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DianeB

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Everything posted by DianeB

  1. until
    Wednesday Workout with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. How to Play Drop D Tuning.
  2. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. The Three Types of Blues You Need to Know.
  3. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Drop D Tuning.
  4. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Song Lesson: "Brown Eyed Girl".
  5. until
    Wednesday Workout with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Playing Thirds on Guitar.
  6. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Playing Thirds on Guitar.
  7. Watch Live Lessons on the Guitar Gathering YouTube Channel HERE. 7:00 pm Central Time US 2022 LIVE LESSON DATES JANUARY 11th – How to Play Fresh Ideas from Stale Chords 25th – Playing Thirds 26th – Playing Thirds (Workout) FEBRUARY 1st – Song Lesson: "Brown Eyed Girl" 8th – How to Play Drop D Tuning 9th – How to Play Drop D Tuning (Workout) 22nd – The Three Types of Blues You Need to Know MARCH 1st – Beyond Traditional Guitars 8th - Song Lesson: “Dust in the Wind” 22nd – Special Guest: Pierre Bensusan APRIL 5th - Creating Open String Runs 19th - Pro Tips for Jazz Guitar; Q & A MAY 17th - Create Your Own Acoustic Blues 24th - Soloing with Small Ideas 31st - Chord Inversions JUNE JULY 5th - Chord Inversions, Part 2 12th - Chord Inversions, Part 3 AUGUST 9th - Jazz Soloing with the Jazz Deck SEPTEMBER 13th - Jazz Soloing with the Jazz Deck, Part 2 20th - How to Play Double Stops 27th - Guitar Success Q & A OCTOBER 4th - Using a Metronome for Maximum Results 11th - Easy Chord Moves of the Pros 18th - Shape Chords NOVEMBER 8th - Belmont Guitar Ensemble 15th - How to Play Harmonics 29th - Greg Voros: Guitar Care, Coffee, and Hope DECEMBER 6th - Guitar Q & A 13th - The Ultimate Arpeggio Workout 20th - Learn How to Play "Silent Night" 27th - Topic to be announced
  8. To document the fifth anniversary of the Guitar Gathering forum official opening!
  9. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. How to Play Fresh Ideas from Stale Chords.
  10. A new documentary feature by CNN Films/HBO Max on the partnership of James Taylor and Carole King will premiere on CNN. “Just Call Out My Name” airs Sunday, January 2, 2022, at 9 pm ET. I recommend Carole’s memoir, A Natural Woman — in which it’s revealed that the musical story of her life is not necessarily the most compelling part.
  11. @DavidMc Your question arises now and then (see this thread) but I think you'll need a DVD player. From there you can rip the files to a hard drive or SSD for convenience. It appears that now even CrowdGuitar is defunct, so the few lessons that were once there are gone. There are still some lessons by Arlen Roth here.
  12. Ron, that link didn't work for me. Try this for the Chicago Blues Boot Camp. Sounds terrific!
  13. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Arpeggios, Part 10: Final Arpeggio Workout.
  14. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Arpeggios, Part 9: Diminished and Sliding Arpeggios.
  15. DianeB

