TrueFire: Tim Sparks - Post-Modern Fingerstyle Blues (+ tabs) Техники, гармония и репертуар для современного фингерстайл гитариста от Tim Sparks. Содержание: SECTION 1: HOW GREAT THOU ART The roots of gospel and blues run deep through this arrangement of "How Great Thou Art," a now-standard hymn that actually has Swedish roots. It's a great jumping-off point for your plunge into post-modern fingerstyle because it builds on familiar elements like blues lines, improvisation, chord melody -but all in entirely new ways. Sparks covers single-note lines, double-stops, turnarounds, Drop D tuning, melodic voicings, arpeggiating chords with harmonics and a cool pedal tone move on the turnarounds to create interesting motion between the changes and the melody, where the higher melody note remains static as the chords shift underneath. SECTION 2: BLUES STUDY IN D This study in Drop D tuning (DADGBE, low to high) is blues-based but you'll find yourself a long way from "blues boxes" and the standard I-IV-V progression. The variations here, heard over a 16-bar structure rather than a typical 12-bar blues map, are inspired by barrel-house piano à la Memphis Slim (1915-1988). The bass line's feel is created by playing 6/8 against 4/4; that is, you create the familiar pulse of a 6/8 even though the rhythm is counted in steady 4's. You'll also learn how to use a "slow-hand" fretted thumb to combine the bass line and melody. You'll also pick up a technique for using the thumb in the fretting action to sustain and move the melody around without cutting it short to catch bass notes. SECTION 3: A FEW BOWLS TURKISH This is an original arrangement of a piece composed by Naftule Brandwein, a klezmer musician who found his way to the U.S. by way of Turkey. Its appeal to both player and listener is in its eclecticism. The arrangement is True to the song's definitively Jewish sound but also draws heavily on the blues, on Middle Eastern harmonies, and on left-of-center jazz harmony. This is what progressive, post-modern music is all about - soulful sounds that draw on global influences but are at home anywhere in the world. Blending Jewish, Gypsy, modern jazz and Freygish scales and chord voicings over a funky, swamp beat using a Brazilian Biaio rhythm, with harp-like cross-picking teaches you how to create some very unusual, gorgeous harmonies. SECTION 4: LITTLE PRINCESS This series of lessons feature eclectic, post-modern guitar interpretations of the music of Naftule Brandwein, King of the Klezmer Clarinet. Owing as much to klezmer music as to jazz, this arrangement of Brandwein's Little Princess flows effortlessly between styles, and shifts from drone-based harmonies to a style more akin to traditional chord melodies and back again. In an approach that's reminiscent of Flamenco technique, the melody in the second part of the arrangement is played almost entirely against a 8th-fret barre. The Freygish mode, learned in A Few Bowls Terkish, is back in play here in the improv section. The solo follows the chords progression behind the melody, with a few liberties taken to capitalize on the more open changes. SECTION 5: MISSISSIPPI BLUES Sparks revisit here to one of his signature blues is a testament to how the personality of a particular guitar can have a profound influence on what you play. Whether these lessons on Mississippi Blues provide you with an arrangement to recreate or a mountain of riffs and techniques to adopt and adapt, they'll serve any serious fingerstyle guitarist way beyond their expectations. With bass line, melody and chords all in perpetual motion, this is the type of arrangement that can make a solo acoustic sound like pure magic. You'll learn a boogie bass in 4/4 against upper-string arpeggios in 6/8 and how to reinvent every recurrence of the 12-bar form. The melody riff harmonized in sixths over a boogie bass line, an elaborate turnaround with the "grand descent" and the concluding line using double-stop 6ths, are alone well worth the price of admission. SECTION 6: ORIENTAL BLUES The Oriental Blues is a brainchild of famed ragtime and blues composer Eubie Blake, and we don't mean to be ironic when we say the tune doesn't fit comfortably under ragtime or blues. If anything it's a stream-of-consciousness version of ragtime from Harlem, circa 1917, with a compelling blend of musical influences mixing jazz, blues, and Middle Eastern harmonies. In terms of technique, harmony, and melody alike, this arrangement is constantly shifting between the familiar and the foreign. The cadenza combining the Middle-Eastern Hijaz (Freygish mode) , the series of 7th chords played with an E pedal tone on the open first string, the 10th intervals, lateral fingering of Hungarian Minor mode and the ascending and descending melody harmonized in 6ths and 10ths will all keep you happily engaged. SECTION 7: OH DADDY, THAT'S GOOD! We're back to klezmer king Naftule Brandwein here, offering a solo guitar adaptation of a klezmer tune he recorded in the 1920's. It's based on a Romanian Gypsy song and uses Gypsy scales, but also integrates blues licks and Brazilian rhythms, as heard in the bossanova and samba segments in the out chorus. The title is reportedly a reflection of 1920's Prohibition culture; Brandwein was known to be a drinker and may have exalted, "Oh daddy, that's good!" in response to a tasty illegal beverage. But, listen to just a few opening bars and you'll wonder how anyone could attempt such a tune with a single drop of alcohol in their bloodstream. The modes most heavily used in "Oh Daddy" are Hungarian Minor and the Ahava Rabba mode, described and played here The second theme has a 6/8 feel before dropping back to 4/4 using the Biaio pattern. It's followed by a vamp with modal improvisation using the Middle Eastern Saz style. Lots of new and cool to get a grip on here. SECTION 8: WAYFARING STRANGER The traditional gospel tune "Wayfaring Stranger" is given the post-modern treatment here in Drop D tuning. This arrangement is inspired by a haunting version of the same song recorded by bassist Charlie Haden on his Art of the Song CD. Wayfaring Stranger calls on the traditional elements of fingerstyle playing- alternating bass, jazz voicings, attention to melody - yet it all shapes up to be anything but traditional. Played up-tempo or down, there's a lyrical, longing quality to the melody that is unmistakably rooted in gospel. By mixing in the alternating bass and arpeggiating the changes - that is, by changing the approach to right-hand technique - the feel changes entirely. The Travis-style fingerpicking is explained here, followed by a discussion of modal and chord-melody improvisation.

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