Intermediate Blues Keyboard: The Complete Blues Keyboard Method [Paperback] Review

Intermediate Blues Keyboard: The Complete Blues Keyboard Method [Paperback]This little book has distilled quite a bit of blues music history and style into an easy-to-understand format.It's really directed at quickly playing blues concepts with just enough explanation and practice exercises.I was pleasantly surprised at how quickly I could play the material and use it in my more traditional jazz playing

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This book is great for keyboardists who have learned the basics of blues improvisation and composing. Beginning with a review of concepts and skills covered in Beginning Blues Keyboard, this book explores further into topics such as chord extensions, blues techniques, building basslines, playing in the key, ii-V substitutions and slow blues.Blues forms such as the twelve-bar blues and the eight-bar blues are explored. Packed with sample licks and songs, this book is essential for any keyboardist serious about learning the blues.

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Jazz Hanon (Hanon Series) [Paperback] Review

Jazz Hanon [Paperback]I have mixed opinions on this one... To be honest, you can probably get an even better bang for the buck by purchasing the full version of Hanon's Virtuoso Pianist and practising the exersizes with swing feel (play chords in your LH and the patterns in your RH), then you could then go out and get some of David Baker's Bebop Pattern books and dig down even deeper... (If you don't know what swing time and swing feel is, you should probably sit in a few lessons with a Jazz improv instructor anyway... sometimes it doesn't come through in writing anyway.)- - Of course what's most important is being able to take the pattern concepts, and applying them to the scales and modes that fit in with different chords, so for that purpose, you should definitely get your hand on a good Jazz Improv book... and also be sure to learn them in all keys... whatever the case, the most important thing to realize is that this is a TECHNIQUE book... not an improv book... hence,you should use this book for the purpose of building your dexterity not for solo ideas...If you're looking for a good HOW TO PLAY JAZZ book, check out my AMAZON list on Essential Jazz Learning Resources.

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Product Description:
Here are graded études and progressive exercises for developing strength, facility, and necessary techniques in jazz piano styles. Included are elements of jazz harmony, chromatic alterations, voicing, swing, bebop, and a chord symbol appendix.

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Garcia: Collector's Edition (Piano/Vocal/Chords) [Paperback] Review

Garcia: Collector's Edition [Paperback]Wow! Someone finally reissued this excellent book.First published by Straight Arrow Publishers, I bought my copy new back in '72 and read it often. It is a great interview with Garcia at a time when the Dead were just taking off. Garcia reveals he "has just made the commitment" to see where the music takes him, and as we all know, the band really went places. Hopefully, the current publishers have reissued it in its original form.
The second part of the book, "A Stoned Sunday Rap," is a great piece that really gets to the heart and soul of the Dead experience, beyond the music. I've always admired the philosophy behind the music for its zen-like approach to life and living; Garcia and Reich tease out the details.
A must-read for anyone who enjoys the Dead.Much better than any of the tell-alls that have been published recently.

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Product Description:
Deal
* Bird Song
* Sugaree
* Loser
* To Lay Me Down
* The Wheel
* Late for Supper.

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Cold Mountain (Piano/Vocal/Guitar Songbook) [Paperback] Review

Cold Mountain [Paperback]The Cold Mountain instrumental piano score is most excellent! The theme songs are beautiful and haunting to hear as they are being played.If you enjoyed the music scores in the movie, you will surely enjoy playing them!

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Product Description:

This stunning, Oscar-winning epic features a T-Bone Burnett-produced soundtrack of Appalachian-flavored folk, moving originals by Elvis Costello and Sting, performances by Alison Krauss and the White Stripes' Jack White, and an orchestral score by Gabriel

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Kurzweil SP2 76-Key Weighted Stage Piano Review

