Playing Guitar like a Pro Lead, Solo & Group Performance
Salepage : Playing Guitar like a Pro Lead, Solo & Group Performance
Archive : Playing Guitar like a Pro Lead, Solo & Group Performance Digital Download
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8.14 GB
This course is a goldmine of information for both guitarists and music enthusiasts who have never picked up an axe.
Dive in and discover the illustrious history of this broad collection of virtuosos on and offstage.
Discover the secrets of some of the world’s most prominent rockers, such as Eric Clapton and David Gilmour, before brushing up on jazz greats such as Django Reinhardt and Antonio Carlos Jobim. Explore nearly a century of music from musicians all across the world, from the roots of bluegrass to the beautiful melodies of Joni Mitchell. You will enjoy the experience of Playing Guitar like a Pro, and you will hear your favorite bands in a whole new light, whether you are a musician wishing to play like the greats or a music fan wanting to improve your experience of favorite performances and songs.
Improve Your Guitar Technique
Dr. McAllister has you covered regardless of genre or ability level. Use intermediate-level techniques such as right-hand arpeggios, crosspicking, slurring, funk-style chord strumming, and slapping harmonics to improvise over the included backing music files. This course provides you with a large toolbox full of techniques for improving your rehearsals, live gigs, and in-studio recordings.
Dr. McAllister employs a variety of learning approaches as he guides you through each of the essential performance skills in the course to ensure that you grasp what you need to improve your instrumentation. Throughout the course, he performs on his guitar alone and with his band for a complete display of technique for the hands-on or audiovisual-based student (as many guitarists are). Then, after demonstrating you how to do it, he includes background music tracks in each session so you can practice with the band! Dr. McAllister also discusses each method and playing style as you learn it, which is complemented by onscreen notation and tablature.
Play as though you’re a rock star.
Dr. McAllister focuses each session on one or two unique guitarists who specialize at specific techniques—you select which ones to learn and in what sequence. These real-world examples demonstrate the successful application of each topic, motivating you to use the approaches that made the greats great. Among the featured guitarists are dozens of well-known musicians with distinct tones just waiting to be discovered. Here are a few examples:
Eddie Van Halen’s lightning-fast, two-handed tapping enhances any rock, metal, or jazz solo. Conquer it for yourself and read about KISS’s Gene Simmons scouting Eddie and his band at a 1970s nightclub.
Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour excels in string bending. He bends his strings gently at times, imparting a bluesy and ethereal aspect to his parts; at other times, he does it swiftly, employing vibrato to spice up otherwise monotonous solo pieces. If you learn this approach, you’ll be able to enhance your solo game faster than you can say, “We don’t need no schooling.”
Wes Montgomery was well-known on the jazz scene for his octave-based melodies and peculiar habit of tapping the strings only with his right thumb, which earned him a distinct sound that you may have.
Dr. McAllister studied with Romero’s sons at the University of California, San Diego, and he will motivate you to include classical influences into your musical arsenal. With techniques like rasgueado (strumming with your fingernails) and pizzicato (resting the outside edge of your right hand on the strings and plucking with your thumb), your playing will be rich in texture and complexity.
Each musical genre represented in Playing Guitar Like a Pro also benefits from several subgenres examined throughout the course, which compliment each other beautifully and help you broaden your repertoire. If the classic jazz stylings of Wes Montgomery and Django Reinhardt aren’t for you, you could enjoy John McLaughlin’s jazz fusion and Pat Metheny’s technical jazz-blues combos. Rock, classical, and folk all have similar examples.
Increase Your Music Appreciation Significantly
Did you know that Jimi Hendrix influenced Eric Clapton’s approach of playing both lead and rhythm guitar sections at the same time? Clapton attempted to perfect the remarkable technique after Hendrix joined in with Clapton’s band Cream at a gig in London in 1966. While Eric Clapton’s most obvious influences were early 1900s Chicago and Delta bluesmen, after hearing Dr. McAllister’s account, would you ever view his famous MTV Unplugged event the same way again?
Knowing what went into the creation, production, or performance of a song frequently alters how we listen to it or what we hear when we hear it. While you may or may not connect to the technical and performance-based anecdotes, learning about the history and background of your favorite performers and songs will give you a whole new respect for them. The skills mastered by these giants are easily discernible in their own—and other bands’—songs.
Aside from the skills themselves, Playing Guitar Like a Pro includes anecdotes from nearly every musician examined that are comparable to those of Clapton and Hendrix. Learning about these abilities teaches our ears to perceive music in ways that most of us are not accustomed to. Connect the Grammy-winning song “The Girl from Ipanema” to its Brazilian jazz and samba roots, then listen to it again to understand why it is regarded as one of the most important songs of the early 1960s bossa nova movement. Alternatively, listen to Rush, dubbed “the Canadian Led Zeppelin.” Their guitarist Alex Lifeson’s usage of shifting time signatures and power arpeggios impacted subsequent generations of progressive-rock bands.
You’ll also learn why certain performers are so distinct and recognized that you’ll recognize a song by them before they start singing. Dr. McAllister, for example, explains why only Eric Clapton sounds like Eric Clapton, why Wes Montgomery’s recording of a song is impossible to mistake for anyone else’s, and why you can pick a Pink Floyd guitar solo out of a lineup—even if you haven’t played one of their records since Nixon was president. This instructive course not only uncovers the intricacies of professional guitar to musicians, but it also improves the listening ear of everyone who takes it. Fortunately, learning this magnificent art form and honing our ears and minds never spoils our special relationship with our record collections and six-string idols. Unlike understanding how your favorite magician does his or her feats, this behind-the-scenes look is as educational as it is gratifying. If you’ve ever wanted to hear your favorite music for the first time, now’s your opportunity.
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