Part One: Melody
Focuses on single note soloing. Learn how to effortlessly solo through complex chord changes.
Jazz Guitar Players
While Andy Summers is best known as the guitarist of the Police, he has since forged a successful and acclaimed solo career with new age-influenced contemporary instrumental music that, like his work with Sting and company, draws on his love for jazz and his fascination with creating instrumental textures. Born Andrew James Somers in Poulton-Fylde, Lancashire, England, on December 31, 1942, the young Somers (who later changed his surname to the more easily spelled Summers) moved to Bournemouth as a child and, upon taking up the guitar at 14, immersed himself in the local jazz scene. By 16, he was playing in local clubs and coffeehouses, where he was noticed by Zoot Money. Somers was invited to join Money's Big Roll Band, with whom he appeared on the live album The All Happening Zoot Money's Big Roll Band at Klook's Kleek. Money eventually changed the band into a psychedelic outfit called Dantalian's Chariot, and when that project dissolved in early 1968, Somers briefly signed on with the Soft Machine before rejoining Money in a revamped Animals lineup for the LP Love Is. When that imploded in 1969, Somers studied classical guitar and composition at UCLA for four years, in the meantime giving guitar lessons, gigging with a local Latin-rock band, and acting with various theater troupes. Upon his return to England in 1973, Summers became something of a journeyman, touring in the backing bands of Neil Sedaka, Kevin Coyne, Kevin Ayers, and David Essex.
Summers met Sting and Stewart Copeland in 1977 while playing with a band called Strontium 90. The two asked Summers to join their full-time project, the Police; together, the trio gradually developed a style centered around jazz- and reggae-influenced pop/rock, and Sting's strong bass lines allowed Summers to supply subtle sonic textures and colors on his guitar, and to experiment with various effects. Summers first stepped out on his own in 1982, teaming with King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp on the jazz- and Eastern-tinged I Advance Masked. It was followed in 1984 with Bewitched, another Summers/Fripp collaboration, around the same time the Police officially disbanded.
Eager to establish himself in musical realms outside of rock &
roll, Summers did a bit of movie soundtrack work (Down and Out in Beverly
Hills, 2010, etc.) before returning to recording, this time on his own.
His first solo effort, 1987's harmonically intricate yet pop-oriented
XYZ, met with poor critical response. Its follow-up, 1988's Mysterious
Barricades, was more successful, emphasizing Summers' textural sensibilities
on its jazzy, new age-influenced compositions. A string of albums in
this style followed through the '90s, notably The Golden Wire (1989),
Charming Snakes (1991), World Gone Strange (1991), Invisible Thread
(1993), and The Last Dance of Mr. X (1997). For 1998's Strings of Desire,
he teamed with South American guitar virtuoso Victor Biglione; 1999's
Green Chimneys: Music of Thelonious Monk found Summers working with
a larger ensemble than usual for him, as well as his first collaboration
with Sting since the Police (on a version of "'Round Midnight").
Following the success of his Monk-themed album, the guitarist put together
an album of interpretations of compositions by Charles Mingus called
Peggy's Blue Skylight, released in late 2000. Earth + Sky appeared four
years later. Summers continued to record thereafter, releasing First
You Build a Cloud in 2007. He also participated in the Police reunion
tour that same year.
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It has been many years since the first edition of Play What You Hear (originally released in 2000). Now volume two is here with new ideas and concepts, complete with audio, video, traditional notation and TAB throughout. High resolution pdf available for printing the entire program. For intermediate and advanced players.
Focuses on single note soloing. Learn how to effortlessly solo through complex chord changes.
Focuses on chord melody. Learn new harmonic devices and understand chords in a whole new way.
Study Chris Standring's six recorded solos, transcribed with audio and high def video.
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