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Learning How to Solo - Carter Style and Beyond This Edition is the Spiral Bound Hardcopy Book (with downloadable audio content) You CAN learn how to take a guitar solo on ANY vocal tune!! In the 108-pages of Volume 2 of the Flatpicking Essentials series you will be given very detailed instruction designed to teach you how to:
1) Select a Vocal Song 2) Learn the Chord Progression by Ear 3) Learn the Basic Melody by Ear 4) Find the Carter Style Arrangement 5) Learn How to Simplify the Melody 6) Embellish the Carter Style Arrangement using techniques such as hammer-ons, pull-offs, slides, alternate chord strums, tremolo, double stops, crosspicking, neighboring notes, scale runs, drones, and fill licks.
The 36 songs that you will study in order to learn how to apply these steps to any song are as follows:
Amazing Grace Arkansas Traveler Banks of the Ohio Bile the Cabbage Down Boogie-Woogie Blues Buffalo Gals Bury Me Beneath the Willow Crawdad Song Cripple Creek Down in the Valley East Virginia Blues Grandfather's Clock Home Sweet Home Jesse James Jimmy Brown the Newsboy John Hardy John Henry Keep On The Sunny Side Lonesome Road Blues Nine Pound Hammer Oh, Susanna Old Joe Clark Old Spinning Wheel Red River Valley Red Wing Salty Dog Blues She'll Be Coming Around the Mountain Storms Are On The Ocean Streets of Loredo Uncloudy Day Wabash Cannonball Wildwood Flower Will The Circle Be Unbroken Worried Man Blues Yellow Rose of Texas You Are My Sunshine
You will learn multiple variations of many of these songs.
Table of Contents for "Flatpicking Essentials, Volume 2":
Introduction
Arranging Solos for Vocal Tunes (Overview)
Step One: Select a Song Step Two: Find the Chords Step Three: Find the Melody ("You Are My Sunshine" Examples) Step Four: Basic Carter Style Step Five: Simplify the Melody ("You Are My Sunshine" Examples)
Practicing the Steps: "Will The Circle Be Unbroken" "She'll Be Coming Around the Mountain" Improvisation "Nine Pound Hammer" "Jesse James" "Red River Valley" "Old Joe Clark"
Waltz Time Waltz Time Exercises "Down in the Valley" "Amazing Grace"
Practice with Carter Style "Jimmy Brown the Newsboy" "Grandfather's Clock" "Old Spinning Wheel" "Uncloudy Day" "Home Sweet Home" "John Hardy" "John Henry" "Buffalo Gals" "Lonesome Road Blues" "Wildwood Flower" "Cripple Creek" "Banks of the Ohio" "East Virginia Blues" "Keep On The Sunny Side" "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" "Yellow Rose of Texas"
Tremolo "Twinkle, Twinkle Tremolo" Tremolo Exercise "You Are My Sunshine" Tremolo "Worried Man Blues" Tremolo "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" Tremolo "You Are My Sunshine" Spiced-up Tremolo "Boogie-Woogie Blues"
Double Stops "Bile the Cabbage Down" Double Stops Finding Double Stops in Chord Shapes "You Are My Sunshine" Double Stops "Buffalo Gals" Double Stops "Cripple Creek" Double Stops "Wildwood Flower" Double Stops "Worried Man Blues" Double Stops "Streets of Loredo" Double Stops
Crosspicking Crosspicking Patterns Crosspicking Exercise "Banks of the Ohio" Crosspicking "Wildwood Flower" Crosspicking "Home Sweet Home" Crosspicking "Oh, Susanna" Crosspicking Alternate Crosspicking Patterns
Pioneer Techniques Summary
Neighboring Notes, Scale Runs, and Drones Clarence White Excerpt "Salty Dog Blues" Doc Watson Excerpts and Drone Strings "She'll Be Coming Around the Mountain" "Buffalo Gals" "Wabash Cannonball" "You Are My Sunshine"
Licks and Soloing C and G Licks "Jimmy Brown the Newsboy" "The Crawdad Song" "Nine Pound Hammer" "Storms Are On The Ocean" "Old Spinning Wheel"
Fiddle Tunes and Carter Style "Arkansas Traveler" "Red Wing"
Looking Forward
About the Flatpicking Essentials Series:
The Flatpicking Essentials instructional series is designed to teach you the art of flatpicking the acoustic guitar in a sequential, step-by-step method that will gradually build your flatpicking skill in a way that leaves no "gaps" or "holes." While this method will be extremely beneficial to beginners, this series will also be of great value to those guitar players who have been working to learn how to flatpick for quite some time, yet can't seem to get beyond a certain plateau. If you are having trouble moving beyond memorized solos, adding interest and variety to your rhythm playing, learning how to play up-the-neck, learning how to come up with your own arrangements to songs, learning how to play by ear, or learning how to improvise, then this series is for you! Too many flatpickers are learning how to play by simply memorizing transcribed fiddle tune solos from tab books and video tapes. In doing that they are learning ineffectively and inefficiently. They are skipping over many vital elements in the learning process and thus they have a weak foundation. In this series my goal is to help you build a strong foundation so that you can easily maintain consistent forward progress in your study of flatpicking. Each volume of this series presents material that provides the foundation for the next volume. In this first volume "Rhythm, Bass Runs, and Fill Licks" you learn how to develop all of the basic skills you will need in order to become a solid rhythm player. This book is designed to teach you rhythm skills in a way that will thoroughly prepare you for Volume 2, which is titled, "Learning How To Solo: Carter Style and Beyond". Volume 3 will start to build your fiddle tune repertoire by providing you with melody-based versions of the most popular jam session tunes. Volume 4 will teach you how to become familiar with the entire fingerboard and understand how to use it to your advantage in creating interesting solos. Volume 5 will explore the styles and contributions of the flatpicking legends: Doc Watson, Clarence White, Tony Rice, Dan Crary, Norman Blake, and others. Volume 6 will provide you with advance arrangements of songs and tunes (arranged by Tim May). From there, future volumes will explore other genres such as Celtic, Western Swing, and Gypsy Jazz. As you will learn in the first section of Volume 1, the flatpicking guitar style developed chronologically along a very clear line of sequential technical skills. In order to learn how to flatpick fiddle tunes like Doc Watson, the student needs to build a foundation similar to the foundation Doc built for himself before he started picking lead solos on fiddle tunes. The first two volumes of this course present the techniques and skills that were developed on the acoustic guitar during the 30s, 40s, and 50s "the pre-Doc Watson skills" the skills Doc acquired as part of building his own musical foundation. The remaining volume then continue to follow the chronological development of the style.
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