. And don't forget the whole concept of hot-rod ding. With a little guidance and tech savvy, you can swap pickups, futz with wiring and enlist some other tricks to make a cheap guitar rage like a cornered panther, or turbocharge a fine guitar until it's something truly magical. As Ezrin revealed, it all comes down to the guitar and what you do with it. And that's where Dan Erlewine becomes your guru, mentor, coach, visionary, taskmaster, guide and, most likely, savior. Dan knows more about guitars and guitarcraftthan pretty much anyone left standing on this planet, and decades of his wisdom, tips, and techniques are encapsulated in this musthave book-which should now and forever be your guitar-repair bible. Dan has been a vital and much-respected member of the Guitar Player family for many years, writing the seminal "Repairs & Modifications" column, as well as the "Repairs" column and the innovative "Mod Squad" feature (which profiled Dan's youthful shop crew pimping out various guitars) during my tenure as editor. Dan has also produced several how-to DVDs, and is currently developing a series of video repair guides for Guitar Player's Web television station, GPTV. To quote a cliche, "Dan is the Man." But that's the whole truth. And after this book inspires you to transform your guitars into the easiest-playing, best-sounding machines you've ever plugged into an amp, you'll probably build a little shrine to Dan Erlewine in your music room, rehearsal space or home studio. Yeah, you'll be that thrilled with your instruments, and the man deserves it. Now, read on and start making your guitars play better and sound great. Guitar Player

... serious problem. Most acoustic guitars with problems suffer from sharpness and need to be compensated by adding to the string length. Occasionally, though, flat- ness caused by over-compensation isfound on acoustics on which the bridge has been installed out of position. Don't expect the guitar you buy to have perfect intonation. Tweaking the intonation needs to be done to suit the the individual player's needs, governed by the factors mentioned here. When setting intonation, we try to get a stri ng to play the same note when fretted at the 12th fret aswhen played open, only an octave higher. In theory, the distance from the nut to the 12th fret isthe same asfrom the 12th fret to the saddle. The 12th fret octave is the halfway point of the scale (scale length equals the measurement from the nutto the 12th fret, times two). In practice however, the string length must be increased to compensate for the sharpness that results when the string is pressed down during playing. The mathematical distance of the scale is based on a straight line from the nut to the saddle's center, but when you press the string down it becomes stretched, and goes sharp. This isa basic explanation of the need for compensation. Add in the factors below, and you'll see why the seemingly simple job of setting the intonation can cause you to tearyour hair out before you finally take the guitarto a repair shop, so they can teartheir hair out! The closer the strings are to the fingerboard, the less compensation is needed, since the strings go sharp less when pressed. However, guitars with lighter strings generally need more compensation than heavier ones, since asstring tension decreases (going from heavier-gauge strings to lighter), the compensation need increases.Therefore, the lighter the strings and the lower the tension, the more need for compensation. So, perhaps one cancels out the other. Confusing, but you can prove it for yourselfby trying this test: Using an electronic tuner, check your guitar's intonation on the low Estring at concert pitch. Retune the string to D.lt will intonate sharper, which indicates the need for more compensation, or added string length. That's why the modern electric player, who uses .010 strings or lighter, often searches far and wide to find a repairman to set the intonation.
Wound strings need more compensation than plain ones. Because of their extra weight and slower, low-pitched vibrations, wound strings need more clearance from the fingerboard to avoid buzzing. The extra clearance isgained by raising the string height from the fingerboard for wound strings. This increase in heigh causes the strings to go sharp more than the unwounds when depressed. This is why bridge saddles slant toward the bassside on steel-string acoustics or electrics. I like the term "speaking length" of a string. Franz Jahnel's comprehensive Manual of Guitar Technology refers to the mathematical string length asthe "true" length (the measured distance from nut to bridge saddle), and the actual vibrating length asthe "playing” or speaking, length. A string, especially a wound one, doesn't actually start vibrating, or speaking, until it gets a certain distance from the nut orthe saddle. So, part of the string's length (in terms of sound) isalways lost-another reason for compensation. Notice that c1assicaI guita rs have sadd les with no slant. Why? The wound strings have a stranded core rather than a solid one, and sharp out at a rate similar to that of the solid nylon treble strings. Classical strings have a more even tension acrossthe fingerboard than steel strings. Therefore, they require close to the same amount of compensation per string, and in general are more uniformly spaced from the fingerboard in terms of height. You may find saddles that have been slightly filed off-center (compensated) under the Band G strings some classicals. Instruments with longer scales need less compensation than shorter-scaled ones, because the longer string must be tighterto reach the same pitch. Thus the longer string is lessapt to be sharp when fretted and needs lesscompensation (the higher the tension, the lessa string goes sharp).The two most common scales are long and short. Long scales are 25-112" or thereabouts (these include Strats, all their clones, and many Gibsons; Martin uses a 25.4" and guild a 25-518",but we lump them all together as long scale): short scales are 24-314" or thereabouts (Gibson Les Pauls, ES-335s,smaller Martins at 24.9",etc.).Classical guitars have long scales.There are many other scales, but only a few really common ones: a "medium" 25" scale is used ...

