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Great way to start playingReview Date: 2007-07-20
Bluegrass MandolinReview Date: 2000-04-05
A Bluegrass Mandolin book!Review Date: 2001-12-07
A Bluegrass Mandolin book is a cool one by the author named Jack Tottle!
This is published by Oak publications.
I got this book from my grade 6 teacher Mr. Dan LeBlanc last year and he gave it to me becuase I liked mandolins.
This is a good book and the songs I like to play on my mandolin is:
Oh Suzanna,
John Hardy,
Cripple Creek &
Banks of the Ohio.
The song I love to play on my mandolin is Banks of the Ohio.
There is a record inside the book and you have to put it on tape.
I like this book because of the F Style Mandolin on the cover.
Bill Monroe is in this book.
This is a great book, A Bluegrass Mandolin book and I love it!
Have fun,
And I hope everybody likes it.
Start Playing TodayReview Date: 2002-10-14
After you have half a dozen dance numbers under your belt, Tottle breaks out a small chord dictionary and introduces the idea of the structured bluegrass song, with instrumental breaks in between verses. Starting with "The Banks of the Ohio", he then demonstrates how to construct a mandolin break around a song's melody. As he adds numbers, Tottle increases in complexity, and it pretty quickly adds up to an impressive repertoire.
Tottle's writing is clear and straightforward. All music is presented in standard notation and in tablature. Occasional charming photographs of mandolin greats add a nice touch.
The book I have does not have the CD, but the CD can only add to what is a great instructional book.


If you love blues you'll love this!Review Date: 2003-09-30
Read this and you'll want to make the tripReview Date: 2003-09-24
Awesome!Review Date: 2003-04-30
Brilliant!Review Date: 2001-11-12

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PAPERBACK VERSIONReview Date: 2007-10-01
It appears as if the pictures are copies of copies of copies taken out of the the original hardback and copied right on some copier rather than done correctly all over again, and there is at least one VERY GOOD picture M I S S I N G!!!!--one of my favorites--where Bob is reading a magazine or paper up close and he has his hat on. NOT DONE RIGHT IS ALSO A TOP FAVORITE: the one where Bob Dylan is playing chess at a French cafe--REALLY REALLY GOOD ONE, I love that one very much--but it still seems COPY OF COPY OF COPY quality--IT IS DARK AND GRITTY. The quality of the pictures in the original hardback book are FAR superior. and I SEE it. I did a copy of the one at the cafe on a copier before I returned the book to the library and believe me it is BETTER quality than the one in this paperback version!!! AAAAHHHHH!!! Maybe people won't notice, but I do notice it. Unfortunately I had to return the hardback book to the library.
P L E A S E TELL THE PUBLISHER TO R E D O THIS BOOK PROPERLY AND RESPECT Bob Dylan's fans because we want quality pictures. This book deserves to be done again properly. Paperback is okay to save the forests, but the quality of the pictures has something to do with the process and technology that they use. They just dished out a paperback version and copied the pictures from some other copies (as I see it) just to make money with no concern about the QUALITY OF THE PICTURES.
May I also suggest Dylan: Visions, Portraits & Back Pages as a book with FAR FAR FAR FAR SUPERIOR quality pictures and it even costs less!
Please do this PICTURE BOOK all over again, PUBLISHERS!!! These pictures deserve FIRST QUALITY production.
Absolutely Sweet BobReview Date: 2005-02-01
They will break your heart absolutely. If you love Dylan and the mythology he created around himself, this book will give you a glimpse behind the curtain. The images of Joan Baez and Dylan are so gorgeous you'll want to duck out of your busy life and cry for five crucial minutes. The image of a back-lit Bob and a shadowy Joan in profile is a just, simple ode to these monoliths. These photos give us what we've intimated about Bob all along.
pure dylanReview Date: 2005-01-05
Great B&W photos of young Bob DylanReview Date: 2005-01-05