Kurzweil SP2 76-Key Weighted Stage Piano[With increased use, I'm becoming increasingly disenchanted with this machine.The manual spends more time on USB/MIDI/computer talk than the practical needs of the performing musician (as opposed to the "programmer").The 16 set-ups are absurd as are the 64 programs--every spacey effect in the book but no engineer thought to include a simple piano/bass split + layered ride cymbal?The Autosplit feature (in "Program mode") is useless because, unlike the PC2, it doesn't raise the left-hand pitches by an octave while simultaneously lowering the right-hand pitches by same so that both hands will be playing in the appropriate register.Consequently, the user can transpose one hand but then discovers that the non-split notes are now in the wrong octave and can't be transposed separately.The only solution is to wipe the slate clean, start with a blank set-up, and construct each program from scratch.It's laborious work, best begun well in advance of any gig, and done on a program-per-day basis.So many musicians may as well forget about "Program" mode altogether and concentrate exclusively on constructing their own "Set-Ups."Finally, in the last couple of years Kurzweil has released or re-deployed the few specialists who knew anything specific about their complex computer-instruments.Whereas the company used to be responsive to befuddled users' questions, their customer support is now virtually non-existent.Kurzweil seems to be going out of their way, even with the PC3, to limit their instruments to advanced computer specialists or to musicians who simply push the buttons and play whatever programs are available at the highest surface level.]

Until the SP2 appeared comparatively recently, I had claimed the Kurzweil SP76 as the least expensive keyboard that a self-respecting professional performer might be able to "get away with" on the job.Now I can revise that claim, bestowing the same on the SP2.The main advantage of the SP2?There are actually two: first, it doubles the number of voices (programs, patches, objects, or sounds, if you prefer), providing 64 instead of a mere 32 (the SP76 did not even have a vibes program); 2nd, it permits you to split the keyboard, assigning different internal sounds to the various zones created by the split.

The SP2 costs about 33% more than it's predecessor, but the above features make the hike worthwhile.Formerly, I was importing bass or vibes sounds from a module velcroed to the keyboard and spending tedious hours with the MIDI set-up. No longer.And for "popular" music, 76 keys is all you need; 88 weighted keys will add at least 20 pounds to the package.I would have purchased a PC1se, a PC2, or a PC3 with 76 keys except for all of the gratuitous add-ons and complications (these are "programmers'" hobby kits) plus the extra weight.With the SP2, I can still, as was the case with the SP76, toss the instrument in a gig bag and set up in no time (I've grown out of the need to haul monstrous, heavy keyboards, sometimes just to play Basie fills in a big band!). If I'm ever awarded a roadie, I'll pick up a Roland RD700 or Kurz PC3x or Korg M50 (the fully weighted 88-key version) or the comparable Yamaha fully-weighted 88-key monster.But for now, safety, sanity and common sense all point to the SP2(76).

If you want more voices (time-consuming, complicated) and onboard speakers (like weighted keys, requiring dollies, helpers and hernias), get an SP3x.But now you've entered a nebulous territory that I've found even Kurzweil reps have no good answers for: when you get down to it, what's the difference between an SP3 and a PC3?(I find the SP, with its protruding knobs, a "gaudier" instrument than the PC design).

Back to the SP, Kurzweil shows its lack of understanding of a musicians' needs when the company doesn't provide a dedicated button permitting "layering" a ride cymbal on to the left-hand bass sounds walking 4/4 lines (the basis of ALL "swing," for Pete's sake).Instead the company throws in an automated drum machine (!) or trumpets its "Take 6" voices (a great vocal group, but I prefer to play them on my iPod or CD player.When I once played them in public on a Kurzweil PC2, the other musicians merely laughed at me--very dismissively).Until companies like Kurzweil take the music and the musician seriously, no real musician is going to record an album on any of their hundreds of Triple Strike "acoustic" pianos.Hundreds of great pianists have had the opportunity--from Oscar Peterson and Bill Evans to Keith Jarrett and Brad Mehldau, though none has lowered himself to that degree.(Even Stevie stuck to a concert grand piano (and nothing more) at the Michael Jackson memorial.)

Electric pianos are still the realm of techno-engineers and gear-heads.These companies have got all they can handle to recreate the sound of an analog synth or Rhodes, let alone come up with a respectable piano.But at least they could listen to, say, Ahmad or Monty Alexander or Benny Green and try to service an actual musician's needs. That'll change if consumers are more demanding, and if musicians are allowed to advise the designers and manufacturers.

[Warning: What ever keyboard you decide on, make sure there's a return/exchange policy you can live with.I've frequently been impressed by keyboards in the store, only to realize after the first job that this infatuation was no more than a single-night honeymoon.The keyboard will always sound different in a different room, with a different amp, with more time to allow your ears to be bombarded by what you thought sounded like a "real" piano.(If you plan to test at the store, bring your best headphones to plug into each piano.)Kurzweil wants its keyboards to be perceived as "performer's" rather than "programmer's" instruments.If so, consumers need to keep the pressure on their engineer / designers, demanding instruments suited less for an engineer than a musician.]

