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101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions with Guitar Chord Frames

101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions with Guitar Chord Frames
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101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions with Guitar Chord Frames

 
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Comb-bound jazz instruction book and CD by Larry McCabe

Red Dog Music Books is proud to offer this superb collection of 101 important jazz chord progressions. Chord frames (specific fingerings) are included for guitar players. The progressions are actual examples of what jazz musicians play on the job and in the studio.

Musicians who want to learn how to play jazz chords and accompaniment will find much value here. The wealth of examples will allow you to confidently navigate the most common jazz chord progressions, while helping you to advance to a higher playing level.

No note reading is required. However, blank treble and bass staves are included for musicians and songwriters who want to write melodies, licks, solos, or bass lines to the progressions.

The book is not limited to use by archtop jazz guitar players, but is helpful for any musician, teacher, student, composer, or studio that desires a user-friendly guide to jazz progressions.

Valuable supplemental articles are included in the book. All 101 jazz chord progressions are played on the companion CD. All this for far less cost than the price of a single private music lesson.

Contents

  • Guide to Chord Symbols
  • How to Use This Book
  • Projects for Students
  • 2-5-1 Progression and Substitutions
  • Four-Bar Progressions
  • Eight-Bar Opening Progressions
  • Eight-Bar Bridge Progressions
  • Twelve-Bar Jazzy Blues Progressions
  • Sixteen-Bar Progressions
  • Turnaround Progressions

Prerequisite Ability

  • Early intermediate and intermediate.

User Profiles

  • Serious hobbyist musicians.
  • Pianists and keyboard players using this book should have prior experience with jazz chord theory and jazz chord voicings.
  • Any gigging musician who wants to study jazz chord progressions in more detail.
  • Composers, songwriters, music studios, ad agencies.
  • Country guitar, blues guitar, and rock guitar players who want to expand their guitar chording skills and knowledge.
  • Music teachers who teach jazz lessons and music theory lessons.

Goals and Purposes

  • Learn jazz guitar chords and jazz guitar voicings.
  • Chord comping.
  • General jazz guitar instruction.
  • Basic jazz guitar technique.
  • Piano jazz chord progressions instruction.
  • Jazz chords and swing chord progressions for songwriters and all instrumentalists.
  • Reference for recording studios.
  • Swing guitar, western swing guitar, big band guitar, and general jazz band use.
  • Practice jazz guitar with a CD.
  • Practice jazz piano chord progressions with a CD.
  • Practice jazz solos and licks (any melody instrument) to standard jazz chord changes.
  • Write jingles to jazz harmonies.
  • Write jazz bass lines to jazz chords.

Author-Recommended Supplemental Listening for Jazz Guitar Players

Nick Lucas, Lonnie Johnson, Eddie Lang, Dick McDonough, Ikey Robinson, Eddie Condon, Bernard Addison, Snoozer Quinn, Harry Volpe, Carl Kress, Eddie Durham, Teddy Bunn, Oscar Aleman, Danny Barker, Django Reinhardt, Freddie Green, Everett Barksdale, Joe Sodja, George Van Eps, Charlie Christian, Billy Bauer, Les Paul, Hy White, Oscar Moore, Tiny Grimes, Eldon Shamblin, Tony Mottola, Barry Galbraith, Al Viola, Irving Ashby, Don Arnone, George Barnes, Mary Osborne, Tal Farlow, Herb Ellis, Mundell Lowe, Johnny Smith, Jimmy Wyble, Wes Montgomery, Chuck Wayne, Barney Kessel, Charlie Byrd, Bucky Pizarelli, Jimmy Raney, Sal Salvadore, Howard Roberts, Joe Pass, Tommy Tedesco, Hank Garland, Jim Hall, Kenny Burrell.

 
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Product Details
Author:Larry McCabe
Plastic Comb:52 pages
Publisher:Red Dog Music Books
Publication Date:August 31, 2007
ISBN:1934777080
Package Length:10.7 inches
Package Width:8.6 inches
Package Height:0.2 inches
Package Weight:0.4 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


5EXCELLENT  Apr 16, 2009 By Lee
An excellent resource for the early intermediate to advanced student, this book is as close to an "instant jazz" approach as you can get. Just listening to the CD alone is a treat, besides knowing that all the information you need to reproduce those sounds are found within the pages of the book.

