Cello Fingering Chart

Cello Fingering Chart PDF Author: David Harrison
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781780385051
Category : Cello
Languages : en
Pages : 0

Book Description
(Music Sales America). This chart includes advice on instrument care, notation guide and a photo/diagram of the instrument.

Violin Fingering Chart

Violin Fingering Chart PDF Author: David Harrison
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781780385020
Category : Violin
Languages : en
Pages : 0

Book Description
(Music Sales America). This chart includes advice on instrument care, notation guide and a photo/diagram of the instrument.

First 50 Songs You Should Play on Cello

First 50 Songs You Should Play on Cello PDF Author: Hal Leonard Corp.
Publisher: Hal Leonard
ISBN: 1540086852
Category : Music
Languages : en
Pages : 123

Book Description
(Instrumental Folio). If you've been taking cello lessons for a little while, you're probably eager to put those new skills to work and play some familiar songs. The First 50 Songs You Should Play on the Cello includes a wide variety of favorite songs, from pop hits and movie themes, to folk songs and classical melodies, several of which originally featured cello! Titles include: Air (Air on the G String) * All of Me * All You Need Is Love * Circle of Life * Fight Song * God Bless America * Hallelujah * Hello * I Will Always Love You * Let It Go * Roar * Satin Doll * See You Again * Shake It Off * Shallow * Stand by Me * Summertime * The Swan (Le Cygne) * This Is Me * What a Wonderful World * and more!

I Can Read Music, Volume 1

I Can Read Music, Volume 1 PDF Author: Joanne Martin
Publisher: Alfred Music
ISBN: 1457402661
Category : Music
Languages : en
Pages : 105

Book Description
These easy-to-read, progressive exercises by Joanne Martin develop a student's reading skills one stage at a time, with many repetitions at each stage. I Can Read Music is designed as a first note-reading book for students of string instruments who have learned to play using an aural approach such as the Suzuki Method®, or for traditionally taught students who need extra note reading practice. Its presentation of new ideas is clear enough that it can be used daily at home by quite young children and their parents, with the teacher checking progress every week or two.

Stradivari's Genius

Stradivari's Genius PDF Author: Toby Faber
Publisher: Random House
ISBN: 1588362140
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 298

Book Description
“’Tis God gives skill, but not without men’s hands: He could not make Antonio Stradivari’s violins without Antonio.” –George Eliot Antonio Stradivari (1644—1737) was a perfectionist whose single-minded pursuit of excellence changed the world of music. In the course of his long career in the northern Italian city of Cremona, he created more than a thousand stringed instruments; approximately six hundred survive. In this fascinating book, Toby Faber traces the rich, multilayered stories of six of these peerless instruments–five violins and a cello–and the one towering artist who brought them into being. Blending history, biography, meticulous detective work, and an abiding passion for music, Faber embarks on an absorbing journey as he follows some of the most prized instruments of all time. Mysteries and unanswered questions proliferate from the outset–starting with the enigma of Antonio Stradivari himself. What made this apparently unsophisticated craftsman so special? Why were his techniques not maintained by his successors? How is it that even two and a half centuries after his death, no one has succeeded in matching the purity, depth, and delicacy of a Stradivarius? In Faber’s illuminating narrative, each of the six fabled instruments becomes a character in its own right–a living entity cherished by artists, bought and sold by princes and plutocrats, coveted, collected, hidden, lost, copied, and occasionally played by a musician whose skill matches its maker’s. Here is the fabulous Viotti, named for the virtuoso who enchanted all Paris in the 1780s, only to fall foul of the French Revolution. Paganini supposedly made a pact with the devil to transform the art of the violin–and by the end of his life he owned eleven Strads. Then there’s the Davidov cello, fashioned in 1712 and lovingly handed down through a succession of celebrated artists until, in the 1980s, it passed into the capable hands of Yo-Yo Ma. From the salons of Vienna to the concert halls of New York, from the breakthroughs of Beethoven’s last quartets to the first phonographic recordings, Faber unfolds a narrative magnificent in its range and brilliant in its detail. “A great violin is alive,” said Yehudi Menuhin of his own Stradivarius. In the pages of this book, Faber invites us to share the life, the passion, the intrigue, and the incomparable beauty of the world’s most marvelous stringed instruments.
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