The Best of Stevie Wonder.by Todd Lowry. Hal Leonard Corporation Hal Leonard Corporation is a US sheet music publishing company. It is the largest sheet music publisher in the world. (7777 W. Bluemound Rd., P.O. Box 13819, Milwaukee, WI 53213), 2002. 31 pp., $22.95. Intermediate. The Best of Stevie Wonder is a new publication of Hal Leonard's Keyboard Signature Licks featuring such artists as Ben Folds Five Ben Folds Five (1993–2000) was a trio formed in Chapel Hill, North Carolina who were a mainstay of piano rock until their breakup in 2000. Much of their work was influenced by jazz, evident in frequent improv-styled passages through bridge and/or ending. , Billy Joel, and Lennon and McCartney. The books attempt to teach pianists the techniques and styles used by these artists; thus, it is more of a study guide of the keyboard part rather than a performance volume of the total song. The CD, packaged with the book, is a recording of the keyboard parts without melody, as well as notable keyboard parts played at a slower speed. The book will appeal to pianists who want to play in the style of Stevie Wonder or play Wonder's songs from a lead sheet in the appropriate style. One will get the most out of it if both an acoustic piano and synthesizer synthesizer Machine that electronically generates and modifies sounds, frequently with the use of a digital computer, for use in the composition of electronic music and in live performance. are available. Piano students may be disappointed if they choose the volume, since the vocal line does not appear in the piano part. I think the intermediate student would enjoy playing the keyboard parts if he or she records the melody line and plays it back while performing the keyboard part. The Wonder edition includes an informative biography and a discography dis·cog·ra·phy n. Examination of the intervertebral disk space using x-rays after injection of contrast media into the disk. of his recordings. Songs include favorites such as Superstition and You Are the Sunshine of My Limb. Todd Lowry precedes each of fourteen songs with an engaging description of the song and an analysis of Wonder's sophisticated harmony, unusual keys and instrumentation. Although Wonder is an accomplished keyboardist, the keyboard in his pop songs consists of comping (patterns accompanying the vocal melody). Each keyboard part is essentially a short rhythmic and harmonic pattern that is repeated throughout the piece. Wonder often uses keys of five or six sharps or flats. Lowry speculates that Wonder likes the challenge of difficult keys to find more "edgy" harmonies. Lowry does a terrific job of breaking down each song by the mood, key, harmony and instrumentation. Most interesting is the history of the evolution of Wonder's style from age 11, when he first signed with Motown Records
Annual awards given by the Recording Academy (officially the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences). The first Grammies (the name is a dimunitive of “gramophone”) were given in 1958. . Reviewed by Sylvia Coats, Wichita, Kansas
Wichita, also known as the Air Capital of the World, is the largest city in the U.S. state of Kansas, as well as a major aircraft manufacturing hub and cultural center. . |
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