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Song Books
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303 More Fiddle TunesCompiled by Ron MiddlebrookRosin up your bow and get ready to fiddle! This collection features 90 reels, 90 jigs, 93 hornpipes, 15 clogs and 15 strathspeys, plus a fascinating article on the history of old-time fiddling contests by Ken Perlman, terrific photos, and a section on Highland Dancing. |
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ASAP Fiddle Tunes Made Easy for Bluegrass BanjoLearn How To Play The Bluegrass Wayby Eddie CollinsThis book/CD pack provides beginning and intermediate banjo players with two versions of 18 of the most popular fiddle tunes heard at bluegrass jam sessions. The “basic” solos generally begin on the first beat, contain lots of quarter notes, and use only simple rolls. The "intermediate" solos use more 8th notes and complex roles, and require more difficult formations of the left hand. Tunes include: Arkansas Traveler - Old Joe Clark - Red Wing - Salt Creek - Soldier’s Joy - and more! |
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Christmas South of the Borderfeaturing The Cactus Brothers
with Special Guest Se–or Randall AmesAdd heat to your holiday with these Salsa-flavored piano arrangements of time-honored Christmas carols. Play along with the arrangements of Se–or Randall Ames on Silent Night, Carol of the Bells, We Three Kings, Away in a Manger, O Come O Come Immanuel, and more. Feliz Navidad! |
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Friendly LettersA Collection of 10 Piano Solo PiecesWritten and Performed by Carla K. BartlettComposer Carla Bartlett writes “musical letters" to tell her friends how special they are. This collection assembles ten of her compositions - in styles from samba to rock and country to jazz - at the intermediate to early advanced level. The CD features Carla performing the pieces. |
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He Was Singin' This Song - Revised and Updatedby Jim Bob Tinsley, Forewords by Gene Autry, Douglas B. Green and Omar BakerIn this book Jim Bob Tinsley shows the cowboys' songs to be an essential metaphor of their lives and times. He follows the image of the cowboy from the ""cow-keeper"" of colonial America, through the Civil War, the war for Texas's independence, the banditry of the Old West. He follows the image along the trail of the cattle drive, fighting Indians and rustlers, and into the saloons and dance halls with the gunfighter and gambler, and arrives finally at the hero we know from films and television. |
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