[P.S. The SP2 is not, technically speaking, "weighted."See the Young Chang / Kurzweil site.]

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Product Description:
SP2 Overview: Superior Technology on the Inside...Elegant Simplicity on the OutsideThe Best... The SP2 delivers the legendary Kurzweil sound, with all of its detail and refinement, in a digital stage piano which is both professional and easy to use....

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Jazz Piano Collection (Music Sales America) [Paperback] Review

Jazz Piano Collection [Paperback]This is just a very nice piece of work by Mr. Pearl.The selection of tunes spans multiple styles and features some rich interworkings and extensions.So What, for instance, incorporates Bill Evans intro right into the arrangement, with an interlude that is brand-new but remains in keeping with the tune's feel.Other highlights for me are Manteca, with nice 13th chords and rhythmic accents, and the pure bebop of Anthropology.

Book is intermediate to advanced.Fingerings would have been nice in a couple of places, and why they can't sell it in spiral-bound, lay-flat binding is totally beyond me.

Where is Volume 2?

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Product Description:
A selection of great jazz songs arranged for intermediate/advanced solo piano with chord symbols. Original compilation. Arranged by David Pearl.

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George Winston Piano Solos - Piano Solo Personality Songbook Review

George Winston Piano Solos - Piano Solo Personality SongbookAs far as contemporary pianists go George Winston in my mind blows the rest away.The creativity of his variations and the amazingness of his original compositions is breathtaking.I have been playing the piano for a few years and I finally got this book.I recommend it to anyone.His music is deceivingly simple, allowing even intermediate musicians to use this book and improve through it, but makes you sound like a pro.Check it out.

The book includes:
Loreta And Desiree's Bouquet-Part 1
Graduation
Walking In The Air
Lullaby
Joy
Reflection
Thanksgiving
Longing
Thumbelina
Music Box Dance
Variations On The Kanon By Pachelbel
Prelude/Carol Of The Bells
The Velveteen Rabbit
The Twisting Of The Hay Rope

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Product Description:
The All Music Guide says that pianist & composer George Winston is among the earliest and most successful proponents of contemporary instrumental music. Here is the first songbook ever notating his beloved piano pieces. Winston himself chose the songs & cover art, wrote the preface, and approved every note. Features 20 of his most-requested favorites: The Black Stallion - Joy - Longing - Prelude/Carol of the Bells - Thanksgiving - Variations on the Kanon by Pachelbel - and more. Includes a biography, discography, and discussion of chords. First Fully Authorized Songbook Featuring Winston's Esteemed Compositions & Arrangements

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Swing! Here and Now: Piano [Paperback] Review

Swing Here and Now: Piano [Paperback]I have a full big band that meets at my home once a week to rehearse and occassionally performs in the LA area.We are always looking for material to perform.I bought this entire set of books.

On the whole the arrangements are very good.They have lots of counterparts, and are more modern than much of the traditional swing band repertoire that we play (Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Glenn Miller, Harry James, Tommy Dorsey, Duke Ellington, Count Basie type arrangements).Our favorites in this collection are I Had the Craziest Dream which has a great trumpet solo, Forty-Second Street, We're in the Money and Jeepers Creepers.Not every arrangement is that much fun to play though, for instance I don't care for the arrangement of "At Last."

This book, which is the score, comes with a CD with the George Roumanis Big Band.Our band has found the CD useful to hear how the songs should be played.However, we are split about the quality of the CD.I feel that the playing on the CD is lackluster and a bit sloppy, but other members of the band think it is great.

I would not recommend this collection for the CD (which is out of print as a standalone product), but I would definitely recommend this set of charts if you are looking for a repertoire for a swing band.

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Product Description:
Twelve fantastic swing dance charts composed by the great American songwriter Harry Warren and superbly arranged by master musician George Roumanis. Each song is recognized as a well-known standard featured in Hollywood musicals and all of the songs were recorded by famous big bands. Included with the conductor's book is a recording of the songs performed by the George Roumanis Big Band. Titles are: Chattanooga Choo Choo * I Had the Craziest Dream * Forty Second Street * The More I See You * Lulu's Back in Town * You'll Never Know * Jeepers Creepers * At Last * September in the Rain * Serenade in Blue * I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo * We're in the Money.

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