MUSIC SALES

AC/DC BALLBREAKER GUITAR TABLATURE CHITARRA SPARTITI-Hard as a Rock-Boogie Man-Hail Caesar

AC/DC, BALLBREAKER. GUITAR TABLATURE EDITION

 

LIBRO DI MUSICA HARD-ROCK.
SPARTITI PER CHITARRA E VOCE.
TESTI DELLE CANZONI, ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE. 

"Le canzoni non si raccolgono sugli alberi, le trovi nell'anima, nel cuore. Prevedono un lungo studio ma soprattutto deve esserci amore... ...mi sveglio ancora nel cuore della notte se mi viene in mente un buon riff, e allora non riesco più a dormire, devo alzarmi dal letto e suonarlo."

Transcribed by: Kenn Chipkin - Matt Scharfglass - Josh Workman - Alex Houton.

Album uscito nel 1995.
Hard as a Rock (Young, Young)
Cover You in Oil (Young, Young)
The Furor (Young, Young)
Boogie Man (Young, Young)
The Honey Roll (Young, Young)
Burnin' Alive (Young, Young)
Hail Caesar (Young, Young)
Love Bomb (Young, Young)
Caught with Your Pants Down (Young, Young)
Whiskey on the Rocks (Young, Young)
Ballbreaker (Young, Young) 

Prezzo: €65,99
€65,99

THE ROOTS OF SLIDE GUITAR Fred Sokolow CD TABLATURE Come On in My Kitchen Robert Johnson-SPARTITI LIBRO

THE ROOTS OF SLIDE GUITAR. Fred Sokolow. Metodo per suonare e cantare il blues con 3 titoli acustici e 2 elettrici.

LIBRO DI MUSICA BLUES CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER VOCD E CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE.

  

THE SONGS AND LICKS THAT MADE IT HAPPEN 
A SURVEY OF SLIDE GUITAR, ITS PIONEERS, AND HOW IT DEVELOPED

 

This book/CD pack is a complete survey of slide guitar, its pioneers, and how it developed. It includes: 6 note-for-note transcriptions of famous slide tunes :

-Come On in My Kitchen (Robert Johnson)

-Motherless Children (Mance Lipscomb)

-Roll and Tumble Blues ("Hambone" Willie Newbern)

-You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had (Muddy Waters)

-You Gotta Move ("Mississippi" Fred McDowell)

-You Shook Me (Earl Hooker with Muddy Waters);

instruction in the essential playing styles; the history and the development of slide guitar; biographies of its representative artists; and recordings on CD of the songs, exercises and licks.


You gotta move -come on in my kitchen -motherless children -roll and tumble blues -you can't lose what you ain't never had -you shook me. CD TABLATURE

 

HOW TO USE THIS BOOK AND RECORDING
It swoops, wails, whines, moans and growls: slide guitar sings. It's a crowd pleaser, and it reaches people because it conveys naked emotion-especially when playing the blues. And most slide guitar heard today, whether in a blues, rock or country song, is played in a style derived from early Mississippi Delta blues.
Modern blues and rock slide guitar evolved from traditional acoustic styles. This book is about the guitarists who made that evolution happen. It takes you to the roots of slide guitar. Each of the six classic blues tunes transcribed here demonstrates a particular style and tuning. Every song is preceded
by information, exercises, scales, licks and chords that are needed for that style.
Timing is such a major part of slide guitar that it's almost impossible to learn from the printed page alone. Listen to the recording that comes with this book before playing a note. Once you know how a tune sounds, then it's time to check out the tablature and/or music notation.
If you want to learn any style of music, it helps to imitate the masters. Whether you're a beginner or an experienced player who wants to get back to the roots, here is the essential guitar stuff. This is an introduction to and an appreciation of great vintage music, and it's a foundation on which you can build your own style.

." Fred Sokolow
All guitars and vocals on the recording that comes with this book are by Fred Sokolow. Bass, drums, piano and horns are by Dennis O'Hanlon, and it was recorded at O'Hanlon Recording.

 

MUSICAL INTRODUCTION

A LOOK AT THE ROOTS OF SLIDE GUITAR
Most musical historians trace slide guitar to Hawaii, but Johnny Shines, friend and accompanist of Robert Johnson, is one of many who claim that blues-style slide developed in Africa, along with open-chord tunings. The first literary mention of blues slide was W. C. Handy's famous 1903 sighting of a singer at a Mississippi train depot who used a knife to slide on his guitar strings. Like most Mississippi blues players, he made his guitar sing and mimic his voice.
Early players slid on the strings with pocket knives or beef bones, and some held the guitar on their lap, Hawaiian-style, but by the 1930s, most blues players held the guitar upright and used a brakenoff bottleneck or a sawed-off length of pipe for a slide. This was a major stylistic development, because if you hold a knife in your left hand, it's impossible to fret the strings with your fingers; fitting a slide on the ring finger or little finger frees up two or three fretting fingers. Most slide players tuned the guitar to a major chord, usually 0, E, G or A, and used the slide to play major chords, as well as individual notes.
There was a blues craze in the 1920s, and by the middle of that decade, major labels began recording blues guitarist/singers. The first crap of slide players who recorded included Sylvester Weaver, Barbecue Bob, Hambone Willie Newbern and Sam Butler. Following them were the Mississippi bluesmen Son House, Charlie Patton, Bukka White, Kokomo Arnold, Sam Collins and Robert Johnson. They played a raw, very rhythmic, emotional style of blues and sang and wailed with passionate intensity. Texans Blind Willie Johnson and B. K. Turner (the Black Ace) were influential early slide blues players, as were Tampa Red and Furry Lewis, who boasted a polished, gentler slide style.

THE COUNTRY CONNECTION
Hawaiian guitarists developed a lap style of playing: the guitar lies in your lap, strings facing up, and you hold a steel bar down on the fretboard. This technique migrated to the mainland and, in the 1920s, with the help of Cliff Carlisle, Jimmie Tarlton and slide players who accompanied Jimmie Rodgers, it became an essential part of country music. By the '30s, Hawaiian and country pickers began using electric, fretless "lap steels." These evolved over the years: they grew legs, more strings, twin and triple necks (in different tunings), and foot pedals and knee levers to bend notes while playing.
Thus was born the pedal steel guitar that is now a signature country sound. But country pedal steel and lap steel bear little stylistic resemblance to blues or rack slide playing.
In the early '50s, the acoustic lap style slide guitar (see Dobro picture, below) began appearing in bluegrass bands. The wooden, acoustic whine of the Dobra is also heard in contemporary country music. Usually played in a bluesy style in open tunings, country Dobra is more related to bottleneck guitar than is its cousin, the pedal steel.
All-metal Dobro
Wooden-bodied squaredneck Dobro


BLUES SLIDE PLAYERS PLUG IN
Before instruments were amplified, it was hard for a guitarist to be heard over a piano, horn or even a banjo. In the late '20s, the National Company answered this need by making all-metal guitars, fitted inside with convex aluminum resonators, like speaker cones. Sounds crazy, but it worked: the guitars were louder, with more sustain, and they rapidly became popular with jazz, country and blues players. Lap style players used the square-necked models with a nut that lifted the strings high off the fretboard (better for the metal slide), but bottleneckers favored the round-necked National that could be played like a normal guitar. To this day, the all-metal National and its cousin, the Dobro, are favored by many an acoustic slidester. The Dobro company also makes a wooden, square-neck guitar with a metal resonator fitted into its body (it looks like someone stuck a hub cap over a guitar's soundhole) that bluegrass players use.
However, even the National or Dobro could not cut through drums, saxophones and electric guitars. By the mid-'40s, many Mississippi players had relocated in Chicago, and a new kind of blues was brewing. Elmore James and Muddy Waters led full electric bands, playing screaming, amplified slide.
It was loud and distorted, and single-note solos became the norm-with a whole band for backup, a guitarist didn't need to fingerpick or play chords. You could wail with one note, like a sax or trumpet.
Waters' and James' styles were clearly rooted in the Delta, and so was the playing of electric slide pioneers J. B. Hutto and Hound Dog Taylor. But Robert Nighthawk and Earl Hooker began playing electric, single-note style in standard tuning, which was a new direction for bottleneckers.

