FRED SOKOLOW

SHORTCUTS FOR GUITAR FRED SOKOLOW CD TABLATURE CHITARRA LIBRO SPARTITI BOOK

SHORTCUTS FOR GUITAR. TIPS TO MAKE YOU A MORE SKILLFUL PLAYER IN NO TIME. FRED SOKOLOW. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE. 

 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA CON CD. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA CON: 

ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

 

Series: Guitar Educational

Format: Softcover Audio Online

Author: Fred Sokolow

 

Everyone wants to get there faster and easier. This guide from Fred Sokolow features 29 tips that save time and make you a more skillful player in any musical genre. Tip topics include: Sliding Major Pentatonics • Soloing Off Chord Shapes • Power Chords • The 12-Bar Blues Form • Turnarounds • Simplifying Chords • Finding the Relative Minor • How to Use the Capo • and so much more. These shortcuts will improve your playing and your understanding of music and the guitar, overnight. The book includes access to online demonstration audio tracks for download or streaming.

 

Inventory #HL 00146022

ISBN: 9781495021787

UPC: 888680068226

Width: 9.0"

Length: 12.0"

72 pages

Price: €19,99
€19,99

FRETBOARD ROADMAPS LAP STEEL GUITAR BOOK CD TABLATURE METODO SPARTITI LIBRO

FRETBOARD ROADMAPS – LAP STEEL GUITAR CD

SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH LAP STEEL TABLATURE. 

 

 

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA ROCK BLUES. 

SPARTITI PER CHITARRA BLAP STEEL :

GRIGLIA DEGLI ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA, TABLATURE. 

 

ESEMPI DI MUSICA

 

 

The Essential Patterns That All Great Steel Players Know and Use

Series: Guitar Educational

Format: Softcover Audio Online - TAB

Author: Fred Sokolow

 

Take your lap steel guitar playing to the next level with this great package that will teach you how to play solos, licks and backups, all over the fretboard, in any key, plus teach you how to navigate in several tunings including G, D, E7 and more. Easy-to-follow diagrams and instruction are included for beginning, intermediate and advanced students. 63 demonstration audio tracks of tunes and licks matching the music examples in the book are available for download or streaming online.

 

Inventory #HL 00130590

ISBN: 9781480396562

UPC: 888680021986

Width: 9.0"

Length: 12.0"

96 pages

 

 

 

G TUNING

ESEMPI : 

ROCKY BLUES

SEE SEE RIDER

CHILLY WINDS

SOLOING 

SEE SEE RIDER

AMAZING GRACE

RED RIVER VALLEY

SLOOP JOHN B.

I NEVER WILL MARRY

ROCKY BLUES

 

G TUNING : SLANTS, MINORS, AND OTHER CHORDS

WAYFARING STRANGER

ST. JAMES INFIRMARY

THE WATER IS WIDE

SCARBOROUGH FAIR

CORRINE, CORRINA

TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO

TURN AROUND

 

THE G7D CONVERSION

CHILLY WINDS

 

D TUNING: FIRST POSITION

BLUES TRAVELER

STREETS OF LAREDO

 

D TUNING: SOLOING

ELMORE'S BLUES

CARELESS LOVE

STAGOLEE

SOUTHERN ROCK

 

D TUNING: SLANTS, MINORS, AND OTHER CHORDS

WAYFARING STRANGES

TURN AROUND

 

E7 TUNING: CHORDS AND SCALES

THE GREAT SPECKLED BIRD

CARELESS LOVE 

BEAUTIFUL BROWN EYES

SIX TO FIVE

BETTY AND DUPREE

BLUES RIFF

AURA LEE

 

C6 TUNING : CHORDS AND A SCALES

 

BEAUTIFUL BROWN EYES 

ALOHA OE

RED RIVER VALLEY 

CORRINE CORRINA

 

C6 TUNING: MORE CHORDS

ST. JAMES INFIRMARY

THE WATER IS WIDE

TWELVE BAR SWING

THE GREAT SPECKLED BIRD

TAIN'T NOBODY'S BIZ-NESS IF I DO

 

