Creative Chordal Harmony for Guitar – Using Generic Modality Compression | Berklee Guide with Online Audio | Learn Advanced Chord Voicings and Improvisation Techniques
D**E
Nothing short of revolutionary.-Harmony/melody/composition in one thought
This book is 95 pages of a vision that unifies harmony, melody and compositional texture in sounds that I couldn't believe existed in my guitar. In 5 chapters of discussion, etudes, arpeggio explorations, "compressed modal" explorations and a rich section on implications and applications of the material, Mick Goodrick has presented an entirely new attitude that makes perfect sense yet unlocks doorways into beautiful sounds completely missed in the harmonic perspective up to this point. In his previous books, Goodrick has consistently tackled and expanded the boundries of guitar as an improvisational and compositional instrument. He can arguably be called the granddaddy of modern jazz guitar having passed his knowledge on to the who's who of contemporary creative jazz guitar. His books have been exhaustive, uncannily insightful yet challenging in their open ended possibilities. This book may be the most approachable edition to date, with usable examples on chord progressions that demonstrate the utility of the concept and the power of the approach. One note of note: The book is written in standard notation. There IS a CD with examples played by the co-author and notable guitarist in his own right Tim Miller, but fluency in reading and triad voicings will be most helpful. If you are beyond the hand holding foundational material stage, this is a truly rewarding work. If you are searching for ways to expand your creative base and craving totally new colours to use in any situation, this book could very well be the new currency standard.I'm going to be busy for a very long time.
L**D
Great Book and Fantastic Play Along
I've followed Mick Goodrick's books and recordings for years and truly his work is a narrative on deep and rich harmonic practice for guitarists and all musicians. This book thoroughly details a complete system that yields strikingly beautiful sounds. You need to read music and it will help to have an understanding of chord types and voice leading as well as a well developed knowledge of the fingerboard.The play along features John Lockwood on bass and Terri Lyne Carrington on drums. These are world class (I mean the very best) players. The examples are on the changes to Stella and you will know this tune backwards and forwards if you work with this book. What blows me away is Terri Lyne's and John's creativity in making this recording: the seemingly endless variety that they achieve within multiple renditions of the same tune at the same tempo is an education and an inspiration!
R**E
First Look
Mick Goodrick is a very knowledgeable guitarist. His "Advancing Guitarist" book is absolutely excellent, so I expect this one will be also. There are some issues you need to be aware of, however. First, he makes no use of tablature or chord diagrams at all. Standard notation only. Except that there are also many examples of 'non-standard' notation. For example, throughout the book he uses stemless quarter notes to illustrate his concepts. No problem, I get that. But when I see one bar containing six of them with a time signature of 4/4, I'm a little confused. And later on, he provides examples using standard notes and timing indicators, but no time signature at all. I think I know what he means, but then again, I've been studying theory for over forty years. Some explanatory notes might be a good idea. A novice may not be able to figure out what he is doing. Second, if have have a very solid understanding of basic jazz harmony studies, including seventh chords and their related scales and modes, you will be able to handle this book. Otherwise, you won't since no help is given about these things. Third, what is discussed here, and exemplified on the recordings, is for advanced, non-standard, improvising. If you are looking for info on how to do traditional soloing over standard changes, this book is definitely not for you. The info given here is for the musician who is looking for those 'way-out' ways of voicing chords and creating solo material. If this is you, you've hit the jackpot. Fourth, while I haven't listened to the CD at high volume, the mix of the bass on those tracks provided as 'accompaniment' for you to experiment is barely audible on the small player I use for practice. So, with all these things in mind, I still give this four stars. After I've played with this book awhile, I may be inclined to add one more.
J**L
Great book. Like all of Goodrick's books - and ...
Great book. Like all of Goodrick's books - and Van Eps's books as well - this one requires the musician to figure it out. Essentially, it discards the common chord voicings in favor of a chord-scale approach to harmony. If I had one wish for this book it would be that the etudes were written to more than just the "Stella By Starlight" changes, but I do appreciate that the real work is mine. The recorded etudes are killer takes on the tune, though.
D**S
Awesome:
It won't get you hired in a restaurant, but it is certainly cutting edge and anyone who delves into it in depth will be thankful they did.Some of the concepts are not as new as Mr Goodrick indicates, however: leaving out the root is not a new idea he "stumbled upon".Another awesome book which is certainly worth exploring is Gary Campbell's "Explorations". In this book you encounter the "b6 Pentatonic" scale which is a melodic minor scale which leaves out the root and fourth degree.But I am quibbling. Mr Goodrick is an awesome musician and educator, to say the least! He's a wonderful nut as well.
M**L
Modern Guitar Heaven
This book is the real deal. It's a good recommendation to have a solid theoretical foundation before digging deep into to this. I was fortunate to study with Mick in 2002. I have all three voice-leading almanacs and of course, The Advancing Guitarist. You probably want to be familiar with those works. The jist of this book is removing the root note from a mode and organizing the remaining 6 notes into two 3pt structures. Bottom line is when you apply this principle you really start to hear these beautiful harmonies and melodies. It's a fantastic work. Props to Mick and Tim.
A**E
A treasure trove
Mick Goodrick was the head of Berklee Guitar Dpt. and Tim Miller is like legit schooled Allan Holdsworthian type virtuoso. Get this book! Learn with it! I am and love it…..
P**O
Ottimo
Libro molto avanzato, da una visione alternativa degli accordi, sia sul piano teorico che pratico.È molto apprezzata la scrittura su pentagramma, data la difficoltà dell'argomento.Ho iniziato a studiarci sopra da un paio di settimane circa, e credo sia uno di quei libri dove per apprendere e fare propria una sola pagina di esso, ci voglia un po'... ma è nello stile Goodrick, appunti sui quali riflettere.
M**R
Provides a path to fresh sounds but it's up to you to make them sound musical.
I was initially a little disappointed because the examples and demo do not sound very melodic to my ears. They gave me the impression that these voicing are not be suited to your average jazz jam where an intermediate level soloist might appreciate comping chords on a standard that more obviously outline the harmonic progression of the song. But then I picked out some voicings for a II-V-I where the top notes gave the 7th-3rd-M7 guide tone sequence and they both sounded fresh as well as melodic. So perhaps there is a lot more here than you initially hear/see. So the approach of the book does give you new sounds but It's up to you to choose voicings that actually sound musical.
Y**I
時間が、、、
誰かのこの類の教則本の推薦文にもありましたが、このアイデアをやるには人生が3回分必要です。おじさんには時間がありません。やるのなら若いうちから取り組んだ方が良い。内容は素晴らしい。さすがのミックグッドリック。ティムミラーの演奏も素晴らしい。デモ音源がついてます。
M**O
super
très interessant, mais pas forcemment pour le sujet en lui même ( tjs les meme cfitiques que je fais a goodrick) mais par la classification qu'il fait des groupes de trois notes
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