Add some excitement to your playing by playing outside the scale.
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Add some excitement to your playing by playing outside the scale.
Steve Pappas is back with his arrangement of one of the most well known hymns of all time.
Indie marketing guru Tim Sweeney discusses live show promotion ideas.
How to embrace the healing power of music.
Let The Countdown Begin
A Modern Approach To Flamenco
An Arsenal Of Chops
Blending New Age, Folk & Celtic
Music Encompassing Many Moods & Styles
Doin' It With Just Bass & Vocals
Howe's This Rock/Fusion?
Mastering The Musical Use Of The Guitar
Mood-Driven Blues Instrumentals
Santa Margarita's Metal Mayhem
Rock Instrumentalist Seeks Contract
Fusing Funk, Blues, Jazz & Country
Brazilian Progressive Metal
Modern, 'Greenwich Village Style' Fusion
Soliciting Progressive Instrumental Fans
A Flair For Phrasing
Pursuing A Bluesy Vision
Some Sort Of Portuguese Progressive
Neo-Classical Metal Demos From Italy
Psychedelic Hard Rocker
Extremely Aggressive Instrumental Metal
Swedish Instrumental Axe Man
Hard Rock Guitarist Seeks Recognition
Music industry guru Christopher Knab is back with a whole list of ways to set your music apart from the pack.
More creative ways to use modal pentatonics in your playing.
Complete understanding of the modes has eluded many a guitarist. Here`s part two of Mike Campese`s multi-part lesson.
Stop pulling out your hair, read the latest gem from Mr. Hess.
Performing a seek-and-destroy on 60-cycle hum with Canadian guitarist David Martone.
Sean Mercer returns with ways to help you break out of the 3 and 4 note sequence rut.
Constructing your own chord voicings and increasing your chord vocabulary.
Add some excitement to your playing by playing outside the scale. This time: the diminished scale.
Steve Pappas enhances his previous "Amazing Grace" arrangement with this variation.
Becoming a performer and a listener all at once.
Indie marketing guru Tim Sweeney reminds you not to settle.
Virtuoso classical guitarist and instructor Jamie Andreas discusses why, at times, you must make the difficult even more difficult.
There were a lot of different things that inspired this CD. Once I put the studio together, I just started recording what I wanted to hear. I love guitar and electronic music. I really wanted to blend the two together more than it`s ever been done.
The first thing that you should care about for a CD release is the music. You have to trust in yourself as a musician and composer and try to come up with interesting music and then find a nice studio to record it in, or you can record at home if you have a nice home studio.