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Welcome to Advanced Guitar Player
Perfect Your Pitch - Free Guitar Ear Training Course PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon Harris   
Tuesday, 21 September 2010 14:34

The Guitar Pro Tab Files for the first part of Perfect Your Pitch - Advanced Guitar Player's Free Online Ear Training and Sight Reading Course For Guitarists are now available to AGP Members in Downloads.

This first section concentrates on learning how to Sight Sing the C Major Scale using the movable solfege system - so after completing it you will able to apply your knowledge of the intervals to any major key.

Working on your Aural and Pitch Recognition Skills is essential for every musician - by improving your Musical Ear, you'll become a better improviser, songwriter or guitarist.

 In short, improving your ability to hear music and learning to distinguish pitches and scale degrees, will simply make you a better musician!

 

Perfect Your Pitch came about as a result of my studies at the Taller de Musics Jazz School in Barcelona. I did a summer intensive course (five months of study packed into three weeks) and I needed a way of checking that I was singing the right notes. I decided to programme some Tabs and realised that this kind of information would be useful to other musicians.

Consequently, this first incarnation of Perfect Your Pitch is almost totally based on the Sight Singing and Ear Training part of the Taller's Music Theory course. However, Ear Training has become a bit of an obsession and I plan to augment the course with supplementary ideas - relating particularly to intervals.

 

You can download the complete course for free as most of the lessons are self-explanatory, but I'm still working on the text for the tutorials - below is a list of contents which will be completed over the next week or so! ENJOY!


Guitar Ear Training Programs And Links

The accompanying Guitar Tab Files for this Ear Training Course are available in Guitar Pro 6 format from the Advanced Guitar Player Downloads section.

If you haven't got a copy of Guitar Pro, Click here to visit the Guitar Pro download page.

Although they often don't provide progressive Aural Skills development for beginners, ear training software programs can be very useful. I personally use EarMaster Pro - Click here to download a Trial Version of EarMaster Essential, Pro or School.

Last Updated on Sunday, 10 October 2010 22:01
 
Guitar Scales and Modes Compendium PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon Harris   
Saturday, 09 August 2008 22:30

I've just started work on a Guitar Scales and Modes Compendium. Over the next few weeks I'll be creating Guitar Pro Tabs for all the essential guitar scales needed to make the transition from Rock Guitar to Jazz Guitar.

 

At the moment, the Guitar Scale Tablatures that are available are:

 

The Minor Pentatonic Scale

The Major Pentatonic Scale

The Blues Scale

 

The Major Scale (work in progress)

 

More Scales and modes will follow and Advanced Guitar Player Members will be able to access the Guitar Pro Tabs from the Downloads Section!

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 November 2010 12:54
 
Essential Bb Jazz Blues Chord Shapes PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon Harris   
Sunday, 20 June 2010 09:31

 

This article is hopefully going be the first in a series of articles and videos centring on a Basic Jazz Blues in Bb.

As Advanced Guitar Player has been going for about 3 months now, I've decided that it's time to start creating guitar teaching and learning materials in earnest - otherwise the site will just end up being a crummy regurgitation of other things that can already be found on the Internet.

The more I roam around Internet looking for an angle on things the more convinced I am that for most musicians coming from a blues or rock background - if you don't already have a strong grounding in 12-bar blues you really need to tackle that first - the best way to get a grip on jazz is through messing with a bog standard twelve-bar in B flat.

Anyway, here are the Basic Jazz Blues In Bb changes with chord shapes and tablature - I made this with Guitar Pro 6, by the way, and I plan to upload the full arrangement as a Tab, a Band In A Box file and a Midi file.

 

 

 

Why B Flat? Well, the first thing you need to get your head round if you want to play jazz is that you're probably going to be playing with saxophonists and trumpet players . . .  and you can be sure that they won't be pleased if you ask them to play in E. Tenor saxes are tuned to Bb and Altos are in Eb so it's much easier for horn players to solo in Flat keys.

As a matter of fact, much like regular blues tends to be dominated by certain keys (E, A, G and C), you also tend to play Jazz Blues in a relatively limited number of keys - Bb, F, G and C most of the time!

What's more B Flat is a good key to start with . . . it's in the middle of the fretboard and only half a step up from our beloved A, so even though you can't use the open strings you can easily apply most of the licks you know in A by moving them up a semitone.

