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#1
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Please recommend guitar books
I've been playing by ear for about 14 years and am now learning soloing (finger positions), faster picking, the fretboard etc.. - trying to be a player.
I'm wondering which books can teach me or guide me on how to practice or what to work on to improve; you know practice with a purpose. I've recorder basic progressions and have been soloing over them in 2 different positions so far. This gets tedious after a while and I'm looking for different types of practice techniques and content. Thanks in advance!!! pjk |
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#2
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Welcome to the forum!
If you only know two positions, then it would behoove you to learn the C-A-G-E-D system for learning scales. I did a cheesy lesson on it here. Let me know if you have any questions. Jack Zucker's "Sheets of Sound" would also probably be pretty good. He sells it to forum members at a discount...do a search on his name or the title of the book. It's full of great exercises that will help you bust your rut. If you want more recommendations, come back with some more detail and I'm sure you'll get a ton more. Good luck! Dave
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dkap.info Look at it with your real eyes, not with your crazy eyes. -- Louis C.K. |
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#3
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P.S. I almost forgot! I'd also very highly recommend Tomo Fujita's video "Accelerate Your Guitar Playing". Regardless of your level of skill, this is a very good video for getting strong fundamental skills as a player.
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dkap.info Look at it with your real eyes, not with your crazy eyes. -- Louis C.K. |
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#4
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Excellent. If anybody has more I would love to hear them.
I'm stepping away for a few hours. I'd love to hear from anybody who has a suggestion on what they used to elevate their playing. |
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#5
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Yeah, I'd give a + to the CAGED system for someone in your shoes. It'll give you the whole neck, tie together chords, scales & arpeggios, and eventually get away from positions.
Good link here: http://www.highcountryguitar.com/caged.htm
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- Tom "Everyone brings something unique and valuable to this Forum and our community" - Frankenstrat |
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#6
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I'll second the 'sheets of sound' suggestion, but would like to add that with any book/DVD, you'll obviously need some level of discipline to soldier through the material.
If you can, a teacher is highly recommended.
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Kelvin |
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#7
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Quote:
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Kelvin |
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#8
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Last year Jack posted a similar thread and another guy compiled the answers in a list. There may be some duplicates.
Here ya go: BOOKS Joe Pass Guitar Style Shawn Lane Power Licks Charlie Parker Omnibook Pat Metheny Songbook Albert Lee Starlicks Sessions The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine. Ted Greene - Chord Chemistry Styles for the Studio - Leon White Joe Pass Guitar Style Shawn Lane Power Licks Charlie Parker Omnibook The Martino vids transcription books jack Z-Sheets Of Sound The Wes Montgomery transcription book by Steve Khan, well, and his transcritions of martino as well. Any transcribed Coltrane stuff Holdsworth Reach For The Uncommon Chord The Albert Lee REH vids Scott Henderson's chord grips The REH vids of Brent Mason and Michael Lee Firkins The Carl Verheyen REH vid The Brett Garsed REH vid Henderson's Phrasing vid Ted Greene - Chord Chemistry Mick Goodrick - The Advancing Guitarist George Van Eps - Harmonic Mechanisms for the Guitar series William Leavitt - A Modern Method for the Guitar series Steve Khan - Contemporary Chord Khancepts Mark Levine - The Jazz Theory Book George Russell - The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization well for jazz, I would say: Improvising Jazz and Patterns for Jazz by Jerry Coker (2 different books) Intervallic Improvisation by Walt Wieskopf The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine Charlie Parker for Guitar (not sure about author) Chromatic Approach to Improvisation by David Liebman Joey Goldstein's book (which is really fabulous by the way). Mick Goodrick's book Jack Grassel's three book series of jazz guitar transcriptions. Wolfe Marshall's Jazz Guitar transcriptions Jimmy Bruno No Nonsense Jazz guitar Wolf Marshall's Best of Jazz Guitar Wolf Marshall's Pat Martino Signature licks. Ted Greene's books. Frank Gambale's books on speed picking and theory. Dave Baker bebop books The Advancing Guitarist Mickey Baker Jazz books. For beginning rock - Rock Guitar by Happy and Artie Traum For fingerpicking - Fingerpicking Styles For Guitar By Happy Traum For Classical - Andres Segovia Studies For Guitar by Ferndando Sor Carcassi Studies. Paul Hindemith Craft of Musical Composition: Book One and Two Materials and Structure of Music by Christ, Delone, Kliewer, Rowell, Thompson Polyrhythms by Peter Magadini The David L Burge series - Relative Pitch and Perfect Pitch Courses Reading and Writing Music by Dave Stewart - only know by reputation but hear it's good. Dave is a great composer and keyboardist. Emily Remler's videos. Hal Galper's Forward Motion Mark Levine's Jazz Theory Dave Liebman's Chromatic Approach to Jazz Harmony and Melody Scott Henderson's Melodic Phrasing Dave Creamer's Advanced Arpeggio/Scale Relationships Jack Zucker's Sheets of Sound Band-In-A-Box Chop Shop A book version of Ronnie Earl's Playing Blues with Soul along with an accompanying DVD. The Advancing Guitarist- Mick Goodrick Advanced Aprpeggio/Scale relationships- Dave Creamer John Abercrombie's Homespun video Ted Greene's Modern Chord progressions (Great study of voice leading) Progressive Steps To Syncopation For The Modern Drummer (rhythm exercises to adapt to guiitar) Forward Motion by Hal Galper http://www.halgalper.com Effortless Mastery by Ken Werner Frank Gambale's "Speed Picking" is also very good. Joe Diorio's Intervallic Designs? Kreutzer 42 Studies or Caprices Fabulous studies for developing picking technique. "120 daily guitar studies for the right hand by Mauro Giuliani" "SOLFEGE" "Modern Reading Text in4/4 by Louis Bellson" "The techique of the flute/chord studies"
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The rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yesterday - but never jam today. Lewis Caroll Last edited by lhallam; 07-21-2005 at 10:20 AM. |
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#9
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Quote:
Quote:
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dkap.info Look at it with your real eyes, not with your crazy eyes. -- Louis C.K. Last edited by dkaplowitz; 07-20-2005 at 08:39 AM. |
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#10
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Quote:
That Christ book was from my Freshman year 1973.
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The rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yesterday - but never jam today. Lewis Caroll |
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#11
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Lance, great list, btw. I'd like to add some to that list...(and do some lame-o reviews of the ones I know). I'll peruse the books I have and post it up when I get a chance.
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dkap.info Look at it with your real eyes, not with your crazy eyes. -- Louis C.K. |
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#12
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Quote:
I'm looking forward to adding your contribution to my spreadsheet.
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The rule is, jam tomorrow and jam yesterday - but never jam today. Lewis Caroll |
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#13
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Tomo video
I've been a bit stagnant and struggling to advance and find ways to make practice times that count (like I said).
I'm going to start off with the Tomo Accelerate Your playing DVD first. I'll chime in later. Thanks again, guys!!! |
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#14
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I don't spend a lot of time in music/guitar books these days (though I am still working through the Van Eps below, VERY slowly), these have been pretty important for me at one time or another:
Chord Chemistry - Ted Greene The Advancing Guitarist - Mick Goodrick Patterns for Jazz - Jerry Coker Masters of the Telecaster - Arlen Roth 20th Century Harmony - Vincent Persichetti Polyrythmns - Pete Magadini Drum Wisdom - Bob Moses Thesaurus Of Scales & Melodic Patterns - Nicolas Slonimsky Harmonic Mechanisms, Vols 1-3 - George Van Eps Exploring Jazz Guitar - Jim Hall Improvisation - Derek Bailey Arcana - Various, edited by John Zorn The Harvard Dictionary Of Music Reading Studies for Guitar - William Levitt Advanced Reading Studies for Guitar - William Levitt Musics of Many Cultures - Various, edited by Elizabeth May The Shaping Forces Of Music - Ernst Toch Brazilian Guitar - Nelson Faria Intervallic Patterns - Joe Diorio Linear Expressions - Pat Martino Pumping Nylon - Scott Tennant The Art Of Practicing - Alice Artzt + Lenny Breau & Ralph Towner's books, both of the names of which escape me at the moment and I'm too lazy to get up and look.... I'm not a big fan of transcription books, sorry. I'd rather lift things off of CD's myself. |
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#15
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I have owned or looked at most of the selections posted so far but one which seems to be missing is
CREATIVE CHORD SUBSTITUTION by Eddie Arkin Of all the books I own, this one is most falling apart from overusage. The best chapters on secondary dominants and fouth chord subs I have ever seen. Does anyone care to guess what the tritone of Em11 is? Hint: It's not a b5 above! Steven |
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