You can view the page at http://www.mandolincafe.com/forum/co...ook-on-Mel-Bay
You can view the page at http://www.mandolincafe.com/forum/co...ook-on-Mel-Bay
Yes!! This is great news!
Kudos to Don Stiernberg who wrote a really great intro for the book. I've had an electronic copy for awhile in preparation for the interview and spent quite a bit of time working through the material. What an eye opener. A really great resource.
Cool, I can't wait to get my hands on one!
If you Google 'bow tie rights activist', you will see Aaron's photo. Well done!
Very much looking forward to this!
Cracked me up.In a recent publicity photo, Chris Thile was wearing a bow tie, hand tied, not a clip-on. Your response?There's a reason he is a MacArthur genius.
I'm not the type to normally splash out on something unseen, but had no qualms about buying this ebook.
The content looks good at a first browse (apart from a text mashup on page 4 of the PDF)
Aaron W definitely has a good way of explaining things to make them clear.
Looking forward to working through it.
Eoin
"Forget that anyone is listening to you and always listen to yourself" - Fryderyk Chopin
Thanks Scott I've just done that and all sorted.
Pretty quick out of the blocks, great to see such attentiveness.
Eoin
"Forget that anyone is listening to you and always listen to yourself" - Fryderyk Chopin
Just curious - was there any prediction when this will be available in printed form?
When I was having a discussion with my contact at Mel Bay last week they said they thought Nov. 1 would be the print availability date. I suppose that could have changed since then but I think unlikely.
My experience as both writer and retailer for MB, they have 21st Century printing technologies that produce books VERY quickly, but you still have the 20th Century infrastructure of shipping (& receiving) and purchasing agents to deal with. Nov 1 would be admirably quick.
Last edited by Ted Eschliman; Oct-26-2015 at 5:39pm.
My contact at Mel Bay just answered an email at 7:15 a.m. and told me 11/1 was still the date they were looking to have it in print.
So, the e-version is ready to download now? And I can print from that if need be?
As usual, there are not enough sample pages on the Mel Bay website to evaluate the book.
Perhaps Mandoline Cafe can coax the author into sharing a little more here.
I know that one could print after purchase. I would like to see one complete sample lesson before purchase.
It seems like with most other books you can read whole chapters online before buying. But it seems that with music books, you often have no idea what the teaching method is, and how the book executes it.
I suppose it has something to do with royalties to the music publishers. Even if the actual music was blacked out, it would be helpful to read the discussion of how the piece is approached.
I guess that if there is a money back policy on the e-books that would solve it.
Object to this post? Find out how to ignore me here!
I just bought this yesterday...as I was kinda having blah practice sessions and wanted a new challenge. What got me interested was the new beatles chord melody book just released. So I have these both to work on now. Its an exciting new challenge. For $15 bucks and a pdf download, its pretty high yield I would say. I knew not much of Aaron beyond watching his videos on youtube and what was mentioned by Don Stiernberg to introduce the book. Which was enough for me to make the purchase, again $15 bucks is pretty cheap compared to some instruction books. I would say that the lesson/structure of the book is challenging in a good way. Concepts are explained well, yet not so much as to spoon feed you...which is challenging. I'm not real familiar with a lot of the chords in the book, which is also exciting and challenging, forcing me to move my fingers is different ways. Aaron shuffles along like some sort of fretboard ninja, its incredible. Chapter One goes something like this: What makes up a chord, Whats a chord voicing and how do we make it, chord voicings. Chapter Two gets into the left hand techniques a bit. Thats all the further I am at this point. Seems, just as the title says, an intelligent and thoughtful system/approach for learning this technique. For myself, its more than that, its challenging me to learn the fretboard and million chord shapes on it. I would say go for it...if you're afraid you wont like it, purchase the print version so you can resell it on the classifieds. I should note, I am not a jazz mandolin player. Hope this helped?
“I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around and play mandolin.”
I was hoping for an accompanying CD, or some YouTube demo's, especially for the etudes section. Any plans on that end? Love the book! Brett
I just wanted to chime in for a moment to thank you all for the nice comments I've received about this book. Also, if anyone has questions as you're working through it, feel free to post them here or in the forum and I'll do my best to answer. Thanks again!
Last edited by Scott Tichenor; Nov-13-2015 at 9:48am.
I bought the online version a couple of weeks ago. Certainly worth the money. I'm not much interested in jazz mandolin, but I think these lessons will have broad application. They have quite a lot of info compressed into a concise space, and they make it all look pretty simple. I would like what my students ask from me: suggested fingerings, an audio file to hear the music as written and to slow it down, and a short video to watch the hand techniques.
Object to this post? Find out how to ignore me here!
Bookmarks