MORE CONVERSIONS

 

HARMONICS

 

CHIMES

 

12-BAR BLUES/ROCKI

WESTERN SWING IN C

Price: €24,99
€24,99

ROCKABILLY GUITAR METHOD HAL LEONARD CD LIBRO CHITARRA TABLATURE SPARTITI METODO STUDIO

ROCKABILLY GUITAR METHOD, HAL LEONARD. BOOK WITH CD & TABLATURE

LIBRO METODO DI MUSICA ROCKABILLY, CON CD CON 58 TRACCE AUDIO.
SPARTITI PER VOCE E CHITARRA.
ACCORDI, PENTAGRAMMA E TABLATURE.

MANUALE, DIDATTICO, METODO, STUDIO, 

Hal Leonard Rockabilly Guitar Method
Series: Guitar Method
Publisher: Hal Leonard
Format: Softcover with CD - TAB
Author: Fred Sokolow

This book teaches the techniques, licks, chords, scales and strums you need to play rockabilly guitar. It shows you how to play rhythm & lead for all kinds of rockabilly grooves, in the style of masters such as Carl Perkins, Brian Setzer, Cliff Gallup, Buddy Holly, Scotty Moore and others. Instead of learning exercises, you learn the classic rockabilly songs and solos that made the genre come together in the first place. The 58-track CD will help you catch the rhythms and nuances of the rockabilly style. Songs include: Be-Bop-A-Lula • Get Rhythm • Honey Don't • Milk Cow Blues • No Particular Place to Go • Rock Around the Clock • Rock This Town • Susie-Q • Train Kept A-Rollin' • and more!

Inventory #HL 00697407
ISBN: 9781423493181
UPC: 884088503468
Width: 9.0"
Length: 12.0"
64 pages

Song List:
American Music
Be-Bop-A-Lula
Boppin' The Blues
Dance To The Bop
Get Rhythm
Good Rockin' Tonight
Honey Don't
I'm Lookin' For Someone To Love
Milk Cow Blues
No Particular Place To Go
Not Fade Away
Psychobilly Freakout
Race With The Devil
Rock Around The Clock
Rock This Town
Susie-Q
Train Kept A-Rollin'
 

 

CONTENTS
PAGES / TRACKS
INTRODUCTION
About the Audio
PRELIMINARIES
The Role of Guitar in Rockabilly & Which Guitars to Use
Amps & Delay Pedals
Fingerpicks & Flatpicks
Great Players to listen To
ACCOMPANIMENT
Moderate Shuffle-Beat Strum
"Boppin' the Blues"
Fast Shuffle-Beat Strum
"Milk Cow Blues"
Straight-Eighths Strum
"Train Kept A-Rollin .
"American Music"
First-Position Boogie Bass lines
"Boppin' the Blues" 1
"Honey Don't"
"Dance to the Bop"
Deadstring Boogie Bass lines
"Rock This Town"
"Get Rhythm"
Double-Note Boogie Bass Lines
"No Particular Place to Go"
"Dance to the Bop"
The 12-Bar Blues Form
I-IV-V Chord Families
Moveable Single-Note Boogie Bass lines
"Boppin' the Blues"
"Honey Don't"
Moveable Double-Note Boogie Bass Lines
"No Particular Place to Go"
"Dance to the Bop"
Fingerpicking Backup
"Good Rockin' Tonight"
"Susie-a"
"Train Kept A-Rollin"'
"Milk Cow Blues"
"Bop pin' the Blues"
Chop Chords
"Rock Around the Clock"
"Dance to the Bop"
Chord-Based Fills
"Race with the Devil"
"Rock This Town"

