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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music
Designed for use with the Guitar Cards Chord Starter Pack, this
pack of 55 cards gives you over 50 of the coolest chords known to
man. Small enough to fit into your back pocket or guitar case, they
are an easy way to learn new chords - suitable for beginners,
songwriters and teachers.
Includes all notes, symbols and terms needed for the first two
years of study on any musical instrument. Cards are color-coded by
category and are numbered on the back.
This easy step-by-step method emphasizes correct playing habits and
note reading through interval recognition. Lesson Book 3 introduces
"overlapping pedal"; new time signatures 3/8 and 6/8; and the
primary triads in Major and Minor keys. Concepts include: passing
one under two and one under three; playing major scales in contrary
motion; the chromatic scale; the minor scale.
For reinforcement of each principle as it is introduced,
supplementary material is carefully coordinated, page for page, at
each level of instruction. Coordinating supplemental books for
Level 3 include: Classic Themes * Composition * Duet * Ear Training
* Ensemble * Fun * Hymn * Merry Christmas * Merry Christmas
Ensemble * Musical Concepts * Notespeller * Patriotic Solo *
Recital * Repertoire * Sight Reading * Technic * Theory and Top
Hits! Solo, Christmas and Duet Book.
Here is an up-to-date, thoroughly researched biography of the
world's most popular pop-punk band. Green Day is almost certainly
the world's most popular pop-punk band. How they got there is the
subject of Green Day: A Musical Biography, the first book to follow
the band from their beginnings through the spring 2009 release of
21st Century Breakdown. Tracing the band's evolution from fiercely
independent punks to a global powerhouse, Green Day starts with the
members' earliest musical influences and upbringing and the
founding of the punk club 924 Gilman Street that shaped their sense
of community. Discussion of their conflicted feelings about signing
to a major label explores the classic rock 'n' roll conundrum of
"selling out," while details of their decline and 2004 rebirth
offer an inspirational story of artistic rejuvenation. Interviews
with the band members and key figures in their lives, excerpted
from punk 'zines and other publications, offer a perspective on
their methods of self-promotion and the image they have chosen to
project over time.
Empathy is the currency of all music and Joe Mulhall does a great job of explaining how that quality has been used to generate solidarity for the struggle and sympathy for those who suffer injustice' Billy Bragg While the global history of the dictatorships, oppression, racism and state violence over the last century is well known - the role that music played in people's lives during these times is less understood. This book is a collection of stories and hidden histories about how music provided light in the darkest of times over the past century. How it steeled souls and inspired resistance to oppression. Rebel Sounds will explore freedom songs in the Republic of Ireland, the Soviet Union's oppression behind the Berlin Wall, authoritarian dictatorships in Brazil and Nigeria, institutionalized racism and police violence in America and South Africa, street violence in Britain, ethnic cleansing in the Balkans and musical resistance in war-torn Ukraine. This is a social history of the twentieth century but one that takes in the human impulse to create, share and enjoy the one thing that connects cultures and spans generations: music
Robert Lachmann's letters to Henry George Farmer, from the years
1923-38, provide insightful glimpses into his life and his
progressive research projects. From an historical perspective, they
offer critical data concerning the development of comparative
musicology as it evolved in Germany during the early decades of the
twentieth century. The fact that Lachmann sought contact with
Farmer can be explained from their mutual, yet diverse interests in
Arab music, particularly as they were then considered to be the
foremost European scholars in the field. During the 1932 Cairo
International Congress on Arab Music, they were selected as
presidents of their respective committees.
Say the words "evangelical worship" to anyone in the United States
- even if they are not particularly religious - and a picture will
likely spring to mind unbidden: a mass of white, middle-class
worshippers with eyes closed, faces tilted upward, and hands raised
to the sky. Yet despite the centrality of this image, many scholars
have underestimated evangelical worship as little more than a
manipulative effort to arouse devotional exhilaration. It is
frequently dismissed as a reiteration of nineteenth-century
revivalism or a derivative imitation of secular entertainment -
three Christian rock songs and a spiritual TED talk. But by failing
to engage this worship seriously, we miss vital insights into a
form of Protestantism that exerts widespread influence in the
United States and around the world. Evangelical Worship offers a
new way forward in the study of American evangelical Christianity.
Weaving together insights from American religious history and
liturgical studies, and drawing on extensive fieldwork in seven
congregations, Melanie C. Ross brings contemporary evangelical
worship to life. She argues that corporate worship is not a
peripheral "extra" tacked on to a fully-formed spiritual,
political, and cultural movement, but rather the crucible through
which congregations forge, argue over, and enact their unique
contributions to the American mosaic known as evangelicalism.
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