 

This Repair Guide is the leading step-by-step

maintenance manual for every guitar owner. New
in this edition: the content is highlighted for you based
on your skill level.
 
Basic: If you're not handy with tools, use the basic sections to keep your guitar out of the repair shop and playing its best.
d.i.y. If you're a do-it-yourselfer, th is book shows you how to do both simple and advanced repairs. 
deep If you want to go further into guitar repair, the 
deep sections are for you.
 
A few sample topics include:
Cleaning your guitar: what to use
How (and when) to adjust your own truss rod
Electric guitar adjustment, including Fender's own 10-step Strat setup"
 
Free DVD included. Dan shows you:
How to evaluate any guitar before buying
How to set your own intonation (It's simple!)
How to install strings without damaging your guitar
 
Computer files on the DVD:
Printable guitar assessment forms useful for repair work

Cleaning and care

basic basic

Supplies 1

Cleaning the finish

Cleaning the fingerboard

Avoiding cracks, dealing with humidity

 

Installing strings

basic

Installing strings on electrics

Installing strings on acoustics 1

Installing strings on c1a~sicals 1

Neck evaluation and truss rod adjustment

basic

Neck evalution

d.i.y.

Truss rod adjustment

Understanding relief

Pro-quality straightedges

Typical neck adjustment scenario

deep

Rescuing a broken truss rod

Setup and action

basic

What is a setup?

d.i.y.

The basics of setup

Setting up an electric guitar

Setting up a guitar with tremolo

Setting up an electric bass

Setting up a flattop acoustic

Setting up an archtop

Setting up a classical

deep

Low action and the blues

Setups for pro players: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jeff Beck

John Mooney's slide

Albert Collins

BuddyGuy

B.B.King

 

Intonation and compensation

basic Understanding compensation

d.i.y. Setting intonation

Adjustable bridges (electrics)

Non-adjustable bridges (acoustics)

deep Buzz Feiten Tuning System

 

Tuning machines

Tuner basics

d.i.y. Installing tuners

Steinberger tuners

Tuner repairs, broken mounting screws

Damage from over-oiled tuners

deep

Rotted plastic knobs

Making new tuners look old

Reconstructing rotted knobs

 

Electric guitar bridges: non-tremolo

basic

The manyTune-O-Matics

TonePros and Pigtails

Steve Rowen on T-O-M hardware

d.i.y.

Slotting Gibson bridge saddles

Adjusting an ABR-1bridge radius

Bridge posts and tailpiece studs

De-rusting metal bridge saddles

 

Electric guitar bridges: tremolos

basic

Setting up your tremolo system

d.i.y.

Floyd Rose installation and setup

Kahler installation and setup

Fine-tuning a Strat tremolo

The Trem-Setter

Roller nuts

deep

String benders

 

9 Acoustic guitar bridges

basic

Fitting flattop bridge pins

Evaluating acoustic action

d.i.y.

Replacing a bridge saddle -

Archtop bridges

Fitting an archtop bridge

 

10 Acoustic body repairs

d.i.y.

Clamps and glues

Closing and gluing cracks

Gluing loose braces

deep

Reattaching loose bridges

Bridge pad problems

Neck resets

 

11 Necks

 

basic d.i.y.

Fender guitar neck shapes

Fender bass neck shapes

d.i.y.

