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frankus
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 Posts: 1100 Location: Chelmsford/Arachnipus
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Posted: Mon Mar 07, 2005 10:51 am Post subject: Scott Henderson Chord Book. |
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Basically this dinky book, is a bit freakish..
I was expecting something similar to the Ted Green books but it's more guitarology than theory..
I think I'll re-read it in a year or two, it might be practical for me by then. _________________ Fabulous powers were revealed to me the day I held my magic Suhr(d) aloft and said "by the power of great scale!"
I have the power! |
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dkaplowitz
Joined: 19 Mar 2005 Posts: 73 Location: Narberth, PA
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Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2005 12:02 am Post subject: Re: Scott Henderson Chord Book. |
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frankus wrote: | Basically this dinky book, is a bit freakish..
I was expecting something similar to the Ted Green books but it's more guitarology than theory..
I think I'll re-read it in a year or two, it might be practical for me by then. |
Similar to which Ted Greene Book? (I have at least 4 of his books, 2 of them are chord books). Can you elaborate on what "freakish" and "guitarology" mean in this context? I'm just curious. I've not seen that book. The only one of his I've seen is one that seems to just have a few transcriptions in it.
I have his way-old videos (fusion improv and phrasing for around $10. each) and I think they're pretty good in some ways. Not incredible or life changing, but a nice look into the myriad of choices one has over maj/min/dom chords.
Cheers,
Dave |
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frankus
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 Posts: 1100 Location: Chelmsford/Arachnipus
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Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2005 9:46 am Post subject: Re: Scott Henderson Chord Book. |
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dkaplowitz wrote: | frankus wrote: | Basically this dinky book, is a bit freakish..
I was expecting something similar to the Ted Green books but it's more guitarology than theory..
I think I'll re-read it in a year or two, it might be practical for me by then. |
Similar to which Ted Greene Book? (I have at least 4 of his books, 2 of them are chord books). Can you elaborate on what "freakish" and "guitarology" mean in this context? I'm just curious. I've not seen that book. The only one of his I've seen is one that seems to just have a few transcriptions in it. |
Okay I've got Chord Chemistry, Modern Chord Progressions, Single Note Soloing 1 and 2 .. pah 4, I thought there might be another book for me to get. I guess I was expecting a hybrid between Chord Chemistry or Chord Progressions, instead what you get is his own spin on synonyms in a colour coordinated chart... so each chord has a colour code denoting the tonality and that's hovered over strings to mark the root or seventh.. most of the chords are very interesting sounds but they are too advanced.
I feel happier building a strong foundation of chords and knowing the sounds before I try embelleshing it with his voicings _________________ Fabulous powers were revealed to me the day I held my magic Suhr(d) aloft and said "by the power of great scale!"
I have the power! |
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dkaplowitz
Joined: 19 Mar 2005 Posts: 73 Location: Narberth, PA
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Posted: Tue Mar 22, 2005 11:39 am Post subject: |
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Fair enough. Thanks for the description. I think it's the same material he covered in his videos too. _________________ Less ebay, more Mel Bay |
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frankus
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 Posts: 1100 Location: Chelmsford/Arachnipus
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Posted: Tue Jun 20, 2006 2:04 pm Post subject: |
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Okay, I read Bret Wilmott's harmonic extensions and realise that the Scott Henderson stuff is pretty slick really, so I'll be giving this a go after the move _________________ Fabulous powers were revealed to me the day I held my magic Suhr(d) aloft and said "by the power of great scale!"
I have the power! |
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splatter
Joined: 22 Feb 2006 Posts: 23
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Posted: Wed Jun 21, 2006 8:41 pm Post subject: |
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Weird... I just received the same book last night from Amazon. It looks interesting, but it is damned short. 16 pages for $10??? |
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frankus
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 Posts: 1100 Location: Chelmsford/Arachnipus
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Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 8:59 am Post subject: |
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Theory books are wierd. If you get Ted Greene books there's enough there to keep you reading for years. Admittedly there's precious little writing in it.
If you get Wayne Krantz's Improvisers OS you'll see the majority of the book consists of all the possible combinations of intervals, the rest kinda says "Go play" but in a wordy way reminiscent of a computer manual (which irritated the hell out of me, having reviewed O'Reilly books ;^).
It's a trade off, big book with lots to take in and years of graft before you realise the results or small book containing a few very powerful concepts that you can get to grips with sooner.
For me, the Scott Henderson book just looked like cheating, especially when compared to the Krantz and Greene books that visibly advocate a fuller knowledge. But after reading Bret Wilmott's Harmonic Extensions I think I've a handle on where Scott's book seems more focussed, and that's neat. I wasn't ready for it before.
If anything it's like the Mickey Baker Jazz Guitar book where he states you only need about 30 or so chords.. Baker chose them for the way they'd stand up in a big band; Scott's book picks voicings and turns them on their head in front of you, where so many other books would simply repeat the voicing 4 times in different sections. For that, it's more honest and helpful IMO. _________________ Fabulous powers were revealed to me the day I held my magic Suhr(d) aloft and said "by the power of great scale!"
I have the power! |
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nielsri
Joined: 03 Feb 2006 Posts: 25
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Posted: Sun Jul 09, 2006 11:47 am Post subject: |
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Has anyone seen Mick Goodrick's 'Voice Leading Almanac'? It's a series of books which takes chord progressions and voice leads them with different inversions and voicings. Its dense but I found it an exciting approach. |
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