Posts tagged "guitar"

Eddie Adcock – The Most Awesome Country Music Guitar Personality Ever!

Eddie Adcock – The Most Awesome Country Music Guitar Personality Ever!

Article by Auburn Walker

Guitar performer and five-string banjo virtuoso Eddie Adcock has been one of bluegrass music’s greatest and most innovative performers for more than 40 years. He cut his musical teeth with Bill Monroe and Mac Wiseman, and as one-third of the groundbreaking trio The Country Gentlemen Eddie was the initial internationally acclaimed five-string bluegrass banjo performer to play at Carnegie Hall and soon afterwards released his first collection books of country guitar tabs and country guitar tablatures.

Since then his work with his wife, Martha Adcock, has garnered three Grammy nominations and appearances at the Kennedy Center and on a lot of syndicated and local TV and radio shows. Eddie has been named “Instrumentalist of The Year” (Major Independent Record Label Awards ceremony) and “Entertainer of The Year” (International Bluegrass Music Association). The original Country Gentlemen have lately been inducted into the IBMA’s internationally-acclaimed Hall of Honor.

Three time Grammy nominee Eddie Adcock has charmed all types of crowds throughout the U. S., Canada and Europe with his bluegrass and acoustic country songs, with rave critiques, considerably press and serious airplay around the world. He was married in 1976 and now lives in Nashville, Tennessee with his spouse Martha.

Cashbox Magazine calls him “a great musician and vocalist,” and Billboard has called him “one of the Bluegrass circuit’s top acts.” He has taken his sunny, witty, high-energy music from local clubs to the Kennedy Center. Combining authentic Travis-style fingerpicking with lightning fast bluegrass runs, Eddie gets as exciting a guitar sound as you’ll hear anywhere! His progressive guitar techniques include right hand banjo rolls, complex slides, pull-offs and hammer-ons, and alternating thumb index finger combinations to name but a few.Eddie Adcock has performed on “Austin City Limits,” TNN’s “Nashville Now” and “Wildhorse Saloon,” NPR specials, and a lot of syndicated and local TV and radio shows. His video, Dog, attained airplay on TNN, CMT, and also CNN. He released a variety of popular albums, appearing on several bluegrass and country charts.

Eddie Adcock features a lot of his own original tunes, both vocal songs and instrumentals, showcasing his robust, expressive style and somehow sounding like more than himself. Focus calls his tunes “ensnaring.” Woven in and amongst his uniquely-styled tunes are influences from bluegrass, country, folk, jazz, blues, rock and roll, gospel, and rockabilly, transcending into a distinctive and heady sound, part of the past, present, and surely the future! And his warm yet edgy style and uninhibited stage persona is a real treat.

Eddie’s zany stage humor might in the beginning belie the fact that he is an influential, revolutionary stylist on guitar and banjo – plain and simple: a superpicker! He has been one of Bluegrass music’s greatest and most innovative performers for more than 40 years. Country Music Magazine calls Eddie Adcock’s playing and instrumental influence “legendary.” Viewed as the originator of a recognized style of playing, he was the first internationally acclaimed 5-string bluegrass banjoist to appear at Carnegie Hall – as spark plug in The Country Gentlemen. In the course of Eddie’s 12-year tenure with them from 1958 to 1970, they were the group who transformed bluegrass and took it uptown. In his early days, Eddie was a fellow member of Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Boys, remembered by Bill as becoming his favorite baritone singer.

Eddie Adcock belongs to a number of business enterprise organizations, which includes IBMA and the Folk Alliance. He has worked on the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Banjo Institute. He also runs Adcock Audio, a large, state-of-the-art sound company. And he maintains a vast mailing list in order to stay in touch with deejays, press, and fans.

Peabody Conservatory trained guitarist Steven Herron helps people become better guitar performers His company ChordMelody.com features a large selection of country guitar tablaturesas well as instructional DVDs by Eddie Adcock himself. Find out more and claim Steven’s popular free monthly guitar lesson e-course available at: =>Eddie Adcock guitar tabs










Question by Wishing for Nashville: What should I wear to the Wildhorse Saloon in Nashville?
I’m fifteen but I look like I’m 18. I want to have a good time. I’m from Canada. I’ve been horseback riding since I was 5, western of course! I’m pretty country. I want to look like a cowgirl…a real cowgirl going out for the night, not some tourist trying to pull it off with the complete wrong impression. What should I wear? I’m definately going to be out on the dance floor line dancing. I know I’m over thinking this. Any help is appreciated!

Thanks

Best answer:

Answer by brendan- da man and da myth
- I luv a cute woman in a cowboy hat – yeehaw !!!!

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Posted by Mariana's Blog - January 15, 2012 at 9:39 pm

Categories: Wildhorse Saloon Nashville   Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Learn HowTo Play Guitar Online Quickly And Easily With A Free Lesson

Learn HowTo Play Guitar Online Quickly And Easily With A Free Lesson

How Long Does It Take To Play Guitar?

