Systematic method for learning licks, accompaniment patterns and improvisation
Boogie and blues music represents a popular direction among pianists. With this solo piano playing you get to show what you can do on the piano and really let off steam creatively.
If you want to learn to spread a good mood in private or at parties by playing music yourself, Schott Music Boogie & Blues Piano is a good choice. In order for this to succeed and for you to internalize the style, a systematic and detailed teaching method is necessary. This edition is aimed at learners with previous knowledge and cleverly teaches how to play boogie and blues. This is done by means of methodical and easily structured lessons. The lessons always consist of a text part and a piece of music, whereby what is read is immediately put into practice and consolidated.
Contents:
Preface
Aim of the school, history of blues and boogie
The blue notes, the 12-bar-scheme
Improvisation, characteristics of boogie-woogie
Instruction manual
Boogie 1a: Start It Up
Boogie 1b: The Beat Goes On
Boogie 2a: Expansion of the melody: change of thirds
Boogie 2b: Expansion of the melody: Syncopation of thirds
Improvisation experiments, drone note hammering
Boogie 3a: The blues scale
Boogie 3b: The 1st Blue Note -Boogie 4a: Double Grooves Better
Boogie 4b: Pattern compression
Variations of the two-hand accompaniment
Chord blues: seventh chords, extended blues scale
Boogie 5a: Courage to leave gaps
Boogie 5b: Gapless
Boogie 6a: Thirds theme and scale loops
Boogie 6b: Three triplet eighths in the melody
Hobby Boogie: A new hobby
Extension: The boogie chain
Boogie 7a: Slipping danger
Boogie 7b: The 2nd blue note as a triplet lick
Improvisation in C minor
Striding The Blues: Improvisation in C minor
Boogie 8a: Moving to the 2nd floor
Boogie 8b: 2 becomes 1
Blues Ballad in A minor
Blue Ballad: Improvisation in A minor
Boogie 9a: Family reunion
Boogie 9b: Feast for the ears
Chained up
Teamplay
Teamplay Voices: Brass and guitar
Bass and Drums
Intermediate licks, tricks to the blues scale
Variation of basic licks, runs of thirds
Real handwork
Boogie 10a: The boogie for your own solos
Transposing licks
Boogie 10b: Transposing
Boogie 11a: Blues drone ladder
Boogie 11b: A new accompaniment pattern
Explanation of the Boogie Accompaniment Pattern System I
Boogie accompaniment pattern I: Music examples
Boogie 11c: Accompaniment pattern meets boogie
Boogie 12a: The preparation boogie
Boogie 12b: Crushed notes: The fine print of the contract
Boogie 12c: Crushed notes (continued)
Listening Boogies 1-3: Listening and playing
Boogie 13a: Lick preparation in two halves
Boogie 13b: Lick preparation
Lick variations
Boogie 13: Tight pack
Boogie Chain III
Walking Around: Walking bass pattern
Variations of the Blues Scheme
I'm Walking in G
Walking Bass Examples
G-Walk: Blues and Jazz Comping
I'm Trillering: Trill exercises
Walking bass variations, counter G-line
Boogie 14a: Premiere
The sixths connection
Boogie 14b: Chop the walk
Of ornaments and other beautiful things
Boogie 14c: Boogie All Inclusive
Boogie 15a: Stretching
Cluster Impressions
Boogie 15b: The Amen Formula
The Amen Formula: Variations
Boogie 15c: Lick roll
Lick detail questions
Boogie chain IV, lick transfer
Lick transfer from C to G and back
Explanation of the accompaniment pattern system II