https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B4S3f4zHrJF-N1JyRjFwakZ1VVU
Pretty simple book, basically his take on Fretboard logic - I figured it would be, but found it for sale and thought it would be cool to have so I bought it and scanned it for all of you. As simple and obvious as it might seem, I think it is also a helpful reminder that we ought to occasionally return to basics; the arpeggios might be the most important thing in improvising, so why not take another look?
Quote from: Heady Jam Fan on September 06, 2012, 12:59:45 PM
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B4S3f4zHrJF-N1JyRjFwakZ1VVU
Pretty simple book, basically his take on Fretboard logic - I figured it would be, but found it for sale and thought it would be cool to have so I bought it and scanned it for all of you. As simple and obvious as it might seem, I think it is also a helpful reminder that we ought to occasionally return to basics; the arpeggios might be the most important thing in improvising, so why not take another look?
Thanks for sharing!
Heady, You are so good to us.
For sure guys! This one might not bring too much discussion, but definitely worth a read, only took me about 10 minutes, but I plan on going back to it and actually trying to absorb it. I think I will probably take chunks of 4-5 frets and work through all the tonalities / scale/chord shapes, should be a breeze after the first, but I think it will help me remember where each interval of each chord is in any key or position. I sent it to someone else as well who suggested I look at abook by Pat Martino called Linear Expressions (https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B4S3f4zHrJF-ZkFuQ3JKRzhiVlk), Martino's a killer player and the PDF looks interesting (easy to find on the webs).
I'm planning on dropping another one for you guys too, but it is twice as long and I am having trouble setting aside time at the University library to scan page-by-page.