As with all of Larry's materials the format is great, very user-friendly. The charts go from one page to the next without a lot of talking/writing in between, and the song numbers in the book match the song numbers on the CD, which unfortunately isn't always the case with many publications. There is also a lot of helpful information in the book: theory, chord simplification for beginners, chord subs, and projects for students, just to name a few, but all in it's own section of the book, not sprinkled throughout the book here and there making it impossible to find. The best supplement of all, however, may just be the section entitled "Tailoring the Materials to Your Specific Musical Requirements". After all, isn't that what any self-help, or teach-yourself or student supplement book should aim to do?

Though geared toward students with at least some playing experience, a beginner could confidently tackle some of the progressions in this book with just a basic knowledge of how to read chord diagrams, a bit of left hand dexterity, and some perseverance.

Another great book by Larry McCabe,(as anyone familiar with his materials would agree),and as a full time music instructor I would have to say this is definately one of the better books on the subject. 101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions would be a great addition to any music library.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:


5An ideal instructional that is confidently recommended  Mar 05, 2008 By Midwest Book Review
Jazz is the authentically American music form that had its beginnings in the brothels of New Orleans and evolved to become an established musical genre appreciated and supported around the world. Larry McCabe draws upon his many years of experience and expertise as the author of more than eighty published instructional music books for children and adults to present "101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions With Guitar Chord Frames", a spiral bound collection of jazz progressions for the guitar. specific fingers called chord frames are presented, along with blank music staves for each progression so that aspiring jazz guitarists wanting to write, perform, record, or teach melodies, licks, solos, and bass lines can do so with a professional competence. Of special note are the 'Suggested projects for Students" and the accompanying CD which includes all 101 progressions covering two-five-one, four-bar, eight-bar opening; sections, as well as eight-bar bridges, twelve-bar blues, sixteen-bar, and turnarounds. "101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions With Guitar Chord Frames" is an ideal instructional that is confidently recommended for dedicated and aspiring jazz guitarists alike!

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:


5Pretty cool stuff to play around with...  Sep 05, 2008 By Phony Money "*******"
The complete book on Jazz rhythm... It is definitely an in-depth study on all there is with jazz rhythm, while almost. It has so many variations and chord substitutions that will keep you busy for years. I especially love the chord voicing. The chords are rootless and or played on the upper light strings, (strings 4 down to 1). That is the best location for comping along with a bass players and or piano players or for expressing the melody or for chord soloing style.

The patterns are 4 bars or so in length and Larry gives you indications as to where they can be placed as substitutions for the original arrangement. This will allow you to add variety to any arrangement.
An additional usage I found helpful is to start creating improvised lines over the patterns or in between them as fills to spark up your comping. I am not that good with it yet, but I am getting better. The key is to comp the first chord on beats 1 and 2 and then add mini fill for beats 3 and 4 and even on 1 and 2 for the next bar before playing the next chord in the pattern. To get a ideas of this playing, check out players like Joe Pass, Herb Ellis' style of comping; then take any pattern from this book and try to mimic their style of playing.

But for you beginners, you will love this book for the simple reason that it will have you creating professional sounding arrangements, intros and ending. Pretty cool stuff in here, man


3Underwhelming  Feb 03, 2012 By Bill the Cat "stringman"
I bought "101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions" expecting quite a lot since the other reviews are so glowing. I'm afraid I don't quite agree with them. First of all, there is no music notation, just chord frames with blank staves below. You're invited to write in the music, which I have begun to do, but two things bother me about that: First, the author didn't seem to regard the linear flow of the voices to be at all important, and second, the space below the chord frames is occupied by a "great staff", not a single guitar staff. That wastes a LOT of space. And now that I think of it, the accompanying CD will not play. I've tried it on several players and I get an error message on each one. The absence of a CD doesn't really bother me, except I like to hear how these various authors sound- that can be an education in itself. Lastly, the progressions are okay, nothing off the chart here, but the book could have been a folio half as thick without all that wasted space. My final thought is, you'd be far better off with "Modern Chord Progressions" by Ted Greene than this. "101 Uptown Jazz Chord Progressions is pretty thin gruel by comparison.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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