SOLOING
First-Position E Minor Pentatonic Scale
"I'm Lookin' for Someone to Love"
"Be-Bop-A-Lula"
The Moveable Blues Box
"Be-Bop-A-Lula"
"Race with the Devil"
Chuck Berry-Style Double-Note licks
"No Particular Place to Go"
"Dance to the Bop"
"American Music"
Chord-Based Soloing
"Not Fade Away"
"Honey Don't"
"Boppin' the Blues"
Fingerpicking Solos
"Susie-a"
"Train Kept A-Rollin"'
"I'm Lookin' for Someone to Love"
"Good Rockin' Tonight"
"Milk Cow Blues"
"Be-Bop-A-Lula"
Swing-Style Single-Note Soloing
"Race with the Devil"
"Rock Around the Clock"
"Rock This Town"
Octave Soloing
"Train Kept A-Rollin'''
Psycho billy
"Psycho billy Freakout"
Endings & Closing Chords: 6ths. 7ths. and 6/9 Chords
"Boppin' the Blues"
"Honey Don't"
"Dance to the Bop"
"Rock Around the Clock"
"Be-Bop-A-Lula"
"Rock this Town"
"Race with the Devil"
WHERE TO GO FROM HERE
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
GUITAR NOTATION LEGEND
 

Price: €23,99
€23,99

RAGTIME, BLUES, & JAZZ FOR BANJO. FRED SOKOLOW, TABLATURE

RAGTIME, BLUES, & JAZZ FOR BANJO. Sokolow. CASSETTA TAB.

Product Description:
If you are a banjo player whose enjoyment of music isn't limited to bluegrass and country, you'll find this collection of tunes fun and sometimes challenging. Contains ragtime, blues, old-time jazz, and bluegrass blues, G tuning. Banjo tab. **For five-string banjo.

Song Title: Composer/Source:
Abilene John D. Loudermilk, Lester Brown, Bob Gibson
Behind The Eight Ball Blues
Betty And Dupree
Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home Hughie Cannon
Brown's Ferry Blues
Bully Of The Town
Careless Love
Chilly Winds (Lonesome Road Blues)
Cleopha Scott Joplin
Down But Not Out Blues
Elite Syncopation Rag Scott Joplin
Five String Boogie Woogie
Frankie And Johnny
Gambling Blues
Leola Scott Joplin
Maple Leaf Rag Scott Joplin
Oh, Babe It Aint No Lie
Original Rags Scott Joplin
Ragtime Dance Scott Joplin
Railroad Bill
Rising Sun Blues
Smoky Mokes Abe Holzmann
Something Doing Scott Hayden & Scott Joplin
St. Louis Tickle Barney And Seymore (Faron Bennett)
Stagolee
Stealin', Stealin'
Sunflower Scott Hayden & Scott Joplin
Swipesy Cake Walk Arthur Marshall & S.J.
Take This Hammer
The Entertainer Scott Joplin
Two White Horses
White House Blues
Worried Man Blues
Yankee Land Max Hoffman

Price: €15,99
€15,99

FRETBOARD ROADMAPS, BLUES GUITAR. Hal Leonard. CD TABLATURE

FRETBOARD ROADMAPS, BLUES GUITAR. CD TAB.

The Essential Guitar Patterns That All the Pros Know and Use
Series: Guitar
Medium: Softcover with CD
Arranger: Fred Sokolow

These essential fretboard patterns are roadmaps that all great blues guitarists know and use. This book teaches how to: play lead and rhythm anywhere on the fretboard, in any key; play a variety of lead guitar styles using moveable blues boxes, chord-based licks, blues scales and double-note licks; play boogie woogie licks and turnarounds; and much more! Each chapter presents a pattern and shows how to use it, and provides helpful playing tips. Great for beginning, intermediate and advanced players.

Price: €14,95
€14,95

COMPLETE COUNTRY GUITAR BOOK Fred Sokolow CD TABLATURE flatpicking lead-Doc Watson-Clarence White-bluesy-Atkins/Travis fingerpicking-rockabilly-Nashville-Western swing

COMPLETE COUNTRY GUITAR BOOK. Fred Sokolow. CD TABLATURE

Product Description:
This book is an encyclopedia of Carter flatpicking style back-up, bluegrass back-up, Carter flatpicking style lead, Doc Watson-style lead, Clarence White-style bluesy lead, Atkins/Travis fingerpicking style, rockabilly guitar style, Nashville lead styles, and Western swing. The tunes and exercises in the book are included on the CD. Fred introduces each tune with page numbers to locate the corresponding material in the text. Stereo split track recordings allow you to hear the guitar through one speaker, separate from the band. In notation and tablature.

