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C**Y
Would recommend
Truly an amazing book. Would recommend for beginner and intermediate students.
M**E
Great
Very good book on guitar theory. It will expand your knowledge of how the guitar works and enable you to play better
M**E
With patience & practice this book is a buy!
Admittedly, I just bought this book rather recently and have not been able to delve into it in great detail. However, what I have revived and utilized thus far is of immense help to me. Also, I am quite fortunate to have a buddy of mine who graduated from Berklee, plays phenomenal guitar, and was able to run through this book with me. This was of great help to say the least as my skill level is on the lower end of intermediate compared to his. Overall is this book perfect? Absolutely not, but with practice and patience you will find that this is a “solid buy” on a scale of 4.25/4.5 out of five stars!
C**G
This Berklee Guitar Theory book...is a MUST HAVE!
This is the newest edition from the Berklee Guitar Department. It's a labor of love, curated by Berklee's Guitar Chair, Prof. Kim Perlak, and developed by the Berklee Guitar Department Faculty. That's more than 500 years of knowledge if you add them all up. Great for incoming students, that are taking the guitar proficiency test, and also great for guitar alum. Great for the home player to the pro player, add this to your collection. Keep your guitar fundamentals....TIGHT! AAA+
A**K
Perfect gift
I bought this for my husband and he loves it. He's been a musician his whole life but mostly played guitar by ear. This has elevated his play and he said it made alot of things make sense and click.
A**R
Excellent book
Excellent review book.
L**S
Great Material
I absolutely love the detail put into this book and it goes into what every guitar player should know from modes of the major scale, melodic minor etc, intervals, arpeggios, and everything in between. Works great as a practice tool.
A**R
Poorly written
This book is all over the place, it has no logical organization or progression. The only real selling point is that it has some original etudes. There is no "guitar theory", whatever that means. Just stick with the Leavitt method.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago