| Bottleneck Blues Guitar (Guitar Books) |  | Author: Woody Mann Brand: Music Sales America
List Price: $21.95 Buy New: $13.13 as of 9/9/2010 18:34 CDT details You Save: $8.82 (40%)
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Seller: mediabazaar Rating: 4 reviews
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Pages: 124 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 11.8 x 8.4 x 0.4
ISBN: 082560317X Dewey Decimal Number: 782 UPC: 752187649847 EAN: 9780825603174
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| ISBN13: 9780825603174 | | Condition: New | | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Product Description A comprehensive instruction guide to blues slide guitar styles. Contains over 25 accurate transcriptions of authentic bottleneck blues tunes by such masters as Son House, Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton and many more. Songs include: A Spoonful Blues Black Ace C.C. Rider Come on in My Kitchen Country Farm Blues Crossroad Blues Denver Blues Don't Sell It Dry Spell Blues High Sheriff Blues I Got to Cross That River of Jordan It's Just Too Bad Mean Old Twister Milk Cow Blues No Woman No Nickel Poor Boy Long Way from Home Roll and Tumble So Lonesome Walking Blues Whoopee Blues Yo Yo Blues You Can't Keep No Brown You Got to Reap What You Sow Your Enemy Cannot Harm You.
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| Customer Reviews: Awesome!! December 24, 2007 DeltaBluesDawg (Deepin, TheSwamp) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
24 great bottleneck pieces from 17 Masters of the blues. Includes Robert Johnson, Son House, Leadbelly, Charlie Patton, and Tampa Red to name a few. More than enough to start building a repetoire. It will keep you busy for a long time.
Songs include greats like "Walkin' Blues", "Come on in my kitchen", "Cross Road Blues"--good stuff.
This is not really a beginners book. Intermediate at least. For a great beginners book get "Traditional, Country, and Electric Slide Guitar" by Arlen Roth. That one will give a beginner "That Sound" right off the bat.
A Good Purchase January 10, 2006 Dave B Real (NJ) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I think this would be a great beginner's book for anyone trying bottleneck blues for the first time (like myself). I am finding the given exercises and songs easy enough for a beginner, but challenging enough to not get bored with. Note that the songs are played using Open G and Open D tunings if that matters to you. Songs are clearly written out in tab format, with standard notation above.
Thanks Woody, for putting together a solid book.
Great slide book February 16, 2006 R. French 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I found the book to be very helpful, and full of great information about slide players and their music. So far it has been easy to read and understand, but I have had help. I am currently taking lessons and my instructor is using this book as one of the resources to teach me slide. I am not sure if I would have the same understanding if I was trying this alone. The books takes you step by step through the concepts of the blues and slide guitar. I feel it has been well worth the price.
Good, but you probably want a teacher to help you work through it December 2, 2008 Michael S. Kerry (Columbia, MD USA) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
This book has definite pros and cons for me. First, let me say that I consider myself an early intermediate player, having previously worked through Fingerstyle Guitar by Ken Perlman (http://www.amazon.com/Fingerstyle-Guitar-Ken-Perlman/dp/157424115X), which I did under the guidance of the same teacher that I have started working through this book with.
The book is organized into two sections: first, an instructional section, with exercises and small training pieces; second, the tabbed songs.
The instructional section is pretty good, but I was dismayed to discover that there is no accompanying CD with the book (hearing the examples would have been great...fortunately, I have a good teacher). Alas, the instruction pretty much stops once you get to the songs. The selection of songs is great; lots of really fantastic material, much of which I hadn't heard before. Each artist is given a paragraph or two of introduction, along with some background on the songs. However, there is virtually no instruction on actually playing the songs (fingering recommendations or slide technique, etc.). It's just you and the tab from there on out.
Fortunately, every single song is available on iTunes; still it would have been nice to have a CD included, first with the original recordings and second with a recording of the music (as tabbed out) being played. Since the originals are often quite old, those recordings are not as helpful as they might be in some cases. Further, the originals are often more than a single guitar (even the very first tune, Black Ace, has a strummed accompaniment in the original, so the tabbed version sounds a bit different). Overall, however, this isn't a big deal.
Also, it should be noted that most of the songs have tab for just a couple of variations played in the original recording. This is not unexpected, and can provide good training for the student (figuring out new variations), however in some cases the author was a bit chaotic in his choices for what to tab and what not to. Example, Yo Yo Blues has an Introduction, verse 1, verse 2 and a variation of verse tabbed out, spanning five pages in the book; yet Tampa Red's You Got To Reap What You Sow has two small sections (main and a variation, although it isn't marked as such) with a small coda, on only two pages. Listen to the two originals! Yo Yo Blues is pretty much the same throughout (minor differences) yet You Got To Reap What You Sow is full of variations, and has a neat little intro that, while not terribly complicated, isn't tabbed out at all! The latter tune is far more deserving of the extra attention than the former, IMHO (although I like both).
The worst part about the book, however, are the errors. While I have only looked at a handful of the songs in detail thus far, so far almost all of the ones I have attempted have had errors in the tab -- mostly subtle, but some pretty bad. So, again, not having a more experienced player to go through it with you -- my teacher has been invaluable here -- would make it very difficult. Having said that, the process of going through the songs, finding and fixing errors, has itself been very educational (good ear training). Like most things, you get out of it what you put in...
Finally, I would say that the songs are not necessarily well-ordered, in terms of difficulty. Black Ace is a good one to start with, for sure, but I felt that song two (Milk Cow Blues; the Kokomo Arnold version, which I was not familiar with, and is much better than the Robert Johnson version) was significantly harder. So much so that we started skipping around after that (e.g., song four, Yo Yo Blues, seemed much easier to me than Milk Cow; even the Tampa Red stuff was easier to get the basics, as it is slower and much less rhythmically challenging, although it is harder to really master in terms of tone and expression -- it's Tampa Red, after all -- but perhaps this is just personal ability).
Bottom line: I like the material a lot and I'm glad I have the book, but I wish there was a CD, more detailed playing notes on the songs themselves, and fewer errors in the tab. If you are experienced enough to work through some of these shortcomings, or have a teacher to help, the book will be great as you'll learn a lot doing so. If you are not so experienced and do not have help, I would be careful as you may get frustrated.
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