    Ninth Anniversary

    His house was hidden from the street. I drove past and into the apartment complex where my GPS seemed to be pointing me. My young guitar tutor of six years moved here in East Asheville last year. When I started fingerstyle lessons with him, he was a college sophomore. Jonathan was already a gifted musician and teacher, and our age difference led our conversations into delightful side trips about the sixties and seventies. He graduated and remained in Delaware for a few years to sort out his goals. Meanwhile he coaxed me through the basics of classical guitar. We were nearing the finish line of Pachibel’s Canon when the pandemic struck. During those alarming early weeks, he made my grocery runs. He needed income; I needed to avoid crowds. Eventually he decided to move to Asheville. He loaded his Ford Focus with all his worldly possessions and came to say goodbye. When I met him at the door, he had a gig bag on his shoulder. He handed it to me. “What’s this?” I asked. “I want you to have it. It’s my first guitar” I opened the bag. Inside was a Squier Strat, plastered with stickers, a popped string dangling free. “Jon, you shouldn’t. You should keep this to embarrass your kids one day.” “There’s no room in the car with my other three.” I could only shake my head, as a plan took shape. The apartment complex was clearly a detour, so I stopped and called him. He came out to the street and led me to his driveway. “How was your guitar camp?” he asked. “Amazing, as usual. I’m saturated with guitar. Ready for lunch?” “Sure, I know a good place.” “Oh, before I forget, I have something for you.” I reached in the car. “It’s the latest from Joe Robinson.” I gave him the CD. “Oh, wow, thanks.” He showed me around the house he shares with a roommate, as I flashed back to my first apartment and setting out on my own. I recalled the excitement of my mid-twenties and the anxieties of what might lie ahead. We drove into town for sandwiches al fresco at a cafe. He had to be at work that afternoon, so there was no time to play guitar. Back at the house we said goodbye. “Oh, yeah, I almost forgot. There’s one more thing.” I reached in the back seat, took out the gig bag and gave it to him. “I think this is yours. Have a look.” His eyes widened. “I took it to my guy, Chuck. He replaced the broken tuner. The jack was bad, so he did that too. I tried it. Sounds like new. He cleaned off the old glue. But we thought we should leave the stickers. All the better to show your kids.” His expression told me that he couldn’t quite imagine the scene, but I could. This progression was meant to resolve.
  16. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Arpeggios, Part 8: Sevenths Workout.
  17. A photo essay from The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2019/aug/19/string-theory-make-acoustic-guitar-in-pictures
  18. History recounts otherwise, here and here.
  19. It’s hard to say which is more impressive, the man’s musicianship or his hair retention. I saw Pat again last night (7th time around) and he is just ageless. He’s touring now with keyboardist James Francies and drummer Joe Dyson. Remarkably, they have Lyle Mays and Antonio Sanchez covered note for note and beat for beat. This current "Side-Eye" trio will be performing steadily in the US through February of 2022 before heading to Europe in the spring. Pat left his omnipresent striped shirts on the bus in lieu of a black tee, apparently in subtle solidarity with his bandmates. They performed two hours to a virtually full house at the Keswick Theater in Glenside, a town northwest of Philadelphia. He has devoted fans around Philly. For the encore, Pat played a solo acoustic medley, then they said goodnight with the crowd pleaser “Are You Going With Me” from Offramp. The Pikasso and Orchestrion had their moments. So did a misbehaving pedal — I’m guessing a tuner was left switched on — when Pat switched out guitars, but you would have never known it from their sound. Pure professional artistry.
  20. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Arpeggios, Part 7: Sevenths.
  21. The technique has been around for decades, but languished in obscurity until perhaps most significantly the late Michael Hedges brought it to a wider audience in the eighties. Acoustic virtuosos like Christie Lenee, Tommy Emmanuel, and Ian Ethan Case cite Hedges as an influence. As Fretless observes, it crossed over to rock with EVH, who amusingly attempted to keep the technique a trade secret at first by turning away from his audience.
  22. until
    Live Lesson with Steve Krenz from Nashville, 7:00 pm CT. Arpeggios, Part 6: Creating Licks from Arpeggios.
  23. Just one more: this might take the prize. It’s been staring at me for weeks in, of all places, Steely Dan’s “Peg” — what appears to be a quinary dominant. Peg it will come back to you CM7 G/B A7sus Esus G: IV I II VI Then the shutter falls you see it all in three D it’s your fav'rite foreign movie A/C# C G F#7 Bm7 E7#9 Am7 D7 CM7 Gadd9 G: II IV I V/V/V/V/V V/V/V/V V/V/V V/V V IV I (VII) (iii) (VI) (ii) I'm puzzled about how to analyze the A-E-A; it doesn't seem to qualify as a tonicization as the chords (notwithstanding the C#) are diatonic. The boys used a “Hendrix chord” (E7#9) to create an extension of Michael McDonald’s tonsils. More augmented trivia: Jay Graydon, who played the solo, was the inspiration behind “Wah Wah” in Doonesbury — not that I’m old enough to remember. Go forth, grok those dominants and mu majors.
  24. I understand. Too much to expect, but not too much to ask. What matters is that she's engaged and learning. Good for the whole family.

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