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The Infinite Variety of Music

[ebooks] The Infinite Variety of Music by Leonard Bernstein at Arts-Photography

Description

Learning to play slide Guitar is a highly rewarding experience; but getting started can be a challenge! Here at last is a book that helps you choose the right instrument and accessories and then gets you playing - fast!Full colour pictures; clear diagrams and genuinely practical advice combine to make Start-Up Guitar do exactly what is says on the cover. Yoursquo;ll start off on the right track and that makes everything else come more easily.Contents include:Setting up your guitar for playing slideTuningsChoosing a slideReading tablatureSlide techniqueLeft-hand techniqueVibratoDampingChords and partial chordsFingerpicking


#347452 in eBooks 2007-12-01 2007-12-01File Name: B00GQZQ7E6


Review
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful. An altogether original and wonderfully engaging treatment of a subject thats both timely (as ...By L. WilkinsonAn altogether original and wonderfully engaging treatment of a subject thats both timely (as photography becomes ever-more central to life) and timeless (as understanding what we see; and what it does and doesnt mean; is as important as its always been). Certainly essential for students of art and art history; but relevant to (and likely to be enjoyed by) a broader audience interested in creativity; contingency; and the powerful place of photographic imagery in our lives.3 of 5 people found the following review helpful. This is one of the best books on photography I have ever readBy Patty AlspaughThis is one of the best books on photography I have ever read!! It is an erudite historical study that is written ostensibly in defense of photography as art. I would like to add the following quote by Edgar Allen Poe to the authors discussions. In Poes Poetic Principle (http://www.beforetheblog.com/favorites/favorites-best-trivia-party-chatter/); he states: "It is to be hoped that common-sense; in the time to come; will prefer deciding upon a work of art rather by the impression it makes; by the effect it produces; than by the time it took to produce the effect; or by the amount of sustained effort which has been found necessary in effecting the impression."0 of 4 people found the following review helpful. No problemBy Acquisitions; UNLV LibrariesNo problem

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