THE '60S BLUES REVIVAL AND BEYOND
During the '60s, white blues fans, many of whom had learned to play by studying old blues records, sought out the first-generation blues artists. Legendary players whose careers had petered out were rediscovered and brought into the limelight, and many excellent artists who had never played outside their own county recorded and performed all over the world. Folk festivals, concerts and coffee houses featured acoustic and electric blues.
American and European audiences loved the aging but passionate blues legends, and by the mid· '60s a blues revival was in full swing on both continents. Besides giving players like Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf a bigger audience, the revival encouraged young players to form new blues bands, and to use blues techniques in rock and pop bands. After playing with John Mayall's blues band, enthusiastic blues disciple Eric Clapton brought blues guitar skills to his rock and pop bands (Cream, Derek and the Dominoes, Bonnie and Delaney). While still playing with the Butterfield Blues Band, guitarist Mike Bloomfield backed up Bob Dylan on one of his first electric albums. And slidemaster Duane Allman used his blues chops with the Allman Brothers Band and, as a studio player, infused all kinds of pop recordings with the blues.
In the '70s and '80s, pop audiences were introduced to slide sounds by Johnny Winter, George Thorogood, Eric Clapton, Duane Allman, George (post-Beatles) Harrison, Bonnie Raitt, Little Feat's Lowell George, Ry Cooder, David Lindley and the Rolling Stones. Many Southern rock bands had slide guitarists, and they influenced a new crop of country stars who, in the '90s, used slide on Nashville hits. Slide is heard more and more in movie and television soundtracks. Fortunately, as its audience grows, slide guitar has retained its down home character.

 

MUDDY WATERS
Often called the "father of electric blues," Muddy Waters was the leading force in the post-war
Chicago blues scene and an important figure in the development of rock and roll. The roster of players who learned their craft playing in his band reads like a "who's who" of blues legends: Little
Walter, Junior Wells, Otis Spann, James Cotton and Jimmy Rogers are just a few. While T-Bone
Walker and B.B. King, with their big-band sound, urbanized and streamlined the blues, Waters
brought it back to its funky Delta roots with a small but powerful band whose lineup (two guitars,
piano, harp, bass and drums) would evolve to become the typical rock band format.
Born McKinley Morganfield of sharecropper parents in Rolling Fork on the Mississippi Delta, April 4, 1915, Muddy Waters built his own guitar when he was seventeen. Robert Johnson and Son House
were his main influences; he watched Son House in action when House came to Clarksdale,
Mississippi. House taught him riffs, open tunings and songs, and showed him how to break off and
flame-smooth a bottleneck.
In '41, folklorists Alan Lomax and John Work came to Clarksdale and recorded Waters for the
Library of Congress. In '43, ready for bigger things, Waters moved to Chicago. Though his style of
choice was rough and old-fashioned compared to the reigning blues artists like Tampa Red and
Lonnie Johnson, (of whom he could do a simple imitation) Big Bill Broonzy helped Waters get his
start playing in clubs. In '44, his uncle gave him his first electric guitar, and by the following year he
had teamed up with guitarist Jimmy Rogers. In the next few years, he started to develop his electric
sound and began recording for the Chess brothers.
In 1950, with the release of "Rollin' Stone," (backed with a Robert Johnson-derived version of
'Walking Blues"*), Waters' career was in high gear. In the next several years he had a series of
regional and national R&B hits. He was Chicago's reigning king of the blues, working every night, his style imitated by other bands, and even some of his sidemen had hit records! He recorded blues
classics like "Hoochie Coochie Man," "Honey Bee" and "I Just Want To Make Love To You."
In the mid-'50s, when rock and roll came roaring onto the charts, Waters' record sales dwindled. Still, he held his Chicago fans and his legend grew. In '58 he played in England and then was a hit at
Carnegie Hall and the Newport Jazz Festival. The early '60s British invasion brought him wider
recognition, as the Rolling Stones (who took their name from the Waters tune), John Mayall, the
Beatles and others sang his praises ... and his songs! In the blues revival that ensued, Waters was
acknowledged as the founding father by the British and by American guitar heroes like Mike
Bloomfield, Steve Miller, Johnny Winter and Jimi Hendrix. He played festivals, college concerts and clubs, was filmed for television in England and the U.S., did world tours, starred at the Montreaux Festival, and played stadiums and arenas.
In the late '70s and early '80s, Waters won three Grammys, played for the White House Staff Party,
appeared in the movie The Last Waltz, and toured with Eric Clapton. On April 30, 1983, he died
peacefully in his sleep at his suburban Chicago home.
78 and 45 rpm singles had an "A side" (the featured tune) and, when you flipped them over, a "6 side," or backup song.
 

Prezzo: €39,99
€39,99

PASTORIUS JACO SIGNATURE LICKS LIBRO CD BASS TABLATURE-Bright Size Life-Continuum-Donna Lee

PASTORIUS JACO, SIGNATURE LICKS. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA, SPARTITI PER CHITARRA BASSO CON CD E TABLATURE. 

Birdland -Bright Size Life -Come On, Come Over -Continuum -Donna Lee -God Must Be A Boogie Man -Kuru -Liberty City -Night Passage -Palladium -Port Of Entry -Portrait Of Tracy -Rockin' In Rhythm -Talk To Me -Teen Town. CD TABLATURE

A Step-by-Step Breakdown of the Styles and Techniques of the World's Greatest Electric Bassist
Series: Signature Licks Bass
Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Dan Towey
Artist: Jaco Pastorius

Learn the trademark grooves and solos of the man who revolutionized bass guitar. This book/CD pack will help you take a closer look at Jaco's rich body of work through the structural, theoretical, and harmonic analysis of these classic recordings, 56 pages
Birdland
Bright Size Life
Come On, Come Over
Continuum
Donna Lee
God Must Be A Boogie Man
Kuru
Liberty City
Night Passage
Palladium
Port Of Entry
Portrait Of Tracy
Rockin' In Rhythm
Talk To Me
Teen Town

Prezzo: €29,99
€29,99

PASTORIUS JACO ESSENTIAL BASS TABLATURE CHITARRA BASSO Blackbird-Chicken-Chromatic Fantasy

PASTORIUS JACO, THE ESSENTIAL. Amerika -Birdland -Blackbird -Chromatic Fantasy -Come On, Come Over -Continuum -Donna Lee -Invitation -Liberty City -Opus Pocus -Portrait Of Tracy -River People -Soul Intro -Teen Town -The Chicken -Word Of Mouth. TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA JAZZ PER CHITARRA BASSO
SPARTITI CON TESTI DELLE CANZONI, ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

Series: Bass Recorded Versions TAB
Artist: Jaco Pastorius

Note-for-note transcriptions with tab of Jaco's brilliant bass work on 16 songs, 104 pages

Amerika
Birdland
Blackbird
The Chicken
Chromatic Fantasy
Come On, Come Over
Continuum
Donna Lee
Invitation
Liberty City
Opus Pocus
Portrait Of Tracy
River People
Soul Intro
Teen Town
Word Of Mouth

Prezzo: €26,99
€26,99

YOU CAN DO IT... PLAY GUITAR DAMMIT! Scharfglass 2CD TABLATURE LIBRO SPARTITI-CC Rider-

YOU CAN DO IT... PLAY GUITAR DAMMIT! Matt Scharfglass. 2CD TABLATURE

 

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCK CON CD.

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA. ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

CON BASI E ARRANGIAMENTI PER 2 CHITARRE DI ALCUNE CANZONI NOTE.

Description
This is the book for you if you always wanted to learn but somehow kept putting it off, if you’ve played guitar before and given up or if you’re determined to crack it this time.
The no-nonsense guide that will soon have you playing great chords, riffs and even solos with as little pain as possible!

Some basic musical knowledge is handy, but the 2 CDs included feature a demonstration and backing tracks for each exercise. Chord boxes and how-to-play photos make the tricky stuff easy.

Arranged by Matt Scharfglass who is a New York-based songwriter, bassist and multi-instrumentalist. He does session work, leads his own band and performs extensively in the New York City area.

CC Rider - PER 2 CHITARRE
I Ain't Got Nobody - PER 2 CHITARRE
St James Infirmary - PER 2 CHITARRE
The House Of The Rising Sun - PER 2 CHITARRE
This Train - PER 2 CHITARRE

Prezzo: €27,99
€27,99

FAST FORWARD LEAD GUITAR SOLOS LIBRO MUSICA ROCK CD TABLATURE BENDS pull-offs hammer-on

FAST FORWARD, LEAD GUITAR SOLOS. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA ROCK CON CD, SPARTITI, METODO PER CHITARRA.
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

RIKKY ROOKSBY
Description

An exciting new series of 12 instrumental instruction books. Includes complete music for all riffs, licks, hints and tips, plus easy-to-follow instructions, tips and advice. Accompanying CD allows you to listen and play along to the matching audio tracks. Essential information on how to get all the great rock guitar sounds, from classic 1950s lick to pull-offs, hammer-ons, bends and the slide. Plus, how to get the very best effects from your pedal, and inside tips and tricks on scales and position playing.

Prezzo: €21,99
€21,99

THE LUTHIER'S HANDBOOK A Guide to Building Great Tone in Acoustic Stringed Instruments Roger H. Siminoff

THE LUTHIER'S HANDBOOK, A Guide to Building Great Tone in Acoustic Stringed Instruments. Roger H. Siminoff.

INCLUDES : STRING GAUGE CALCULATOR

LIBRO MANUALE DI ACUSTICA DEI LEGNI E DI LIUTERIA PER CHITARRA ACUSTICA.

CALCOLATORE PER DETERMINARE IL GIUSTO SPESSORE DELLE CORDE. 

Series: Book
Publisher: Hal Leonard
Medium: Softcover
Author: Roger H. Siminoff

An essential item for the instrument builder, The Luthier's Handbook explores the secrets and science behind making good-sounding acoustic stringed instruments. Renowned author Roger H. Siminoff brings to the table more than four decades of luthiery experience and shares the time-tested philosophies, tips and technology of the craft. As the ideal complement to other books on building instruments, this text describes the structural and acoustical attributes of air chambers; what to listen for when tap-tuning; selecting a good piece of wood; placement of the braces and tone bars and how to tune them; how to select the right strings; what to consider in bridge design concepts; and much more. Includes a free String Gauge Calculator for determining the right set of strings. 96 pages.

 

SIMINOFF


THE MYSTIQUE:
I am a hardcore sailor. And while I sail a fairly modern
sailboat with the latest electronic gear, I have dreamt of the
great crossings of Columbus, Balboa, Erikson, and the rest.
I ponder their bravety, their fortitude, and that certain charm
and splendor that accompanies such heroic and fearless
acts of long ago. And, I wonder how they connected with
their vessels and understood their whereabouts in the
absence of today's modern technologies.
The craft of lutherie boasts such connection. It calls upon
the introduction of modern tools while carrying the
mystique of leather aprons, handmade chisels, smelly
hide glue, and the hands of artisans like Stradivarius,
Guanari, as well as the more contemporary work of
Gibson, Martin, and others.
As sailors learned from the rutters (diaries) of sailors
before them, we have learned from the rutters
(instruments) of these great craftsmen. We evaluate their
measurements, count their grain lines, test their finishes,
and listen to the musical wonderment of instruments
hundreds of years old. Not only do we love how old
instruments sound, we love how old they smell.
It is often suggested that technicians of yesteryear
seemed to do a better job than we can today ... that they
had some secret sauce that made their instruments
sound sweeter. What did they know that we don't? How
did they learn to do that? Who did they learn it from?
And, the most commonly asked question; why does that
"pre-war" instrument sound better than any of those
made today?

THE REALITY:
Maybe one should ask, "what did it sound like then?" As
my friend Mike Longworth of C.F.Martin used to recount,
"we have never learned to make a new instrument that is
100 years old!" Age, and the contribution that time and
years of playing make to an instrument is one of the major
dividing lines between today's lutherie and yesterday's.
The truth is, we have more knowledge about wood and
finishes today than craftspeople did 100 or more years
ago. Our tools are better as are our measuring devices.
Our adhesives are better and our finishes are better and
more durable. The ability to season wood correctly greatly
exceeds what was done in the past by stacking, stickering,
sealing, air drying, and keeping fingers crossed. And, with
today's modern machining and CAD/CAM devices, we can
hob out a neck or body, gang-saw perfectly aligned fret
slots, and build production instruments almost faster than
the wink of an eye.

THE VISION:
There are a lot of wonderful books on instrument
construction and maintenance authored by some of the
best luthiers (and good friends) in the business. I'm guilty
of authoring four. The Luthier's Handbook is not about
making good instruments, but about understanding the
science behind making instruments that sound good. My
goal here is to go behind the scenes and talk about the
philosophy and technology involved in this craft including:
why we choose certain woods, howto select a good piece
of wood, where to put the braces and tone bars, how to
select the right string gauges, whatto listen for when taptuning,
howto tune the components, and more.
My primary focus in this text is on issues which are
acoustical or structural in nature - I'll leave the
cosmetics and instrument design up to you. For example,
I am concerned about the height and weight of the bridge
as it relates to transferring and driving the strings' energy
to the soundboard. While the design is certainly tied to the
bridge's functionality, in this book, I am only concerned
about selection of wood and shape as it relates to
acoustical properties and providing the right leverage or
torque. I talk about finishes from a strictly acoustical
standpoint - whether you choose dull or matte, sunburst
or plain, tinted or clear, is up to you. If your instrument
has a tailpiece, I speak about how it works and not how it
is engraved or plated.
You can build the instrument, I want to help you think
about it. I want to share my experiences of more than 40
years with you. All you have to do is read, think, and, I
hope, build better instruments.


CHAPTER 1

ZEN AND THE ART OF BUILDING ACOUSTIC STRINGED MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
There are many steps to building instruments and a life
full of opportunities to learn to use them. Practice and
devotion to the craft will help you achieve the knowledge
expected of a luthier.
The great philosopher John Locke, said that "knowledge
was the agreement or disagreement of two or more
ideas." The length of time you spend practicing and
focusing on your craft will develop wisdom (knowledge
plus experience). And, if you have the gift of creativity
and the art of sensitivity, you are clearly on your way to
plateaus of satisfaction and achievement beyond your
wildest dreams.
Whether you build only one or many instruments, you
will learn processes that take you from A to Z. You will
learn to select the right materials. You will learn
techniques and tricks. And, you will learn - from trial
and error - how to work each step through until you
arrive at the desired destination. You will, I hope, learn
from your mistakes and failures. These become the real
tools and secrets of your trade.
But it is not the knowledge and wisdom that will make
you a great luthier. Rather it is the application of this
knowledge and wisdom that become your fingerprint,
your signature. In the final analysis, it is how you apply
the combination of your skills that will herald what people
will see in you through the instruments you build.
Beyond these traits, there is another piece that others will
not see. There is a component of the real you, should you
choose to accept the challenge, that speaks to how you
wear the inner garb of luthier, and how you personally
accept the challenge of devoting your life to being a true
instrument maker.
I know of some luthiers who approach their craft almost
spiritually. They attempt to maintain the greatest presence
of mind and rationality when they are building an
instrument. Their approach to instrument construction is
not just mechanical, but sensual as well- with all of their
senses invited to take part in the process. Their beliefs on
how parts work, and how parts fit, and their reverence for
wood is, to say the least enlightening. To them, the
instrument is not just a bunch of pieces glued together,
but instead an imaginary entity being contained by sides,
top, and back - each of which plays an important role in
unifying the whole. Each corner is not a joint, but the
union of two planes. Each line has a purpose. Each curve
has a thought. Everything has a wholeness, beginning
from the builder's complete vision, continuing through a
finished instrument, and ending with a glorious tone.
I think there is much to be said for having a feeling - a
sense - of what do and how to do it, in addition to the
mechanical knowledge of the craft itself.
While an industrial design student at Parsons School of
Design, I remember being exposed to the idea of feeling
art from the inside of the piece as well as from the
outside. A chair, for example, wasn't just a nice form to
look at; it has an internal meaning and shape, too. You
may have seen sculptors who worked as hard on the
inside of the piece as they did on the outside. Their art
has no boundaries; it is not just outer shapes, but an
entire multi-dimensional piece of sculpture.
When I was living in New Jersey, I had the pleasure of
knowing Keith Ferris, a highly respected artist who
specialized in renderings of Air Force and Navy aircraft.
His work is superb. I remember watching him begin a
wall-size piece of art of several aircraft. His first lines
were those of the superstructure and struts. Then he
penciled in the fuel tanks and innermost components of
the plane. Finally, he covered all of that line work, hiding
it forever under his paint as he completed the picture of
the planes' exteriors. He knew his aircraft were right -
because everything inside them was in place.
To those luthiers I mentioned previously, creating the truss
rod pocket, slot, and filler strip, and gluing in the truss rod,
is as important a procedure as polishing the sound board's
face, even though the rod will not be seen once the
instrument is completed.
The creative process has no boundaries. There are no
rules, there are no guidelines. Anything goes - at least
in the realm of thought. The truly creative work we see in
luthiery comes from free-thinking craftspeople who have
learned the thrill of allowing their minds to take them
away from their textbooks, workbenches, and tools to a
place where they can think, envision, and dream,
returning only when they are ready to create.
For the creative luthier, the mind takes great risk. Their
work is typically unconventional, untraditional, and
possibly unmarketable. They spend a great deal of time
pursuing the infinite aspects of their instruments so ...

