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(More customer reviews)Congratulations to Andrew Green for his "Jazz Guitar Technique." This book is unique amoung the many jazz guitar books in print because it addresses much more than what many guitarists might consider "technique." Starting from 1)developing assertive pick hand rhythmic control, 2) demonstrating how to see and hear the same melodic idea in many areas of the fingerboard and 3) laying down a concise series of excercises aimed at mastering cross string picking, the author develops excercises and lines that are free from guitar cliches. He includes immediately useful chord voicings from the diminished scale with lots of beautiful phrases that one can apply to tunes right away.
There is more and I am certain that anyone who works with this book will make discoveries leading to improvisational fluency. "Jazz Guitar Technique" is a workbook with no wasted words or excess musical examples. It's one of the really great ones that do not come along often. I for one am glad that it is not published by one of the mega-music publishers (although it deserves wide distribution) because it is not from the conventional mold. Thelonius Monk has been quoted as saying "Jazz is Freedom." Time spent working from Andrew Green's "Jazz Guitar Technique" will help develop the musical and instrumental chops that will lead to freedom.
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When improvising, what your mind hears is more often than not determined by what your body can reproduce on your instrument. Much of your conception as an improviser is determined by your technique. If you can't play certain types of ideas, you are simply not going to conceive of them while you are improvising. Even if you could, it wouldn't matter, since you couldn't play them anyway. Serious chops building technical studies for single note lines and chords. Plus, the examples feature a lot of harmonic content. This book is about much more than technique...I believe this would be a great addition to any jazz guitarist's library. In standard notation only.
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