 

Why Are The Changes So Simple? Quite simply because a twelve-bar is a twelve-bar and if you you get used to playing in flat keys, not using the open strings or bending as often and playing a bit more chromatically, the differences between jazz blues and the kind of blues you get to jam down your local bar are mainly stylistic.

Talking of chromaticism, the example jazz melody I'll be using over these changes will be Blue Monk - you'll see a more complex lead sheet in the Real Book (available in the Jazz Standards section of Advanced Guitar Player).

Thelonious Monk - even though he's a piano player is a great starting point for guitarist because his angular melodies, whilst not being technically difficult to play, show you very clearly how much harmonic freedom you've got inside the simplest of jazz tunes.

I've used Bb7 on the I Chord only because the shape is very easy to move about which will be useful when we get on to chromatic changes and it's also convenient for the basslines - I actually tend to use 13th chords a lot myself, so I'll probably include them in later lessons. Similarly, I've used 9th chords on the IV and V but could have used 7ths just as easily.

A final point . . . I've decided to go to the V chord (F9) in the 12th bar mainly because this makes the progression more familiar sounding to guitar players from a rock background. However, staying on Bb7 would be more jazzy so you ought to try that to see how it sounds.

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 June 2010 20:02
 
Advanced Guitar Player Content PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon Harris   
Sunday, 06 June 2010 08:33

Whilst I put a lot of time and effort into the content of Advanced Guitar Player, I make no claim that it is either complete or that it's the easy way to becoming an Advanced Guitarist.

Keyboard NotationWhat you see on Advanced Guitar Player is just a collection of ideas that I find useful for my own musical development and consequently, hope that they might be useful for other musicians.

Although there are a lot of sections on Advanced Guitar Player, the musical styles that receive the most attention are Jazz and Blues.

This is obviously partly due to musical preference but also because I believe that any musician with a good grasp of Jazz and Blues will acquire all of the musical knowledge necessary to play any musical style.

 

As Jazz is a central part of the site, I'm using RealBook Lead Sheets to knock together a basic repertoire of Jazz Band In A Box LogoStandards and Jazz Blues pieces.

During the early stages of Advanced Guitar Player, I'm basically scouring the Internet for material that might be of interest to the Jazz Blues guitarist - I make very attempt to give credit where credit's due but if you feel that I've not credited you or perhaps have overstepped copyright restrictions, don't hesitate to get in touch via the contact form.

As far as creating my own guitar learning material is concerned, I am currently using Band In A Box to create backing tracks and lead sheets for jazz, blues and rock classics. I'm also using Guitar Pro to make tabs and chord boxes and I've just bought a copy of Cubase Essential in order to be able create decent versions of all the tunes.

So I'll be publishing sheet music of melodies, chord progressions, solo and comping ideas and jazz licks etc on the main site . . . and using a combination of BIAB and Guitar Pro 6 - just about the best quality guitar tablature editor around - I'll be creating Backing Tracks, Midi Files and Tabs for the Downloads section.

 

Last Updated on Saturday, 19 June 2010 17:03
 
Who Is Advanced Guitar Player For? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Simon Harris   
Sunday, 02 May 2010 10:41

Fender Stratocaster Close UpTo put it quite simply, Advanced Guitar Player is for more Advanced Guitarists!

Although I might end up creating some Beginner Guitar Lessons, I don't really want to spend my time teaching people how to tune the guitar or to play a C chord - even though that is a very important and laudable task.

So AdvancedGuitarPlayer.Com is geared towards musicians with a good knowledge of the instrument who want to progress beyond the basic and intermediate levels.

My personal opinion is that, in order to advance on the guitar or any instrument, you need to speak the same musical language as the people you play with.

This basically means that learning scales, licks and typical chord progressions . . . and a lot of songs!!!

However, music is such a universal language that it has many dialects - jazz, blues, rock, country, reggae etc etc etc.

So it's quite probable that you have a deep knowledge of a particular style and can consider yourself an Advanced Guitar Player in that particular genre, but are not quite as confident in other situations.Guitar Player Logo

 

If that's the case then Advanced Guitar Player is for you - my aim is to present a wide variety of musical styles and guitar techniques and stimulate your curiosity!

Last Updated on Sunday, 23 May 2010 11:37
 
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