Barry Galbraith Jazz Guitar Study 4 -- Play Along with Bach: The Complete Bach Two-Part Inventions (1 Through 15), Book & CD [With CD (Audio)]


Book Description

Contains 15 two-part inventions that demonstrate the rich, melodic genius of Bach in his most economical form. Also included are position markings, where applicable, to smooth out difficult passages. Arranged for two guitars, the recordings have Barry playing both parts with total stereo separation so you can fill in the missing part! Or, listen to both tracks in their entirety.




Play Along with Bach


Book Description




J. S. Bach: 15 Two-Part Inventions


Book Description

All 15 of Bach's Two-Part Inventions have been transcribed for solo guitar! Providing a wealth of technical and musical challenges, these transcriptions are perfect for improving sight-reading skills and can be ideal new additions to the performance repertoire of any serious musician.




Jazz Times


Book Description

"America's jazz magazine," Feb. 1991-




Barry Galbraith Jazz Guitar Study 3 -- Guitar Comping: With Bass Lines in Treble Clef, Book & Online Audio


Book Description

From the great recording artist and studio guitarist Barry Galbraith comes the first comprehensive material on the art of jazz guitar comping. This book contains jazz voicings and rhythms for a range of standards and blues, and bass parts are shown in treble clef. The recordings on the play-along CD feature excellent stereo separations, with Barry on guitar and Milt Hinton on bass, making improvisation practice fun




Guitar Improvisation


Book Description

Now includes TAB, as well as standard notation! Guitar Improv contains 10 finger/transcribed solos based on "standard" chord changes by the great Barry Galbraith. The CD recordings feature Mark Slifstein playing the transcribed solos, Milt Hinton on bass, and Barry comping chords. You can turn mute the solo and play it yourself, or mute the comping and you can fill in the chords!




Two-Part Inventions


Book Description

This collection includes a preface and table of embellishments by William Mason.




Music was not Enough


Book Description




The Bach Inventions and Sinfonias for Guitar


Book Description

The Inventions and Sinfonias (BWV 772-801), also known as the Two- and Three-Part Inventions, by Johann Sebastian Bach transcribed for two guitars in standard notation and tablature. Composed around 1720-1723, the 15 two-part contrapuntal Inventions and 15 three-part contrapuntal Sinfonias were orignally written as musical exercises for his students. They are among the greatest pieces ever written for training purposes. Includes: 15 Inventions "Two-Part Inventions" Invention No.1 in C major, BWV 772 Invention No.2 in C minor, BWV 773 Invention No.3 in D major, BWV 774 Invention No.4 in D minor, BWV 775 Invention No.5 in Eb major, BWV 776 Invention No.6 in E major, BWV 777 Invention No.7 in E minor, BWV 778 Invention No.8 in F major, BWV 779 Invention No.9 in F minor, BWV 780 Invention No.10 in G major, BWV 781 Invention No.11 in G minor, BWV 782 Invention No.12 in A major, BWV 783 Invention No.13 in A minor, BWV 784 Invention No.14 in Bb major, BWV 785 Invention No.15 in B minor, BWV 786 15 Sinfonias "Three-Part Inventions" Sinfonia No.1 in C major, BWV 787 Sinfonia No.2 in C minor, BWV 788 Sinfonia No.3 in D major, BWV 789 Sinfonia No.4 in D minor, BWV 790 Sinfonia No.5 in Eb major, BWV 791 Sinfonia No.6 in E major, BWV 792 Sinfonia No.7 in E minor, BWV 793 Sinfonia No.8 in F major, BWV 794 Sinfonia No.9 in F minor, BWV 795 Sinfonia No.10 in G major, BWV 796 Sinfonia No.11 in G minor, BWV 797 Sinfonia No.12 in A major, BWV 798 Sinfonia No.13 in A minor, BWV 799 Sinfonia No.14 in Bb major, BWV 800 Sinfonia No.15 in B minor, BWV 801 Bonus: Downloadable MIDI-generated audio files for all the pieces in this book.




Bebop


Book Description

"When bebop was new," writes Thomas Owens, "many jazz musicians and most of the jazz audience heard it as radical, chaotic, bewildering music." For a nation swinging to the smoothly orchestrated sounds of the big bands, this revolutionary movement of the 1940s must have seemed destined for a short life on the musical fringe. But today, Owens writes, bebop is nothing less than "the lingua franca of jazz, serving as the principal musical language of thousands of jazz musicians." In Bebop, Owens conducts us on an insightful, loving tour through the music, players, and recordings that changed American culture. Combining vivid portraits of bebop's gigantic personalities with deft musical analysis, he ranges from the early classics of modern jazz (starting with the 1943 Onyx Club performances of Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Oscar Pettiford, Don Byas, and George Wallington) through the central role of Charlie Parker, to an instrument-by-instrument look at the key players and their innovations. Illustrating his discussion with numerous musical excerpts, Owens skillfully demonstrates why bebop was so revolutionary, with fascinating glimpses of the tempestuous jazz world: Thelonious Monk, for example, did "everything 'wrong' in the sense of traditional piano technique....Because his right elbow fanned outward away from his body, he often hit the keys at an angle rather than in parallel. Sometimes he hit a single key with more than one finger, and divided single-line melodies between two hands." In addition to his discussions of individual instruments and players, Owens examines ensembles, with their sometimes volatile collaborations: in the Jazz Messengers, Benny Golson told of how his own mellow saxophone playing would get lost under Art Blakey's furious drumming: "He would do one of those famous four-bar drum rolls going into the next chorus, and I would completely disappear. He would holler over at me, 'Get up out of that hole!'" In this marvelous account, Owens comes right to the present day, with accounts of new musicians ranging from the Marsalis brothers to lesser-known masters like pianist Michel Petrucciani. Bebop is a jazz-lover's dream--a serious yet highly personal look at America's most distinctive music.