Learning to play guitar is a process, and there is no finish line. How long does it take to play guitar, is a question students often ask their teacher. How long it takes to play the guitar depends on what your definition of guitar playing is!

The last few decades has seen a remarkable growth in the popularity of rock music and guitar playing has become pretty attractive for many.

Today the guitar is everywhere; a versatile instrument – adapting itself to almost any kind of situation, Victimized by it’s own success, it has become something more than a musical instrument – like the swastika before it, it has become the symbol of a social revolution! The ultimate emblem of grooviness! It is now an object unto itself!

Guitar enthusiasts are so often blinded by the symbol that they remain deaf to the world of musical wonders that lie beyond their blinkered six-string field of interest.

Many teenagers exist who aspire to become rock superstars, but there is also a section who wants to learn guitar playing just for sake of it. But many of them end up losing hope of learning guitar since they don’t find the best way to learn guitar.

How long does it take to play guitar? If you can answer the following questions and make these important distinctions you will have a good idea.

QUESTION ONE: How do you view the instrument?

Do you want to be (a) guitar owner, (b) guitar player, (c) a musician who uses the guitar for musical expression?

Essentially there’s three levels of involvement with the guitar:

1. Guitar owners – to qualify you need only to have enough funds to purchase the instrument, for these people the guitar is simply a toy, like a computer game, or fashion accessory. How long does it take you to play the guitar if you’re in this category? About 5-10 minutes max. The important thing here is to “be seen to be playing the guitar”!

2. Guitar players – players in this category are often very dedicated and speed many hours practicing their instrument. Mostly self taught, they learn almost exclusively from guitar tab, and their friends. How long does it take to play guitar in this category?… these players understand it’s a lifetime journey.

3. Musicians who play guitar as their chosen instrument- players in category two focus on guitar playing skills, whereas level three players understand the whole scope of the musical landscape. A good musician not only plays their instrument well, they understand and can intelligently discuss all music.

These players:

(a) listen to all types of music

(b) read about all types of music

(c) study all types of music

How long does it take to play guitar in this category? Again, it’s a lifetime of hard work and discipline. What’s the difference between category two and category three?

Level two players must have their instrument in their hands to communicate ideas, whereas, musicians who play guitar as their chosen instrument know and can discuss, the qualities which make Herb Ellis or Barney Kessel a great jazz player; why Duke Ellington is a jazz innovator; Michel Legrand a great composer and orchestrator. They know why good symphonies are good and bad symphonies are bad; they know why good pop or country songs are good (musically) and bad songs are bad.

QUESTION TWO: Are you internally motivated or externally motivated?

Externally motivated players usually give up playing the guitar once they realize that they are responsible for their progress. these players quickly move on to the new ‘hip’ fad (only to give up on that as soon as things get a bit challenging).

An obvious example of this type of externally motivated player and their associated problems and disappointments is with the recent popularity of computer games where people pretend to play the guitar.

Despite PR claims from computer game companies like Guitar Hero that their guitar games improve the player’s rhythm and hand dexterity, professional guitar teachers worldwide have reported that Guitar Hero veterans have been disappointed when confronted with the real-world requirements of hard work and delayed gratification. They expect to jump into real guitar and learn it as quickly as they learned the game, and they realize that they can’t.

I’ll assume if you have read this far you’re more interested in category two or three!

needless to say that only internally motivated players make it into category two and three.

QUESTION THREE: What is the source of your information? common knowledge or specialized knowledge?

Today it is not a question of information on any particular subject, after all we live in the information age, don’t we? To accelerate your progress on the guitar and rapidly decrease the time it takes you to play the guitar, what we need is specialized knowledge to help us assemble the relevant knowledge to achieve our goals.

The first thing to understand is that learning guitar is something that takes a long time. how long it takes to learn depends on what you want to learn.

Learning guitar is hard work but it’s really important to have fun and have your guitar make cool sounds while you’re learning all the hard bits. The main thing you have to consider when learning how to play guitar is who is teaching you how to play guitar.

How long does it take to play guitar? It depends on what you want to achieve.

I can teach you quickly, see below.

I have been playing guitar and writing songs for over 30 years.
I can fully reccommend the following online course where you can have a FREE lesson and you will then be playing in hours! Simply Go to => http://www.jediplayer.com

Another song from the ‘Looking back to yesterday’ album.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Posted by Mariana's Blog - October 24, 2010 at 11:39 am

Categories: Teenage Symphony   Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Brand New Country Guitar Lessons – Doug Seven

Brand New Country Guitar Lessons – Doug Seven
Learn the most famous Guitar Licks and Techniques in Nashville today (not twenty years ago). Styles like Brent Mason, Johnny Hiland, Albert Lee and Danny Gatton Guitar Riffs… Instant download, Full Tablature, Backing Tracks and Slow Down Software!
Brand New Country Guitar Lessons – Doug Seven

Tour of Nashville Symphony Center
symphony nashville

Image by amerune


The Family and I at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville

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Posted by Mariana's Blog - July 19, 2010 at 9:40 am

Categories: Symphony Nashville   Tags: , , , , ,

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