Home
Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar
Barnes and Noble
Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar
Current price: $49.99
Barnes and Noble
Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar
Current price: $49.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
This expansive four-disc anthology essentially covers the recorded history of the guitar in the 20th century, beginning with the
ragtime
banjo that set the table for the role of the guitar in a
jazz
setting in the early 1900s, and then touching all the bases clear through to the post-postmodern possibilities of the instrument in the 21st century. Don't let the subtitle throw you, though, because
Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar
interprets
guitar in the broadest of strokes, as it includes not only pantheon
players like
Eddie Lang
,
Django Reinhardt
Charlie Christian
Les Paul
Wes Montgomery
, and
John McLaughlin
but also provides an uncommon sweep by featuring Hawaiian stylists
Roy Smeck
and
Sol Hoopii
;
Western swing
aces
Leon McAuliffe
Eldon Shamblin
country
jazzman
Hank Garland
rock
virtuosos
Jimi Hendrix
Carlos Santana
Jeff Beck
fusion
funksters
Larry Carlton
Al DiMeola
Mike Stein
; and hard to classify
avant-garde
Derek Bailey
Sonny Sharrock
James Blood Ulmer
Marc Ribot
. In all, 78 guitarists from some 33 labels are represented. Arranged roughly by date of recording from first to last (there are some deviations to trace the development of a particular style), it is easy to follow the track listing for
Progressions
in the well-organized 148-page book that accompanies the discs, and what emerges is a portrayal of the massive influence the guitar has had on every form of popular music in the past century. One could quibble about players who were left out, and things are slightly tilted toward electric players as the set progresses, although that is probably understandable, since getting the guitar plugged in is what made it work in large ensembles in the first place. It's hard to argue with a piano, but a case could be made (and this set assembles ample evidence) that the electric guitar was the defining popular musical instrument of the 20th century, and certainly the dominant ensemble instrument for the last half of it.
suggests that the possibilities for the guitar are far from exhausted as the musical time line begins to edge deeper into the 21st century. A beautiful set. ~ Steve Leggett
ragtime
banjo that set the table for the role of the guitar in a
jazz
setting in the early 1900s, and then touching all the bases clear through to the post-postmodern possibilities of the instrument in the 21st century. Don't let the subtitle throw you, though, because
Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar
interprets
guitar in the broadest of strokes, as it includes not only pantheon
players like
Eddie Lang
,
Django Reinhardt
Charlie Christian
Les Paul
Wes Montgomery
, and
John McLaughlin
but also provides an uncommon sweep by featuring Hawaiian stylists
Roy Smeck
and
Sol Hoopii
;
Western swing
aces
Leon McAuliffe
Eldon Shamblin
country
jazzman
Hank Garland
rock
virtuosos
Jimi Hendrix
Carlos Santana
Jeff Beck
fusion
funksters
Larry Carlton
Al DiMeola
Mike Stein
; and hard to classify
avant-garde
Derek Bailey
Sonny Sharrock
James Blood Ulmer
Marc Ribot
. In all, 78 guitarists from some 33 labels are represented. Arranged roughly by date of recording from first to last (there are some deviations to trace the development of a particular style), it is easy to follow the track listing for
Progressions
in the well-organized 148-page book that accompanies the discs, and what emerges is a portrayal of the massive influence the guitar has had on every form of popular music in the past century. One could quibble about players who were left out, and things are slightly tilted toward electric players as the set progresses, although that is probably understandable, since getting the guitar plugged in is what made it work in large ensembles in the first place. It's hard to argue with a piano, but a case could be made (and this set assembles ample evidence) that the electric guitar was the defining popular musical instrument of the 20th century, and certainly the dominant ensemble instrument for the last half of it.
suggests that the possibilities for the guitar are far from exhausted as the musical time line begins to edge deeper into the 21st century. A beautiful set. ~ Steve Leggett