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Fender Special Edition G-DEC Guitar Play-Along Pack: Nirvana

Fender Special Edition G-DEC Guitar Play-Along Pack: Nirvana

This book/SD Card series lets you play your favourites songs just like the artists who recorded them by plugging into your Fender G-DEC 3 and playing along with the sound-alike recordings. Each book features 8 songs with an SD card that includes tone presets along with high-quality backing tracks. Just follow the tab in the songbook, listen to the tracks to hear how the Guitar should sound, and then play-along using the separate backing tracks. The melody and lyrics are also included in the book so you can sing along, too. The play-along recordings can be accessed by simply inserting the card into the G-DEC 3 amp's card slot. In addition, custom G-DEC 3 tone presets are included so guitarists can easily enjoy playing the right Guitar tones and effects for each song. Students and teachers who use G-DEC 3 amplifiers will find their lesson experience greatly enhanced by these convenient tools.SD card details:Compatible with Fender G-DEC 3 Thirty and G-DEC 3 Fifteen amplifiers, or card reader on computerFull-fidelity demo and play-along audio tracks (.wav format)G-DEC 3 tone presets are included so guitarists can create the right tones and effects for each song in the bookSD card has additional storage capability allowing guitarists to save additional presets, backing tracks, phrase samples, or lessons.This volume features 8 Nirvana classics, including: All Apologies • Come As You Are • Dumb • Heart Shaped Box • In Bloom • Lithium • Rape Me • Smells like Teen Spirit.

SEK 410.00
1

Ballad of Heroes op. 14

Ballad of Heroes op. 14

for tenor (or soprano) solo, chorus and orchestra Scoring: 3 (II=picc), 2, ca (=obIII), 2 , cl in Eb, 2, dbl bn (=bnIII) - 4, 2, 3, 1 - timps, 2 perc (xyl, sd, td, bd, whip, cymb) - harp, strings - OFFSTAGE: 3 trumpets in C - sd (optional instruments are ca, dbl bn, offstage tpts and sd). Britten asks for the offstage instruments to be in a gallery or 'isolated position', and later to be out of sight. Text: W H Auden and Randall Swingler Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes Difficulty level: 3 (for chorus) This highly dramatic and rarely performed work was written for a Festival of Music for the People and first performed on 5 April 1939 at the Queen's Hall, London, conducted by Constant Lambert. It is another of Britten's passionate outbursts against the waste and horror of war which had already engulfed Europe once earlier in the century and was about to do so for the second time. The declaration of war was made on 3 September that year. His choice of texts is highly significant. He had collaborated with Randall Swingler as recently as the previous year on his short unaccompanied choral work Advance Democracy - another politically motivated piece (see separate entry). Both Swingler and Auden were aiming in their poems to goad the downtrodden Englishman into standing up and fully living the life of freedom for which their forebears fought and lost their lives. Swingler's lines which say: 'You who lean at the corner and say We have done our best, ...To you we speak, you numberless Englishmen, To remind you of the greatness still among you...Your life is yours, for which they died'. sum up the essence of the message of the piece. The work is in three continuous movements. First comes a Funeral March (to Swingler's poem part-quoted above), then a manic Scherzo, a Dance of Death to a rum-te-tum verse by Auden which only increases its sense of the macabre. Finally comes a slow and powerful recitative and chorale and a slow Epilogue in which the funeral march music from the opening returns. Virtually the whole of the first section of the opening movement is in unison for the chorus. The slow tread of the funeral march is given an added solemnity by this unison singing. The first ten bars are recited on a low C, the next eight bars an octave higher, and after this there is a mixture of simple harmony (more to avoid high notes for low voices) and further unison singing for the rest of the movement. The Scherzo is interesting in setting out the first three vocal parts in a kind of fugal progress. The tenors have the first complete statement in the home key (G minor), the altos are next in the dominant but by themselves, the sopranos are next in line and back in the tonic - again by themselves, and finally the basses have the subject but this time as the basis of a canon at the unison between them and the altos (in a truncated version).

SEK 292.00
1