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Features 50 classic jazz songs with precise fingerings to help you gain mastery of the fingerboard.
(Bass Recorded Versions). Exact transcriptions with tab of this jazz-fusion legend's incredible work on 14 tracks: Barbary Coast * Birdland * Black Market * Cannonball * Harlequin * Havona * Palladium * Port of Entry * Punk Jazz * A Remark You Made * River People * Slang * Speechless * Teen Town.
(Bass Instruction). Legendary jazz bassist Ray Brown reveals his lessons and teaching philosophy in this in-depth book. Includes: solo exercises and arpeggios; music fundamentals; right- and left-hand positions; scales; chords; exercises in tenths; rhythm patterns with "drops"; diminished chords; runs and variations; blues patterns; extension scales; and much more.
Spilleteknisk, biografisk og historisk indføring i en række jazzbassisters spillestil
El-basguitarskole.
This book gives you all the basic principles underlying solid walking bass lines. Comprehensive, easy to understand, with page after page of great transcriptions of the author's walking lines on the accompanying CD. The CD of NY professional jazz players can also be used as a swinging play-along CD. Endorsed by Eddie Gomez, Jimmy Haslip, John Goldsby, etc.
(Bass Instruction). As the original bassist for the seminal death metal band Cannibal Corpse, author Alex Webster offers invaluable insight into the realm of metal bass guitar. This exclusive book/audio pack provides detailed, hands-on training, featuring vital bass guitar techniques and concepts. Extreme Metal Bass further demonstrates how these techniques can be applied in real-life situations within the context of a song. No matter what brand of metal you subscribe to from classic metal to modern metal and beyond Extreme Metal Bass will supply the bass skills you crave. Extreme Metal Bass also includes access to enhanced audio with demonstration and play-along tracks of all the examples in the book, plus play-along MIDI drum files for optimum practicing. This book is designed for players who use a standard-tuned five-string bass (low to high: B-E-A-D-G). If you do not have a five-string bass, a four string (tuned B-E-A-D) will work for much of the material presented.
(Artist Transcriptions). A tribute to Ray Brown including 18 bass transcriptions, performance notes, photos, and a foreword by Christian McBride. Songs include: Autumn in New York * Custard Puff * Days of Wine and Roses * Easy Does It * Gravy Waltz * Have You Met Miss Jones? * How High the Moon * I'm an Old Cowhand (From the Rio Grande) * I'm Glad There Is You (In This World of Ordinary People) * Killer Joe * Love Is Here to Stay * Mack the Knife * Minor Mystery * Moten Swing * Night Train * Sometimes I'm Happy * The Surrey with the Fringe on Top * Tune Up.
Technology and the Stylistic Evolution of the Jazz Bass traces the stylistic evolution of jazz from the bass player’s perspective. Historical works to date have tended to pursue a ‘top down’ reading, one that emphasizes the influence of the treble instruments on the melodic and harmonic trajectory of jazz. This book augments that reading by examining the music’s development from the bottom up. It re-contextualizes the bass and its role in the evolution of jazz (and by extension popular music in general) by situating it alongside emerging music technologies. The bass and its technological mediation are shown to have driven changes in jazz language and musical style, and even transformed creative hierarchies in ways that have been largely overlooked. The book’s narrative is also informed by investigations into more commercial musical styles such as blues and rock, in order to assess how, and the degree to which, technological advances first deployed in these areas gradually became incorporated into general jazz praxis. Technology and the Jazz Bass reconciles technology more thoroughly into jazz historiography by detailing and evaluating those that are intrinsic to the instrument (including its eventual electrification) and those extrinsic to it (most notably evolving recording and digital technologies). The author illustrates how the implementation of these technologies has transformed the role of the bass in jazz, and with that, jazz music as an art form.