Installing bolt-on necks

Fret buzz in the high registers

deep

Broken pegheads

 

12 Fretwork

basic

What to expect from afret job

d.i.y.

Loose frets

Fret files

Compound radius fingerboards

Fret dressing

Refretting:

Choosing yourfretwire

Hammer-in method

Compression fretting

Martin bar-style fretting

The glue-in method

Bound fingerboards

Vintage Fender fretting

Fret slots and tang size

deep

The neck jig

The Plek machine

 

13 Nut replacement

basic

About nut replacement

d.i.y.

steps for replacing a nut

Tools

Removing the old nut

Roughing in the blank

Cutting slots, finishing up

String spacing

 

14 Bindings and pickguards

d.i.y.

Loose bindings

Shrinking Strat pickguards

Regluing an acoustic pickguard

 

15 Guitar electronics

Tools and supplies for electronics

Soldering technique

Using a multi meter

Caps and pots

Switches

Shielding

Acoustic guitar amplification

Seml-hollowbody wiring

Pickup replacement

Pickup repair

Rewiring, modifications

Wiring diagrams

deep

Wind your own pickups

 

6 Finishing and finish repairs

d.i.y.

A basic finishing schedule

Spraying necks and bodies

Finish repairs

Supplies for finish repairs

Fixing chips

Fixing dents and scratches

Touching up color

deep

Faking an aged finish

 

17 Shipping a guitar or amp

How to pack a guitar

How to pack an amp

 

18 Tools

basic tool list

d.i.y. tool list

deep tool list

sharpening chisels and scrapers

 

19 Resources and schools

Training for a career in lutherie

Lists: schools, suppliers, organizations

 

Index

Prezzo: €39,99
€39,99

A MODERN METHOD FOR GUITAR VOLUME 1 BOOK DVD-ROM LIBRO SPARTITI METODO CHITARRA JAZZ

A MODERN METHOD FOR GUITAR VOLUME 1. BOOK e DVD ROM

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ CON DVD ROM.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA. ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA

Series: Berklee DVD
Publisher: Berklee Press
Medium: BOOK & DVD ROM PKG
Guitar
Artist: Larry Baione
Author: William Leavitt

This money-saving value pack includes Volume 1 of this practical, comprehensive method book (the basic text for the guitar program at the world-famous Berklee College of Music) PLUS a matching DVD-ROM featuring 14 complete lessons with Larry Baione, chair of Berklee's guitar department. Owning this pack is like having access to a year's worth of private guitar lessons at Berklee ! 128 pages

A legendary method, now bundled in a book and DVD-ROM package...at one low price!
"...THE BEST METHOD EVER WRITTEN FOR GUITAR." - Mike Stern

For Use in Both Windows and MacIntosh Computers! For use in computers ONLY, this is not for use in a DVD player.

THE BOOK. A Modern Method for Guitar by William Leavitt, is one of the world's most popular guitar methods. It is the basic text for Berklee College of Music's guitar program. It has stood the test of time and earned a vast and loyal following of dedicated guitar students and instructors for over 40 years.

THE DVD-ROM. This DVD-ROM version of this proven method is the most comprehensive guitar method DVD-ROM on the market. The instruction on this DVD-ROM is equivalent to a year's worth of guitar lessons at Berklee College of Music! You will be guided through 14 complete lessons with Larry Baione, Chair of Berklee's Guitar Department.

14 Hours of instruction include on-screen demonstrations, with camera close-ups of both hands, as well as interactive duets and play-along segments so you can "sit in" with your instructor.
You will learn essential skills for playing lead and rhythm guitar, including:

scales
chord forms
accompaniment skills
guitar technique
voice-leading approaches
reading music notation

BIO
Larry Baione has been Chair of the Berklee College of Music Guitar Department since 1990 and a faculty member since 1974. He studied with William Leavitt while Leavitt was developing the Modern Method for Guitar, and also studied with Bucky Pizzarelli, Jim Hall, and other legendary players. Baione has taught students using this method for thirty years. He is the author of the Berklee Practice Method for Guitar. Baione continues to record, perform and give clinics throughout the world.