Product Number: 93935BCD
Format: Book/CD Set
ISBN: 0786628413
UPC: 796279042567
ISBN13: 9780786628414
Series: Complete
Publisher: Mel Bay Publications, Inc.
Date Published: 11/11/1997

Song Title: Composer/Source:
Amazing Grace Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Arkansas Traveler Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Banks Of The Ohio Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Beautiful Brown Eyes Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Bluegrass Back-Up Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Bury Me Beneath The Willow Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
C & W Vamp Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Can The Circle Be Unbroken Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Careless Love Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
I Am A Pilgrim Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
I Never Will Marry Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Jimmie's Blue Yodel Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Just A Closer Walk With Thee Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Lonesome Road Blues Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Luther's Walk Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Nine Pound Hammer Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Railroad Bill Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Red Apple Juice Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Rockabilly Rave-Up Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Rockin' With Carl Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Roll In My Sweet Baby's Arms Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Sally Goodin Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Scotty's Boogie Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Shamblin' Along Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Soldier's Joy Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Steel Bending Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Take This Hammer Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Talking Guitar Blues Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
The Great Speckled Bird Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Turkey In The Straw Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Wabash Cannonball Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Wildwood Flower Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Worried Man Blues Arr. By: Fred Sokolow
Wreck Of Old 97 Arr. By: Fred Sokolow

 

INTRODUCTION

Country guitar means a lot of things to different people. To some it's the easy strumming
of Hank Williams; to others it's Albert Lee or Jerry Reed playing a hot electric lead in a con-
temporary C&W tune; to still others it's Mother Maybelle Carter picking the "Wildwood Flower,"
Eldon Shamblin playing jazzy riffs on Bob Wills' "San Antonio Rose, " Lester Flatt backing up
Earl Scruggs on the "Foggy Mountain Breakdown, " or Carl Perkins rocking out, hillbilly
style, on "Blue Suede Shoes."
And there are still more performers who shaped the diverse traditions and styles of
country guitar playing: Jimmie Rodgers, Doc Watson, Merle Travis and many more.
All the traditions sparked by these major artists are very much alive. Listen to a country
radio station for an hour and you'll hear most of the above-mentioned styles demonstrated by
lead and back-up guitarists. Your enjoyment of one or two of these traditions prompted you to
pick up this book.
A discography at the end of "The Complete Country Guitar" will help you put these musical
influences in historical perspective. More importantly, the body of the book shows you how to
play in the styles of all these artists. Everything from mountain music to the modern Nashville
sound is examined. Licks and s cales are diagrammed and written out in music and tablature,
and a recording enables you to listen to all the tunes and musical examples while studying
the charts and paperwork. (The greatest pickers of all time learned by listening to records
and imitating them -- and few of them ever had any written aids.)
If you're a beginner, you'll want to start with the basics (tuning up, playing simple chords
and strums); otherwise you can open up to the chapter on your favorite type of country music ...
listen to the recorded tunes on the recording .... study the notes and diagrams that precede the
accompanying music and tab ... and finally, comparing the music/tab to the recording, play
like Clarence White or James Burton.
Whether you're a professional picker looking for some new licks or just someone who
wants to pick and sing some country favorites, I hope you find something useful and enjoyable
in this gold mine of guitar riffs.


SONGBOOKS
Countless songbooks are available that contain your favorite country tunes with
the words and music. Since most of them include chord grids, you can learn songs
from them. Just figure out (by ear or trial and error) which strum fits a given tune,
and read the chord grids while you strum. If the song is written in a difficult key
(Eb or B, for example) you can use the transposing method in the MUSIC THEORY
APPENDIX to change the key, or you can use a capo to make difficult keys easy.