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A must for any Dylan fanReview Date: 2001-11-12
Starting A Dylan Book Collection?Review Date: 2003-02-01
collection. Each of the 112 pages comprising this paperback
has at least one photograph, and many pages have two or three!
In my mind the pictures alone are worth a binding of their own. They
include many of his co-workers, and famous peers. After looking
at all of them for the first time, you really get a "feel" for
the environment in which he has been working (living) for the
last 30 - 40 years.
The entire collection of quotes (quotes and pictures are all you get, folks)
are catagorized by a plethora of topics, which enables quick referencing,
so you really should learn ALOT about his PERSONALITY.
I say "personality" because the quotes are in
conversational mode, candid, ranginging from silly quips and
understatements to very sincere and thoughtful comments; the way
I imagine he shares with intimates. This is not a stilted,
unemotional, professional collection of aphorisms, and I feel better informed
as a result.
Best Interview Book Around -- FunReview Date: 2000-06-12
Hillarious--the most fun Bob bookReview Date: 1999-09-25

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Epic of the Open RoadReview Date: 2007-10-31
Hear Texas Icon Joe Ely Interview on NPRReview Date: 2007-09-29
Johnny Hughes, author of the Lubbock novel Texas Poker Wisdom.
Texas Poker Wisdom
Joe Ely - Pulsebeat Of A Life Well LivedReview Date: 2007-11-05
I feel blessed that I was able to sit in the front row at Joe Ely's multimedia presentation of Bonfire Of Roadmaps at the Texas Book Festival held in Austin on November 3rd and 4th, 2007. The audience was packed and enthusiastic. A line formed at the book signing following Joe's readings and songs and video. I was very pleased to have Joe sign my book for me. Later, Joe Ely and Joel Guzman and Joe's band filled the space around the Texas Capitol steps with their magical music and lyrics. Joe was deep into his songs and making every effort to fill each listener with the unique blend of country, roots, wisdom, adventure, personal challenge, disappointments and triumphs of which his music is composed. Much of the time he sang with eyes closed as he drew from deep down the well of his own life experience. I will always remember this concert and I have the book to bring back the feelings of the road, feelings that Joe Ely was kind enough to share with us all.
The Road Goes on Forever...And so, thank god, does Joe ElyReview Date: 2007-06-23


Susan Ballard gets it right!Review Date: 2008-01-27
--Bob Boze Bell
Executive Editor, True West magazine
Review of S.M. Ballard's BORROWED TIME by J.D. HarkleroadReview Date: 2008-01-25
Borrowed Time is S.M. Ballard's first in a trilogy about the life and times of John Henry "Doc" Holliday. Before I read this novel, my first thought was What more can be said about Doc Holliday than has already been said? Boy, was I wrong! Until now (with the notable exception of Val Kilmer's portrayal of Doc in the movie Tombstone), Holliday has only appeared as a shadowy appendage peripherally attached to Wyatt Earp's coat-tails. Ballard, however, brings Doc Holliday to life in his own right, fleshing the man out while revealing little-known layers of his life. The reader feels as if he is observing first-hand Holliday's transformation from his genteel, cultured background as Dr. John Henry Holliday to the hot-tempered gunman/alcoholic who came to be known as "Doc" Holliday.
Ballard has thoroughly researched her subject and it shows. The Tombstone Times, Arizona's History and Information Journal, has published numerous non-fiction articles by Ballard, many of them about Doc Holliday. The character so engrossed her that the concept for a Holliday trilogy was born.
Borrowed Time is not another "shoot-em-up-Tony." While action abounds in this novel, two other story-lines run parallel to the main plot. One illuminates Doc's interpersonal relationships: his abiding friendship with Wyatt Earp; his love/hate relationship with "Big Nose Kate" (Fisher) Elder who, by the way, did not have a big nose; his antagonistic relationships with both Bat Masterson and Wyatt's brother Virgil. The other story-line revolves around Holliday's struggle to live as normal a life as possible while dealing with an illness that, in that time period, proved fatal more often than not. The reader, however, gets so caught up in the Doc Holliday character that, even knowing how the trilogy will ultimately end (we all die sometime) is in no way a deterrent.
Borrowed Time is a great read that will appeal to both men and women, and I'm eagerly looking forward to Holliday in Tombstone, the second in Ballard's trilogy due out in 2008.
Fantastic!Review Date: 2008-01-20
"Borrowed Time" 5 StarsReview Date: 2007-09-19
particular "Doc" Holliday and the Earps, I decided
to pick up a copy of "Borrowed Time".
Almost instantly I found myself teleported back in
time to places rich in detail and atmosphere. From
the rolling plains to the bustling cowtowns, I could
clearly envision myself in these settings. The
descriptions were vivid as well as historically
accurate which as a student of the Old West I found
very satisfying. I could almost smell the smoke
filled saloons, or feel the cold wind blowing in
from the plains.
Doc Holliday, usually portrayed as a one
dimensional, almost abrasive character in books and
film was brought to life in Ballard's story as a
living, breathing, complicated man complete with
real emotions and a depth that's severely lacking in
most other characterizations. This not only applies
to Holliday but all of the other characters as well.
I particularly enjoyed the banter between Doc and
Wyatt, conversations that seemed as natural as any
you might have with a best friend. None of their
interactions seemed contrived or stiff.
The story telling, besides being richly
descriptive, also had an easy going style and a nice
flow, balanced nicely between dialog and action.
This was one of the few stories I've read, Western
or otherwise that I felt connected to the characters
and cared about them as well.
It was an engrossing novel I simply couldn't put
down. A winner for sure and honestly I can't wait to
read the second book in this series and anything
else that S.M. Ballard writes.
---J. Place
Winooski, Vermont