14 ORE DI LEZIONE

Prezzo: €39,99
€39,99

BASIC BLUES GUITAR METHOD 1 Drew Giorgi & JODY Fisher BOOK TABLATURE & DVD slides-double stops

BASIC BLUES GUITAR METHOD 1. Jody Fisher. DVD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES PER CHITARRA CON DVD E TABLATURE.

Basic Blues Guitar Method, Book 1
A Step-by-Step Approach for Learning How to Play
By Drew Giorgi & Jody Fisher,
CATEGORY: Guitar Method or Supplement
FORMAT: Book & DVD

Instrument: Guitar

A thorough course, paced for beginners. Become a great blues guitarist by starting with the fundamentals, like holding the guitar, tuning up, and playing simple chords and notes, and continue to grow with more advanced topics explored later, like slides, tritone patterns and double stops. All the music in each 48-page book is shown in TAB as well as standard music notation and demonstrated on the accompanying CD and/or DVD. 

Prezzo: €23,99
€23,99

YOUNG GUITAR CHRIS IMPELLITTERI SPEED SYSTEM Garsed TJ Helmerich TABLATURE SPARTITI GILBERT

YOUNG GUITAR MAGAZINE, SEPTEMBER 2002. WITH DVD & GUITAR TABLATURE.

IMPELLITTERI CHRIS, THE SPEED SYSTEM. DVD 

 

RIVISTA, MAGAZINE DI MUSICA ROCK, METAL, CON DVD.

MAGAZINE FOR YOUNG GUITAR PLAYERS.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.  

TECNICA, LEZIONE, 

GUITAR LESSON, 

 

Il velocismo neo-classical. Solo su carta: Brett Garsed & TJ Helmerich exercise.

PAUL GILBERT: GOLDBERG EXERCISE. 

 

TITOLI: 

-I like the rock (Gilbert)

-killing me (Harem Scarem)

-stand in line (Impellitteri)

-pipeline (Ventures)

e molto altro. 

Prezzo: €49,99
€49,99

FORD ROBBEN BACK TO THE BLUES 1 & 2 GUITAR TABLATURE DVD CHITARRA SPARTITI LIBRO

FORD ROBBEN, BACK TO THE BLUES 1 & 2. GUITAR LESSON WITH TABLATURE & DVD .

VIDEO LEZIONE DI MUSICA BLUES FUSION . 

LIBRETTO DI SPARTITI : 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

ESERCIZI, TECNICA, METODO, 

SERIES: REH
CATEGORY: Guitar DVD
FORMAT: DVD

Robben Ford has become one of the world's most recognized blues musicians. His trademark, tasty guitar style, is reinforced with incredible depth in jazz and rhythm and blues. Back to the Blues is a special two-part series exploring the finer points of contemporary blues guitar playing. In Part 1, Robben teaches and demonstrates many of his superb and tasty chordal and improvising ideas for both the major and minor blues. In Part 2, Robben demonstrates contemporary blues concepts including comping and soloing for a swing blues and a one-chord blues vamp. He discusses how to be more melodic using triads, good phrasing and simplicity. He also talks about his influences, guitars, stage set-up, and how to get that good sound. Tab booklet included. Special DVD features include a tuning segment, two bonus lessons on vibrato and diminished scale usage, transcription of Slo-Mo Blues, and printable PDF reference materials.
RUNNING TIME: 3 HOURS

Prezzo: €99,99
€99,99

SHRED IS NOT DEAD, TERRY SYREK. DVD TABLATURE

SHRED IS NOT DEAD, WITH TERRY SYREK. Un'ora di splettrante sminuzzamento. DVD TABLATURE

Shred Is Not Dead

Concepts and Techniques for the Aspiring Rock Lead Guitar Virtuoso

By Terry Syrek
Item: 00-21936
UPC: 038081205199
ISBN 10: 0739030191
ISBN 13: 9780739030196
Category: Guitar Method or Supplement
Format: Book & DVD
DVD format: Region 0 for use in all regions. 
Instrument: Guitar

Master shredder Terry Syrek makes it easy to become a rock lead-guitar virtuoso. Discover monster chop-building exercises and the secret to mind-bending, super-fast, sweep-picking licks. Plus, make creative use of the pentatonic scale and other scales you wouldn't necessarily think of using. 48 pages. DVD running time: 60 minutes. 