HOW TO USE A CAPO
Various capos, made of rubber, metal and plastic are available at guitar stores. They depress
all of the guitar strings at whichever fret the capo is placed, which then raises the guitar's pitch.
If you playa G chord with the capo on the 2nd fret (acting as though the fret in front of the capo
were the 1st fret of the guitar), it's the same pitch as an A chord-because A is two frets higher
than G.
One of the capo's main uses is to enable you to raise a song's key (e. g. from G
to A) and still play in the original key's chord fingerings. This is handy if a song is
written in G but you can sing it better in A; or if you learned an arrangement using
G fingering but need to sing in a higher key. Here are some other situations in which
the capo is handy:
1. If a song is written in a difficult key (Ab or B, for example), or if someone's
singing voice calls for a difficult key, pick a nearby easy-to-play-in- lower
key and capo up the difference between the two keys. To play in Ab: G is one
fret below Ab, so capo up one fret and play G fingering. (You can use the
transposing method in the MUSIC THEORY APPENDIX to change all the
chords in the tune from the original key to the capoed key. ) To play in B: A
is two frets below B, so capo up two frets and play A fingering.
2. If you want to play higher up the neck - for variety's sake, or to sound different
from another guitar - but you want to stay in a given key: use the same
process as above. For instance, to playa tune in E, higher up the neck: C is
four frets below E, so capo up four frets and play in the key of C (using the
transposing chart if you need to). To play in G, way up the neck: D is five
frets below G, so capo up five frets and play in D.

PRACTICING SUGGESTIONS
Practice your chords and strums by playing along with the tunes on the recording.
Whether a song is an exercise in fingerpicking or electric lead styles, you can
accompany it with the strums in this chapter. The music /tab will tell you which chords
to play and your ear will tell you whether the rhythm is a country shuffle, waltz or
country frock beat.
It's also excellent practice to try to find by ear the appropriate strums and chords
to familiar songs. From childhood on, we all learn hundreds of nursery rhymes,
folk songs and country and pop tunes, most of which only use three or four chords.
Hunt for these - trusting your ear - on your guitar.
Try using songbooks or sheet music to learn some simple tunes. Once you know
the changes* to a tune, the best way to smooth out your rhythm and chord-changing
technique is to play with another guitarist -- especially one whose playing is at a
slightly higher level than yours. This can be demanding on both of you at times, but
it can also be a lot of fun.
Changes" = the musician's shortened term for "chord changes."

 

 CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION .
HOW TO READ TABLATURE.

BEGINNINGS
TUNING UP
FIRST POSITION CHORDS
HOW TO HOLD A FLATPICK .
STRUMMING PATTERNS
SONGBOOKS
HOW TO USE A CAPO
PRACTICING SUGGESTIONS

CARTER·STYLE BACKUP
THE CARTER·STYLE LICK
BASS RUNS (BURY ME BENEATH THE WILLOW IN 5 KEYS)
I NEVER WILL MARRY
AMAZING GRACE
JIMMIE RODGERS-STYLE BACKUP:
JIMMIE'S BLUE YODEL. .
HAMMERING·ON
PULLING-OFF
TAKE THIS HAMMER
I NEVER WILL MARRY
TALKING BLUES (TALKING GUITAR BLUES)

BLUEGRASS BACKUP
THE G RUN
MORE TAGS
EXTRA RHYTHM STROKES
LESS STROKES
ENDINGS
BANKS OF THE OHIO
ROLL IN MY SWEET BABY'S ARMS
WABASH CANNONBALL
AMAZING GRACE

CARTER·STYLE LEAD
FIRST POSITION MAJOR SCALES
G MAJOR SCALE & WILDWOOD FLOWER
C MAJOR SCALE
WABASH CANNONBALL & D MAJOR SCALE
THE GREAT SPECKLED BIRD
A MAJOR SCALE & WRECK OF OLD 97
E MAJOR SCALE & CAN THE CIRCLE
BE UNBROKEN
A WALTZ·TIME CARTER-STYLE LEAD:
BEAUTIFUL BROWN EYES

DOC WATSON-STYLE LEAD
FAST FLATPICKING TECHNIQUE
FIDDLE TUNES
SOLDIER'S JOY
TURKEY IN THE STRAW
ARKANSAS TRAVELER
SALLY GOODIN
EMBELLISHING A SIMPLE MELODY:
WRECK OF OLD 97 (PART I)
WRECK OF OLD 97 (PART II)
LONESOME ROAD BLUES
FLATPICKING EXERCISES

CLARENCE WHITE-STYLE BLUESY LEAD
BLUE NOTES (FLAT 3RDS. 5THS & 7THS)
CHOKING THE STRINGS
LONESOME ROAD BLUES
CROSSPICKING
NINE POUND HAMMER
RED APPLE JUICE
CROSSPICKING PATTERNS

FINGERPICKING MERLE TRAVIS CHET ATKINS-STYLE
FINGERPICKS
FINGERPICKING PATTERNS:
RAILROAD BILL .
I AM A PILGRIM
BASS RUNS & FINGERPICKING: .
I AM A PILG RIM
FINGERPICKING MELODY
RAILROAD BILL .
BANKS OF THE OHIO .
WORRIED MAN BLUES .
FANCIER FINGERPICKING & BANJO
ROLLS: WORRIED MAN BLUES .
MOVEABLE CHORD & HOW TO USE THEM .
FINGERPICKING ALL OVER THE FRET-
BOARD: I AM A PILGRIM .
CARELESS LOVE .
JUST A CLOSER WALK WITH THEE .

ROCKABILLY A LA SCOTTY MOORE & CARL PERKINS .
SCOTTY'S BOOGIE (pART I)
SCOTTY'S BOOGIE (PART II) .
THE MOVEABLE BLUES SCALE: .
ROCKIN' WITH CARL
BOOGIE WOOGlE BASS PATTERNS: .
ROCKIN' WITH CARL (BACKUP)
ROCKABILLY RAVE-UP .
CARELESS LOVE .

NASHVILLE LEAD STYLES .
CHORD FRAGMENTS HANK SNOW-STYLE:
WABASH CANNONBALL .
BURY ME BENEATH THE WILLOW .
CHORD FRAGMENT MAJOR SCALES: .
GREAT SPECKLED BIRD .
C & W VAMP .
SOME NEW F·FORMATION LICKS AND
A JAMES BURTON-STYLE SOLO .
BEAUTIFUL BROWN EYES
I NEVER WILL MARRY .
CHICKEN PICKIN' & SLIDING SCALES: .
RED APPLE JUICE .
ROLL IN MY SWEET BABY'S ARMS
MORE STRING-BENDING WITH THE SLIDING
SCALE: STEEL BENDING (pART I) .
PEDAL STEEL LICKS: .
STEEL BENDING (PART II)
NINE POUND HAMMER .
SOME PRACTICE SUGGESTIONS
THE LUTHER PERKINS-STYLE BACKUP
LICK: LUTHER'S WALK .

WESTERN SWING .
SALLY GOODIN
TAKE THIS HAMMER
A DIMINISHED SCALE .
WHEN TO USE THE DIMINISHED SCALE .
SHAMBLIN' ALONG
CARELESS LOVE .
TEXAS-STYLE CHORD COMPING: .
SALLY GOODIN BACKUP
MORE ABOUT PASSING CHORDS:
SHAMBLIN' ALONG BACKUP .
CARELESS LOVE BACKUP

EQUIPMENT APPENDIX .
GUITARS & STRINGS
AMPS & ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT .

MUSIC THEORY APPENDIX .
NOTES ON THE GUITAR FRETBOARD
MAJOR SCALE & INTERVALS
CHORDS
CHORD FAMILIES & TRANSPOSING .

HOW TO PRACTICE WITH RECORDS .
DISCOGRAPHY .

Price: €30,99
€30,99

GREAT JAZZ STANDARDS anthology guitar Fred Sokolow CD TABLATURE on green dolphin street - STAR

GREAT JAZZ STANDARDS, F. Sokolow. 14 Titles: take five -star dust -what are you doing the rest of your life? -a certain smile -I don't stand a ghost of a chance -I surrender, dear -I'm gettin' sentimental over you -just friends -Laura -moonglow -on green dolphin street -the shadow of your smile -stairway to the stars -stars fell on Alabama. SHEET MUSIC BOOK WITH CD & GUITAR TABLATURE .