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Great Times!Review Date: 2007-10-10
British Invasion - Who are those people?Review Date: 2007-01-26
British Beat: Then, Now And Rare 1960-1969 by Terry Rawling tracks the overwhelming majority of these bands through their lives during the critical first nine years. He describes the band's origins, their activities during the period under study and their demise and/or current status.
While the coverage could be considered superficial, it is far from that for those interested in the music of the British Invasion period who can and should use it as a guidebook for more in depth study.
One final truly touching thing about the book is found on the inside back cover. Author Rawling shows several score photos of members of some of bands as they appeared in recent times. The images are a fitting close to the period and to this very information and entertaining volume.
Mindblower!!!Review Date: 2004-03-07
great: though...Review Date: 2005-11-16

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The answer is brilliant and nothing can say more!!Review Date: 2000-08-10
i love BUSHReview Date: 2000-11-26
Dry but interestingReview Date: 1999-12-19
Jennifer nine times three equals Twenty Seventh LetterReview Date: 1999-12-17

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Why Angel couldn't marry Liza-LuReview Date: 2000-12-10
Classics brought to life in a whole new light!Review Date: 2001-06-08
Another excellent collection of literary brain-teasersReview Date: 2001-08-28
Well, can she?Review Date: 2000-01-09

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Essential resource for sacred musicians, Bach scholarsReview Date: 2007-12-13
The first section of the book traces the development of the sacred cantata as a genre through 1750. Durr here defines important terms and places Bach's works in historical context.
The bulk of the text is a presentation of the cantatas in the order of the liturgical calendar. For each cantata Durr provides the text, its English translation, and the circumstances surrounding the piece's composition. He also offers analyses/descriptions which vary from half a page for some of the briefer, simpler works, to ten pages for works of particular depth (BWV 106 comes to mind).
This book is an invaluable resource to Bach scholars, singers, and conductors. Also consider Marvin Unger's book on Bach's Cantata Texts for an intertextual look at Bach as theologian.
BMN
contains original German alongside English translationsReview Date: 2007-08-23
Outstanding ResourceReview Date: 2007-02-07
Costly but usefulReview Date: 2006-05-09
Related Subjects: Horror Science Fiction and Fantasy Automotive Pulp Sports Military Environment and Nature
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My only complaint is that this doesn't come with a CD. But this is a slam more towards myself than towards the author. I am ashamed to say that, with the exception of a few songs, I am woefully unfamiliar with most of these beloved folk and bluegrass standards; and the majority of my learning procedure in the past has been by ear. But I am looking at this as a challenge and a way to exercise my ability to read and play along with sheet music. Still, hearing the actual song would help me play more fluid-ish. A check of the copyright page tells me that it first went to press in the late 70s, so CDs were far into the future.