An essential item for the instrument builder, The Luthier's Handbook explores the
secrets and science behind making acoustic stringed instruments. Renowned author
Roger H. Siminoff brings to the table more than four decades of luthiery experience
and shares the time-tested philosophies, tips, and technology of the craft.

The Luthier's Handbook includes expert advice on:
Wood selection
Tap tuning
Bridge designs
Bracing and tone bar configurations
Soundboard design and construction
String selection
Truss rods
Tools and fixtures
Much more ...

"When you're in the music business for any length of time, you have the opportunity
of meeting the 'best of the best' ... people like Roger Siminoff. As a designer,
musician, and luthier always looking to make stringed musical instruments better,
Roger has a rare talent for doing just that. Having worked on many projects with him,
I can't say enough about his thoroughness and intuitive skills. As a writer, he expresses
ideas from his heart but with a complete understanding of the subject matter."
Bruce J. Bolen
V.P. Marketing Development
Fender Musical Instruments


 Preface
 Chapter 1 - Introduction
 Chapter 2 - How It Works
 Chapter 3 - Woods
 Chapter 4 - Structure
 Chapter 5 - Bridges
 Chapter 6 - Sound boards
 Chapter 7 - Truss Rods
 Chapter 8 - Strings
 Chapter 9 - Tailpieces
 Chapter 10- Finishes
 Chapter 11 - Tuning The Assembly
 Chapter 12 - Wrap Up
 Index
 About the Author

Prezzo: €39,99
€39,99

EXPLOSIÓN LATINA DE LA GUITARRA ROCK GUITAR LATIN LIBRO CHITARRA TABLATURE SMOOTH SANTANA

EXPLOSIÓN LATINA DE LA GUITARRA ROCK, LATIN ROCK GUITAR EXPLOSION. BOOK WITH GUITAR TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA LATINA MODERNA.

SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA CON:

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, NOTE, TABLATURE. 

 

96 Pagine. Como Dueles En Los Labios -Como Tú -Corazón Espinado -Detrás De Los Cerros -Dime Jaguar -El Secreto -El Último Planeta -Hechicera -Oasis -Ride -Sal Pa'fuera -Se Me Olvido Otra Vez -Smooth -Socialize. 

Series: Guitar Recorded Version TAB
Artist: Various

96 pages, This hot collection features note-for-note tab transcriptions for 14 of today's biggest Latin hits by bands such as Maná, Jaguares, Puya, Santana and others. Includes:

Como Dueles En Los Labios
Como Tu
Corazon Espinado
Detras De Los Cerros
Dime Jaguar
El Secreto
El Ultimo Planeta
Hechicera
Oasis
Ride
Sal Pa'Fuera
Se Me Olvido Otra Vez
Smooth
Socialize

Prezzo: €23,99
€23,99

FAST FORWARD JAZZ GUITAR IMPROVISATION LIBRO CD TABLATURE be-bop scale-advanced techniques

FAST FORWARD, JAZZ GUITAR IMPROVISATION. CD TABLATURE

LIBRO DI MUSICA PER CHITARRA CON CD E TABLATURE

So you want to play jazz and improvise like a real pro? This book will show you how, fast! First learn a few basics: the all-important scales, fingering and chord sequences, starting with a simple Bossa nova solo. then move on to arpeggios and more complex patterns such as the be-bop scale. Experiment with melodic shapes and discover the jazz-based blues progression used at most standard jazz gigs. The music examples then demonstrate rhythmic and free flowing ideas with lots of tips on the advanced techniques used by professional jazzers. In no time at all you will be creating your own solos in the style of such great jazz legends as Wes Montgomery, Charlie Christian, Sonny Rollins and Jim Hall.
Five complete solos are included in the book in easy-to-follow tab.
On the CD you'll find a matching audio track to every music example in the book. Each track is recorded twice: first with the guitar, the with backing track only so you can play the guitar part.

Playing A Solo
Imagine you're in a recording studio. The red
light is on; there's a session in progress. You can
just about make out the faces of the engineer and
the other band members behind the glass. You're
holding a guitar, and through your headphones
you're listening to the tracks for a newly-recorded
song. Verses and choruses pass by, and soon ...
very soon ... it will be time to record a solo. How
confident would you feel about playing the
session?