Arr. Fred Sokolow
SERIES: Jazz Masters Series
CATEGORY: Guitar Mixed Folio
FORMAT: Book & CD

Fred Sokolow is a prolific performer, educator, author, transcriber, and arranger whose books and videos have covered a wide range of styles including jazz, blues, rock, country, bluegrass, and even 5-string banjo. This anthology provides you with solid, clear, and accessible solo arrangements for 14 of the of the most memorable jazz standards. Every song is presented with the guitar part, written in standard notation and tablature, combined with the lead sheet for analysis. All arrangements are demonstrated on the included CD. Titles are:

A CERTAIN SMILE PRINT (C)
SAMMY FAIN; PAUL FRANCIS WEBSTER

I DON'T STAND A GHOST OF A CHANCE (PRINT ONLY)
BING CROSBY, NED WASHINGTON,VICTOR YOUNG

I SURRENDER DEAR (PRINT ONLY)
BARRIS, HARRY

I'M GETTING SENTIMENTAL OVER YOU
BASSMAN, GEORGE / WASHINGTON, NED

JUST FRIENDS
JOHN KLENNER, SAM M. LEWIS

LAURA
RAKSIN, DAVID/L: MERCER, JOHNNY

MOONGLOW
DELANGE, EDDIE/MILLS, IRVING/HUDSON, WILL

ON GREEN DOLPHIN STREET
KAPER, BRONISLAW/L: WASHINGTON, NED

STAIRWAY TO THE STARS (PRINT ONLY)
M. PARISH, M. MALNECK AND F. SIGNORELLI

STAR DUST
CARMICHAEL, HOAGY/L: PARISH, MITCHELL

STARS FELL ON ALABAMA PRINT (C)
FRANK PERKINS, MITCHELL PARISH

TAKE FIVE
DESMOND, PAUL

THE SHADOW OF YOUR SMILE (FROM "THE SANDPIPER")
L: WEBSTER, PAUL FRANCIS/MANDEL, JOHNNY

WHAT ARE YOU DOING

Price: €29,99
€29,99

GOSPEL GUITAR, VOLUME 1. FINGERPICKING AND TRAVIS STYLE.

GOSPEL GUITAR, VOLUME 1. FINGERPICKING AND TRAVIS STYLE. La musica Gospel è la musica dei canti religiosi dei neri d'America. Negli anni venti, prima della grande depressione che colpì gli Stati Uniti nel 1929, quando ai neri fu concesso di avere le proprie chiese, la canzone gospel si definì maggiormente, ed iniziò a diffondersi anche attraverso i dischi. In questo libro troverete alcuni tra i titoli più famosi di musica Gospel (Vangelo). Numerosi artisti della scena americana degli anni '50, iniziarono cantando in chiesa le canzoni sacre di questo libro. Ogni titolo è arrangiato in tre modi: per chitarra e canto, per chitarra fingerstyle e in Merle Travis style. Casualmente nel 1956 Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis e Johnny Cash si trovarono nello studio di registrazione nello stesso periodo, e durante gli intervalli cantarono insieme, divertendosi con alcune canzoni del repertorio Gospel. Siamo certi che questo libro vi aiuterà ad organizzare una vostra divertente Gospel "jam session" improvvisando con queste semplici e chiare melodie. Amazing grace -angel band -can the circle be unbroken -give me that old time religion -in the sweet bye and bye -just a closer walk with thee -life is like a mountain railroad -old gospel ship -rock of ages -swing low, sweet chariot -this train -walking in Jerusalem just like John -wayfaring stranger -when the saints go marching in. TAB.

Price: €13,00
€13,00

LEARN TO PLAY BOTTLENECK GUITAR Fred Sokolow LIBRO CD TABLATURE OPEN D G TUNING Fred McDowell-Robert Johnson

LEARN TO PLAY BOTTLENECK GUITAR. F. Sokolow. CD TAB.

Price: €20,99
€20,99

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.

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. 

Price: €39,99
€39,99
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