Janet Johnson performing at Birdy’s Sports Bar

17 Jun

Guest post from Janet…

Father’s Day! Birdy’s Sports Bar! Have you ever been to Birdy’s Sports Bar? It’s on the northside in the Wandermere area just north of the Wandermere Cinemas. It’s an upscale place with good selection of pub grub.

Birdy’s Sports Bar
12908 North SR Hwy 395, Spokane, WA‎ – (509) 863-9572‎

Sunday, June 20th 6-9pm, rain or shine, I will be playing with Charles Tappa accompanying me on his jazz guitar. Genre is Folk/Rock/Pop/Jazz. I would love to introduce you around to everyone – come and mingle. Meet some new folks! Get to know the owners personally! You’ll love them….

Peace & Love,
Janet Johnson :)

An easy guitar method specifically for active adults

16 Jun

I’ve been playing guitar for decades now, but when I talk to other people who are also around my age who don’t play the guitar the most common thing I hear is that they think it’s too late to get started. In the case of a lot of guitar teaching courses available online, I’d say that’s largely true. Not because the information is bad, but just because the course is geared towards a younger player. I’ve made an interesting discovery. There is an instructor named Keith Dean who has worked out a method for guys and gals our age to not only learn guitar, but to learn it using techniques that make it easy for older students to overcome the obstacles that we frequently run into, such as problems with finger stretches, holding notes to chords, trying to play too fast, and other age specific challenges. He also teaches based on an older song book than today’s Top 40. He gives personal feedback and allows students to talk with each other. It’s a unique and refreshing approach. His students routinely say that they are jamming along with guys like Eric Clapton and Paul Simon within 30 days. Those are pretty impressive results.

Start playing guitar from scratch within a few minutes

16 Jun

Crash Course Beginning GuitarI just came across today a new teaching method that can take an absolute beginner sand get them up to speed playing riffs and jams within a few minutes I have taught guitar for decades and I have never seen anything like it. The instructors name is Phil Mason and he uses a variety of techniques including 720p full motion HD video and super close up shots of his fingers on the fretboard to show you exactly where to put your fingers and what to do at each step of the way to get you burning hot licks in no time. The feedback from his students is quite impressive. His students say he really lives up to his motto “Play first and learn later”

Drummer Jeff Williams celebrates 60th birthday with jazz

15 Jun

Jeff Williams Quartet
John O’Gallagher on alto saxophone, Duane Eubanks on trumpet, and John Hebert on bass.

60th Birthday Celebration, Monday July 5th from 9 PM until 12 AM

Smalls Jazz Club
183 West 10th Street at 7th Avenue, NYC

Jeff Williams, jazz drummer

Jeff Williams, jazz drummer. Photo by Richard Kaby

Now dividing his time between New York and London, where his recent collaborators have included Hans Koller and his ensemble featuring Bill Frisell and Evan Parker; Martin Speake and Change Of Heart with Bobo Stenson; Norma Winstone and Kit Downes, Jeff returns to the US having completed a live recording with Lee Konitz at London’s Pizza Express Jazz Club last month.

His most recent New York appearance was in February for the reunion of Dave Liebman’s 1970s group Lookout Farm at Birdland.

Jeff’s quartet has been together for several years and has developed a broad repertoire of compositions from each member. A recording is planned for later this year. Performances are infrequent owing to the challenging schedules of the participants, making each a special occasion. This particular one additionally so as the leader enters his sixth decade at the stroke of midnight.

Bonus feature: Jeff Williams has his own website where you can download his music mp3s and videos for free!

Learning the art of solo jazz guitar with Gene Bertoncini

13 Jun

The DVD Gene Bertoncini: The Art of Solo Jazz Guitar documents a Master Class with guitarist Bertoncini. A nylon-string guitarist who has worked with the likes of Buddy Rich and Wayne Shorter, Bertoncini answers questions from a small group of off-screen students, while explaining the concepts behind his graceful technique.

Bertoncini discusses how many guitarists tend to memorize chord fingerings without really being aware of what’s inside these chords. Switching from electric guitar to the nylon string forces him to slow down to develop the technique for this instrument while also allowing him sufficient time to explain how he started playing scales on the nylon string— not across the neck but up and down each string. Moreover, he analyzes each note in relationship to its complementary chord.

Besides a master’s knowledge and insight, Bertoncini demonstrates his consummate mastery of the instrument itself, applying the aforementioned concepts to several jazz standards, including frequently played albeit challenging tunes like “All the Things You Are”, “Lush Life”, and “It Had to Be You”.

The guitarist also stresses the importance of melody, reminding the assembled students that “jazz guitar is not about playing hot licks.” Rather, the role of the musician, he emphasizes, is to communicate and tell a story.

The DVD closes with Bertoncini offering up some practical exercises for students to work on, such as keeping the top note the same throughout a tune, demonstrating the application of the technique to various chord tones and their extensions. Finally, he encourages students to expand their ears, advice that might be well heeded by all musicians, regardless of instrument.

For the student guitarist who is a beginner to intermediate, the material covered here would be over their head. For the advanced guitarist, there is a treasure trove of ideas in this DVD, a sufficient number, in fact, to lead the extra-motivated student to virtually total knowledge and freedom on the fret board.

Tracks: Introduction: Half Diminished Scale and Applications; All the Things You Are (Improv); Invitation; Girl Talk; Alone Together; Medley: Sophisticated Lady/ Mood Indigo; Lush Life; Round Midnight; Creating a Melody; The Shadow of Your Smile; Exercises; Medley of Tunes; Here’s a Rainy Day.

Gary Breckenridge

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