Designed for those who have at least a few years experience playing bass guitar but wish to improve their playing ability and knowledge to an advanced level. This book is the highest level in the acclaimed series by the Registry of Guitar Tutors. The book covers all the material needed for the Registry of Guitar Tutors bass guitar examinations from Grade 6 to Grade 8, enabling you to gain a valuable internationally recognized qualification. Whether or not you intend to take the bass guitar examinations, this handbook will help you develop your bass guitar playing to a fully advanced level. It covers all the most useful scales, modes and arpeggios, and explains how to use them in improvising and creating bass lines. A wide range of bass patterns, covering all popular styles, is also included. The book provides a sound theoretical basis to enable you to achieve your full potential as a bassist. Aural assessments are provided to help you develop your musicianship skills to a high level. Here s what Bassist Magazine said about the Produced to a very high standard. The pace and content are expertly designed. The material is remarkably well presented. It should be an enjoyable journey.
Greg Alan Brownderville Libros





An epic coast-to-coast cycling trip through the wild and lonely interior of the Highlands.
Haunting of Alabama, The
- 240 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
"Apparitions of children in windowpanes, paint peeling off the sides of a house mysteriously, ghosts, specters, and all manner of spirits that haunt the living -- this is the definitive collection of Alabama ghost stories and folklore. This book covers every part of the state, from the haunted railroad tracks in the town of Cuba to the ghost of a Confederate captain at the University of Montevallo. Discover Alabama's ghostly lore in such places as the Sweetwater Mansion in Florence, the Lyric Theatre and Sloss Furnaces in Birmingham, the Weeden House in Huntsville, and the Freight House Restaurant in Hartselle." -- From publisher's description
America has survived wars within its borders and beyond them, a Great Depression and a Cold War; yet has America ever truly slain the oldest ghost from its past? Just as the clash of ideologies that was the Cold War ended only for a clash of civilizations to re-assert itself, has racism really died of ignorance or has it found fresh wells upon which to draw? When Jack Brown was born in Alabama racism was part of the culture. As the Ku Klux Klan and Jim Crow are challenged, Jack's leadership shows their heirs they can not only survive, but flourish in the shadows. Yet Jack's only reward is to be compromised in a power-grab. By then he more than just a racist, but a father and husband who has learned to question his racist views. American democracy will stand or fall on whether Jack finds his conscience.
Irresistible in its colour and momentum, Greg Alan Brownderville's debut collection explores the competing mysticisms of his boyhood: the Voudou of his native Arkansas Delta and the Pentecostalism embodied by his devil-hunting pastor, Brother Langston.