This booklet will help prepare you to get the most out of your video.
It will introduce the guitar fingerboard, the basics of reading standard
music notation, guitar tablature, chord diagrams and guitar neck
diagrams.  All of us at the National Guitar Workshop and Alfred wish
you lots of fun and fulfillment as you learn to play guitar.
 
The Guitar Fingerboard
Half Steps and Whole Steps
Our first order of business is to understand how the guitar fingerboard
works and to learn how to find or name all of these notes on the neck.
This is easy if we know about half steps and whole steps.
A half step is the distance from one fret to the next on the guitar.  For
instance, the distance from the 1st fret to the 2nd is one half step.  This
is the smallest interval (distance between two notes).  Two half steps equal
one whole step, which is a distance of two frets on the guitar.  For
example, the distance from the 1st fret to the 3rd fret is a whole step.
The arrangement of whole steps and half steps in the musical alphabet
is as follows:
Here is where all of the notes in the musical alphabet—the natural notes—
are found on the guitar.
A B  C D E  F  G A
W H  W W H  W W
 
W= Whole step
H= Half step
 
G A  B C  D  E
C D  E F  G  A
A B C D E
Whole Step
Half Step
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1st string
6th string
Open Frets
Strings2 3
& w
G
G line
Treble clef
Staff
Note
 
You have probably noticed the blank, unnamed frets on the fingerboard in
the diagram on page 1.  These are filled with sharp and flat notes, also
called accidentals or chromatic tones.  When a sharp 

 is placed in front of
a note, the note is raised one half step (one fret).  For example, F

 is one
fret higher than F.  When a flat  is placed in front of a note, the note is
lowered one half step (one fret).  For example, G
 is one fret lower than
G.  Notice that F

 and G
 fall on the same fret.  Two notes which sound
the same (played on the same fret) but have different letter names are
termed enharmonic equivalents.  Every sharped or flatted note has an
enharmonic equivalent.
Notes
Music is written by placing notes on a staff.
Notes appear in various ways.
Music Notation: Pitch
 
The Staff and Clef
The staff, which is read from left to right,
has five lines and four spaces.  At the
beginning of the staff is a clef.  The clef
dictates what pitch (exact degree of
highness or lowness) corresponds to a
particular line or space on the staff.  Guitar
music is written in treble clef , which is sometimes called the G clef.
The ending curl of the clef circles the G line on the staff.
Here are the notes on the staff using the G clef:
Ledger Lines
The higher a note appears on the staff, the higher it sounds.  When a note
is too high or too low to be written on the staff, ledger lines are used.
Guitar music actually sounds one octave lower than it is written.  We
write music an octave (12 half steps) higher than it sounds strictly for
reasons of convenience and easy reading.
Music Notation: Time
Measures and Bar Lines
The staff is divided by vertical lines called bar lines.  The space between
two bar lines is called a measure.  Measures divide music into groups of
beats.  A beat is an equal division of time.  Beats are the basic pulse behind
music.  A double bar marks the end of a section or example.
 
Time signature
One measure or bar
Bar lines
Double bar
E F G A B C A B C D E
Ledger lines
Ledger lines
Note heads
Stems Flag Beams
& w w w w w w w w w
D G A  B  C  D  E  F
F G A  B C  D  E
Whole Step
Half Step
Enharmonic 
Equivalents
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1st string
6th string
Open Frets
Strings4 5
Half Rests = 2 beats
Quarter Rests = 1 beat
Eighth Rests
Sixteenth Rests
= ½ beat
= ¼ beat
Whole Rest  = 4 beats
Ties
When notes are tied, the second note is not
struck.  Rather, its value is added to that of the
first note.  So, a half note tied to a quarter note
equals three beats.
Notice the numbers under
the staff in these examples.
They indicate how to count.
Both of these examples are
in  time, so we count four
beats in each measure.
When there are eighth
notes, which are only half a
beat, we count “&” (“and”)
to show the division of the
beats into two parts.  When
a counting number is in
parentheses, a note is being
held rather than struck.
Ties are a convenient way to notate notes that begin off the beat (on
an “&”).
Half Notes = 2 beats
h h
Quarter Notes = 1 beat
q q q q
Eighth Notes
Sixteenth Notes
= ½ beat
= ¼ beat
Whole Note = 4 beats
Note Values
As you know, the location of a note relative to the staff tells us its
pitch (how high or how low it is).  The duration, or value, is indicated
by its shape.
 