FastForward Jazz Guitar Improvisation will
give you the confidence to create awe-inspiring
jazz solos and breaks. No-one can teach you how
to improvise - however, you can learn a lot about
technique and musical sense to give you a better
chance of being able to playa great solo when
the time comes!
The book is divided into five sections. Each
section represents a different recording session
and a different style of playing, including Bossa
Nova, and Blues and Jazz progressions. Before
each solo, you get to playa few simple phrases at
a slow tempo and practise some scale patterns
and some other ideas that you could use in a solo
of your own.
Then it's your chance to learn a solo (usually 24
bars) that fits the chord sequence and is
accompanied by a 'Spotlight on Technique' which
focuses on some of the ideas featured in the solo.
Later, you can use the backing tracks to
improvise your own lead breaks. Each backing
track is twice the length of the solo track, to give
you more time to get your creative juices going!
Along the way this book will answer some of the
common questions players have about soloing:
What scales should I be using?
Do I have to change the scale when the chord
changes?
Which scales go with jazz? Are these the same as
for other styles of music?
What is syncopation?
Which scales go with which key?
How do I build a whole solo?
How do I make the scales I know sound more
like a solo?

Each example is given in musical score and in
guitar tablature. With the latter each number
indicates the fret at which the note is played,
each line is a string. If you find it hard to
remember which way up they go, think always of
pitch: high notes are above low notes, therefore
the high-sounding string (1st E) is at the top.
Each musical example is played once with the
lead guitar, and once without. The first is for you
to learn by listening, the second 'play-along' track
is for you to practise.
The examples have a one-bar count-in.
TRACK I Tuning notes

Guitar Tablature Explained
Introduction
Playing A Solo

Chapter 1: The Big Bossa
Bossa Nova Scale Shapes
Arpeggio Chord Tones
Five-note Scale
Scale Patterns
Spotlight On Techniques
The Big Bossa (solo)

Chapter 2: Where's Montgomery?
Blues Scales
Blues Arpeggios
Arpeggio Impro
Solo Patterns
Spotlight On Techniques
Where's Montgomery? (solo)

Chapter 3: Tune For Toots
Scale Shapes
Repeating Patterns
Arpeggio Shapes
Classic Chord Sequence
Spotlight On Techniques
Tune For Toots (solo)

Chapter 4: Bygones
The Circle Of Fifths
Half-scale Patterns
Arpeggios In Fifths
D Minor Arpeggio Patterns
Spotlight On Techniques
Bygones (solo)

Chapter 5: Song For Sonny And Jim
Standard Scale Shapes
Repeated Scale Patterns
Standard Arpeggio Shapes
Chord Tone Patterns
Spotlight On Techniques
Song For Sonny And Jim (solo)
Conclusion
 

Prezzo: €18,99
€18,99

WHITFIELD MARK GUITAR COLLECTION TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO Blues for Davis Alexander-Brother Jack-HAL LEONARD

WHITFIELD MARK, GUITAR COLLECTION. TABLATURE

LIBRO PER CHITARRA CON TABLATURE. 

MARK WHITFIELD

Mark Whitfield
Series: Artist Transcriptions
Artist: Mark Whitfield

Right-from-the-record, note-for-note transcriptions for ten top tunes from four of Mark Whitfield's releases. Includes: Blues for Davis Alexander • Brother Jack • David's Theme • The Joy of Love & Peace • The Marksman • More Than You Know • Namu • Runnin' with the Ooze • Salvation of MRT • and The Very Thought of You, plus a biography, an intro by Mark, and a discography. Guitar Tab, with chord symbols TAB

Artist Transcriptions are authentic, note-for-note transcriptions by legendary artists including Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Stan Getz, Oscar Peterson, Jim Hall, and dozens more. These outstanding, accurate arrangements are in an easy-to-read format which includes all essential lines. Artist Transcriptions can be used for performance, sequencing, or for historical reference.

Inventory #HL 00672320
ISBN: 9780793544677
UPC: 073999723205
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
88 pages

Blues For Davis Alexander
Brother Jack
David's Theme
The Joy Of Love & Peace
The Marksman
More Than You Know
Namu
Runnin' With The Ooze
Salvation Of MRT
The Very Thought Of You

Prezzo: €24,49
€24,49
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