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Sheet music $16.95

Original

Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard. Tricia Woods. Organ sheet music. Piano Method sheet music. Advanced.

Translation

Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard. Tricia Woods. Organ sheet music. Piano Method sheet music. Advanced.

Original

Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard composed by Tricia Woods. For Keyboard. Piano. Keyboard. Piano. Method. Instruction. Blues. Advanced. Book & CD. 48 pages. Published by Alfred Music. AP.28252. ISBN 0739048082. Blues. For blues musicians, there is no better feeling than improvising a great solo. Spontaneously creating music that comes from the heart is very rewarding. But if youâve never tried it before, soloing can be intimidating. Which notes do I play. How do I come up with new ideas. What if I make a mistake. Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard helps you overcome these doubts. Youâll learn easy methods to approach soloing with confidence. Instead of learning a lot of technical music theory, youâll get practical guidelines you can use in real life. The blues has influenced many types of music, so youâll be able to apply what you learn to a wide variety of musical situations. This is an excellent book for experienced musicians who are new to improvising, beginning players with a love for the blues, or busy people looking for a quick, low-stress introduction to soloing. A CD demonstrating all the examples featured in the book is included. Introductio. Music Revie. Middle C. The Grand Staff. Sharps and Flats. Half Steps And Whole Steps. The Major Scale. Ingredients for a 12-Bar Blue. Simple Blues in C. Feelin' the Shuffle Blues. Dominant Chords. Improvising. Telling Your Own Stor. Soloing with Just Two Notes. Live at the Two-Note. Two is Enough. Soloing with Three Notes. Three's Company. 2x3. Combining Two-Note and Three-Note Ideas. Tag It On. The Minor Pentatonic and Blues Scale. Flat City Blues. Going Downstairs. It's All Downhill. Getting More Mileage Out Of Your Idea. Play Clusters from the Scale in Repeating Patterns. Rhythm, Rhythm, Rhythm. Add the Root or the 5th Above Your Ideas. Over the Top Blues. Use Octaves to Emphasize Ideas. Use Trills to Create a Dramatic Effect. Take a Simple Idea and Repeat It Over Different Octaves. Chicago Style. Playing Off the Chord. Triad Blues. Passing Tone Blues. The Pull-Off. The On-Again, Off-Again Blues. Approach Tones. Approachin', Encroachin' Blues. Chord-Tone Exercise. Another Way to Make the Change. Makin' the Changes Blues. More About the V Chord. High Five Blues. Playing Over Turnarounds and ii-V7 Progressions. Turnaround Exercises. Putting It All Together For The Hippest Soun. Together Forever Blues. The Balloon Approach. Hot Air Blues. Repeat, Combine, Extend. It's All About Me. Conclusion. Enough Already, Time to Jam. Key to Listening Exercises.

Translation

Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard composed by Tricia Woods. For Keyboard. Plan. Keyboard. Plan. Method. Instruction. Blues. Advanced. Book . Published by Alfred Music. AP.28252. ISBN 0739048082. Blues. For blues musicians, there is no better feeling than improvising a great solo. Spontaneously creating music that comes from the heart is very rewarding. But if youâve never tried it before, soloing can be intimidating. Which notes do I play. How do I come up with new ideas. What if I make a mistake. Easy Soloing for Blues Keyboard helps you overcome these doubts. Youâll learn easy methods to approach soloing with confidence. Instead of learning a lot of technical music theory, youâll get practical guidelines you can use in real life. The blues has influenced many types of music, so youâll be able to apply what you learn to a wide variety of musical situations. This is an excellent book for experienced musicians who are new to improvising, beginning players with a love for the blues, or busy people looking for a quick, low-stress introduction to soloing. A CD demonstrating all the examples featured in the book is included. Introductio. Music Revie. Middle C. The Grand Staff. Sharps and Flats. Half Steps And Whole Steps. The Major Scale. Ingredients for a 12-Bar Blue. Simple Blues in C. Feelin' the Shuffle Blues. Dominant Chords. Improvising. Telling Your Own Stor. Soloing with Just Two Notes. Live at the Two-Note. Two is Enough. Soloing with Three Notes. Three's Company. 2x3. Combining Two-Note and Three-Note Ideas. Tag It On. The Minor Pentatonic and Blues Scale. Flat City Blues. Going Downstairs. It's All Downhill. Getting More Mileage Out Of Your Idea. Play Clusters from the Scale in Repeating Patterns. Rhythm, Rhythm, Rhythm. Add the Root or the 5th Above Your Ideas. Over the Top Blues. Use Octaves to Emphasize Ideas. Use Trills to Create a Dramatic Effect. Take a Simple Idea and Repeat It Over Different Octaves. Chicago Style. Playing Off the Chord. Triad Blues. Passing Tone Blues. The Pull-Off. The On-Again, Off-Again Blues. Approach Tones. Approachin', Encroachin' Blues. Chord-Tone Exercise. Another Way to Make the Change. Makin' the Changes Blues. More About the V Chord. High Five Blues. Playing Over Turnarounds and ii-V7 Progressions. Turnaround Exercises. Putting It All Together For The Hippest Soun. Together Forever Blues. The Balloon Approach. Hot Air Blues. Repeat, Combine, Extend. It's All About Me. Conclusion. Enough Already, Time to Jam. Key to Listening Exercises.