Time Signatures
Every piece of music has a pair of numbers at the beginning, called
time signatures, that tell us how to count time.  The top number
represents the number of beats per measure.  The bottom number
represents the type of note receiving one count.
 
Dots
A dot increases the length of
a note by one half of its
original value.  For instance, a
half note equals two beats.
Half of its value is one beat (a quarter note).  So, a dotted half note
equals three beats (2 + 1 = 3).  A dotted half note is equal to a half
note tied to a quarter note.
Dotted notes are especially
important when the time
signature is  , because the
longest note value that will fit in a measure is a dotted half note.
Also, dotted notes are very important in  time, because not only is
a dotted half note the longest possible note value, but a dotted
quarter note is exactly half of a measure (counted 1 & a 2 & a).
In some cases, consecutive eighth notes are beamed together.
Sometimes a 
 is written in place of  time.  is often called
common time.
= Four beats per measure
= A quarter note      equals one beat

= Three beats per measure
= A quarter note      equals one beat

= Six beats per measure
= An eighth note      equals one beat

Rest Values
Every note value has a corresponding rest.  A rest indicates silence.  A
whole rest indicates four beats of silence, a half rest is two beats of
silence, etc.6 7
Beaming
Notes that are less than one beat in duration are often beamed
together.  Notice the couting numbers: since there are four sixteenth
notes in a beat, they are counted “1 e & a, 2 e & a,” etc.
Rhythmic Notation
Rhythmic notation is common in guitar music.  It is a system of slash
marks with stems and beams that notate specific rhythms without
specific pitches.  Rhythmic notation is usually used to show a rhythm
guitar part.
 
TAB
Tablature is a system of notation that graphically represents the strings
and frets of the guitar fingerboard.  Each note is indicated by placing a
number, which indicates the fret to play, on the appropriate string.
Reading TAB, Scale and Chord Diagrams
Scale Diagrams
The top line of a scale diagram represents the 1st (highest) string of
the guitar, and the bottom line the 6th.  The vertical lines represent
frets, which are numbered.
Chord Diagrams
Chord diagrams are similar to scale diagrams, except they are oriented
vertically instead of horizontally.  Vertical lines represent strings, and
horizontal lines represent frets.
Beamed sixteenth notes Beamed quarter notes
 
Chord name
Play open string
Indicates a
barre chord
Fingered
notes
5 4  3  2  1 Strings
Left-hand
fingering
Fret numbers
Mute or don’t play this string
 
T
A
B
 
4th string, 5th fret
Open G chord
1st string, 10th fret
2nd string, 10th fret
String
numbers
Count:
Whole note (4 beats)
Half notes (2 beats)
Quarter notes (1 beat)
2 3 4  2  4 1 2  3 4
Eighth notes (½ beat)
1 &  2 &  3 &  4 &
Frets Left hand fingering
Root
6th string
Fret numbers
Scale tones
7 8 9 10
1st string
Roman Numerals
Here is a review of Roman numerals and their Arabic equivalents.
I or i................1
II or ii.............2
III or iii...........3
IV or iv..........4
V or v.............5
VI or vi...........6
VII or vii........7
VIII or viii.....8
IX or ix...........9
X or x...........10
XI or xi.........11
XII or xii.......12
XIII or xiii....13
XIV or xiv....14
XV or xv.......15
XVI or xvi....16
XVII or xvii..17
XVIII or xviii..188
Some Terms and Signs
Repeat.  Return to the beginning or the nearest        and
play again.
Half Step.  A distance of one fret on the guitar.
Whole Step.  Equals two half steps, distance of two frets on
the guitar.
Flat.  Lower the note one half step (one fret).
Sharp.  Raise the note one half step (one fret).
Natural.  Cancels a sharp or flat.
Prezzo: €25,99
€25,99

FENDER: SOUND HEARD 'ROUND THE WORLD Centennial Edition by Richard R. Smith BOOK & DVD Libro

FENDER: SOUND HEARD 'ROUND THE WORLD Centennial Edition, R SMITH. BOOK & DCD .

 

Libro e DVD.

LIBRO CON DVD.

Publisher: Hal Leonard
Medium: Softcover
Author: Richard R. Smith

No one changed the sound of guitar music more than Leo Fender. He so improved the clarity of the amplified vibrating string that he gave almost every style of music played on the guitar a means to sound better. For five decades, finicky musicians made pilgrimages to Leo's R&D labs to discuss their musical frustrations and seek better ways for guitars to function.

In the pages of Fender: The Sound Heard 'Round the World, you will watch this complex, dedicated man gain success as a true innovator of the new. You will also follow the team of energetic, creative people who steered Fender to fame, men like Don Randall of Fender Sales, Forrest White and George Fullerton of Fender Electric Instruments, and Dale Hyatt and Tommy Walker, two of Randall's growing cadre of savvy, high-powered salesmen spreading Leo's ideas worldwide.

This book is the largest collection of Fender historical photos, product shots, patent drawings and advertising materials ever published. Whether you are a musician, a lover of Fender lore, an instrument collector or curious history buff, your search ends here for the ultimate and definitive book presenting the complete, unedited Fender story.

"This is by far the best book about Leo Fender yet published.
Vintage Guitar magazine

"Sets new standards for books on guitar history."

Country Music magazine

"An astounding job of research, reportage, distillation and writing on a subject whose impact on music and society in general is inestimable."

Los Angeles Times

"Fender freaks will revel in the model-by-model, year-by-year detail in which Smith unfolds the company history."

Guitar Player magazine

FENDER: SOUND HEARD 'ROUND THE WORLD
Centennial Edition

Medium: Hardcover with DVD
Author: Richard Smith

Leo Fender needs no introduction to people who love music; his work changed the way we all hear, play, and write it. His revolutionary guitars, basses, and keyboards helped create a soundtrack for the last 60 years. This book takes us back to Fender's beginnings with the most comprehensive collection of Fender historical photos, product shots, patent drawings, and advertising materials ever published. Whether you are a musician, a lover of Fender lore, an instrument collector, or a curious history buff, your search ends here for the ultimate and definitive book presenting the complete, unedited Fender story.

Highlights:

Rare footage of Leo Fender contained on bonus DVD

The largest collection of Fender historical photos, product shots, patent drawings, and advertising materials ever published. 320 pages.

REVIEWS:
"An astounding job of research, reportage, distillation and writing on a subject whose impact on music and society in general is inestimable." Los Angeles Times

"Fender freaks will revel in the model-by-model, year-by-year detail in which Smith unfolds the company history." Guitar Player magazine

Prezzo: €239,99
€239,99

VAN HALEN YOUNG GUITAR TABLATURE LIBRO DVD CHITARRA ELETTRICA TAPPING METODO TECNICA

VAN HALEN.  SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH DVD & GUITAR TABLATURE . 

LIBRO DI MUSICA METAL CON DVD, 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TECNICA, 

 

THE GUITAR MAN

LIGHT UP THE JUMPIN' MONSTER

SPECIAL ISSUE FOR ROCK GUITAR MANIACS

41 esempi video, strumentazione, i pick-up, tour data dal 1976-1984, fotografie e molto altro.

Prezzo: €99,99
€99,99

KOTZEN RICHIE SHINING VIRTUOSITY DVD BOOK GUITAR TABLATURE arpeggio-Legato Pentatonic

KOTZEN RICHIE, SHINING VIRTUOSITY. Legato Pentatonic phrasing, legato linear fingering, stretch fingering, legato arpeggio shaping, arpeggio 1,2,3, finger picking, altro, 3 pezzi completi: funk jam (veloce melodico), space jam, slow jam. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH DVD & GUITAR TABLATURE.

YOUNG GUITAR MAGAZINE PRESENTS 100% SPECIAL DELUXE EDITION RICHIE KOTZEN

ISBN4-401-61786-X

 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA ROCK, CON DVD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

TECNICA, 

 

PLAYING ANALYSIS EX-1 - EX-8

DEMOSTRATION 1: FUNK JAM 

DEMOSTRATION 2: SPACE JAM

DEMOSTRATION 3: SLOW JAM

Prezzo: €99,99
€99,99
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