actual new stuff
actual new stuff
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Thanksgiving '21

Well, we made it through.  It's been a long year so far, and it ain't over yet.  America feels more unsettled than ever.  Yet life goes on, and music continues to be made.  And kids, if you give them a chance, raise them right, and keep various wolves from the door, continue to get bigger--and surprise you.
The photo above is my son Shaun, 15, this past summer, up on Monhegan Island, Maine.  That's where he made his solo debut as a busker, playing trombone on the dock and raking in $50-75 more than once.  This is with zero pressure from dad.  But you may be sure I'm proud--and incredulous, frankly, since busking is not for everybody and one might have assumed that a fifteen year-old would have found it hard to conquer his fear.
What fear?  At this point, a hardened veteran, he seems to have bypassed that phase.  He has played half a dozen times on the Square in Oxford this fall, often on the Friday late afternoons preceding football Saturdays.  He brings BOTH his trombone and his euphonium, the latter of which is now his main instrument at Oxford HS.  This past Saturday he called me from the Square.  "Dad!" he said.  "I just started warming up on the trombone, I'd only been playing for 30 seconds, and a guy stopped his car and handed me a ONE-HUNDRED DOLLAR BILL!"
What am I thankful for?  No need to ask.

New videos

Here are three new videos.  You'll notice a continuing theme:  chrome rims.  The third video will explain that.
1)  weird harmonica keys - 1
2)  be present, risk more - improvising blues harmonica
3)  Sonata Blues Project - stage 3 - rims!

The Big Kahuna!

As I noted in my last newsletter, a potential customer's query recently motivated me to create a massive 3-gig zip file that contains every video lesson and tab sheet currently for sale in the Modern Blues Harmonica store, roughly 150 in total, all at a steeply discounted price of $150.  (At full price they'd sell for roughly $550.) 
This sort of sprawling, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink collection surely isn't for everybody.  But it could be right for you.  I've been gratified by the response so far.  Please think about checking it out:
Channels, Books, Music, Lessons
YOUTUBE CHANNELS:
 
BOOKS:
Mister Satan's Apprentice audiobook version (narrated and with harmonica playing by Gussow)
 
MUSIC:
 
HARMONICA LESSONS:
Modern Blues Harmonica Advanced Beginner's Special
For beginning players who have completed the first handful of lessons on my website (most of which can be found in the "Beginner's Special" and "Beginner's Deluxe") and are ready to commit to the next step, here is a bargain:  six video tutorials with the tab sheets thrown in for free.  The lessons in this collection continue your education into the world of blues harmonica by teaching you a range of ways of moving through the 12-bar changes--the "blues progression."  These include a boogie-woogie (Bittersweet Boogie), a melody drawn from a vocal line (Same Old Blues), a jazzy melody that deliberately breaks across the bar lines (Whistlin' the Blues), a two-beat stomp that uses double stops and chords (Red Dress), a simplified version of a Chicago blues standard (Mojo 1.0), and a rock classic (Rock Around the Clock).  There is a method in Gussow's madness!  These songs socialize you into the wide and wonderful world of blues musicianship, even as they develop your lip-strength, coordination, and reflexes.
PLEASE NOTE:  All these songs are demonstrated using a key of C harmonica, except for Mojo 1.0, which uses a key of A harmonica.

ADDITIONAL NOTE:  You do NOT need to know how to bend notes in order to play these songs.  This is why they are appropriate for beginners and advanced beginners.    
 
Chicago Blues Classics
For INTERMEDIATES and ADVANCED INTERMEDIATES who want a selection of the best that the Chicago blues tradition has to offer, I've bundled five video tutorials into an easy-to-download zip file, with the tab sheets thrown in for free.  Included in this package are Sonny Boy Williamson/Junior Wells ("Checking Up on my Baby"), Junior Wells ("Messing With the Kid"), Big Walter Horton ("Easy"), Paul Butterfield ("Born in Chicago"), and Little Walter/Kim Wilson ("Got My Mojo Working"), all for only $25, a savings of $10 off the item-by-item price.
 
"Bending the 3 Draw":  NOT just for BEGINNERS and ADVANCED BEGINNERS, but for INTERMEDIATES as well.  The 3 draw bend--several different bends, actually--is more challenging than 4 draw and 2 draw.  I help you extract the deep bluesy sound that lies buried in the harp; I use a guitar to explain exactly which pitches you're trying for and where they're located.
 
"Harmony for Improvisation":  For blues harmonica students in the BEGINNER and ADVANCED BEGINNER category who seek some basic grounding in harmony that will strengthen their understanding of the instrument and improve their abilities as improvisers.  INTERMEDIATE players who have neglected this element of their musical education may also find this lesson useful.  This zip file includes one QuickTime video plus one jam track in the key of G.  There is NO tab sheet with this lesson.
    Harp:  C
 
"Upper Octave Boogie":  INTERMEDIATE / ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE, although ADVANCED BEGINNERS will be able to get most of it.  An original composition that breaks open the upper octave and make it available for further exploration.  Please check out the free preview available on either Tradebit page below!
    Harp:  C
 
"Buford Chapel Breakdown":  a gospel-flavored original blues, with three complete choruses.  For ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE and fearless INTERMEDIAT players.  This is an exact transcription of what I play on the recording, which can be purchased on iTunes and it part of my debut solo CD, KICK AND STOMP.  (Note:  This lesson includes a three-chorus extract from the original recording, so you can hear exactly what I do in the studio.) 
    harp:  Bb

"Help Me":  This is arguably Sonny Boy Williamson's best-known song--a harmonica blues staple of blues bands and jam sessions the world over.  An amazing amount of harmonica knowledge is packed into this 12-bar solo:  warbles, angular triplets, chuck-chuck accents.  For INTERMEDIATE and ADVANCED INTERMEDIATE players.

“Messin’ With the Kid":  I've tabbed out Junior Wells's two-chorus solo and adapted the guitar riff from bars 11 & 12.  This is an amazing, challenging solo--so challenging that I encourage you to slow it to 80% of full speed using the Amazing Slow Downer application.  Great rewards await students who embrace this challenge; Junior's approach, properly understood and adapted to your needs, can significantly expand your bag of tricks.

   Harp:  F
   Video:  www.tradebit.com/filedetail.php/3268319-messin-with-the-kid-mov
   Tab:
www.tradebit.com/filedetail.php/3268318-messin-with-the-kid-gussow-pdf
 
"St. Louis Blues":  This is the most famous blues song in the world, bar none.  W.C. Handy's 1914 hit deserves a serious blues harp arrangement; this is it.  An incredible value, this lesson focuses on a four-page tab (the longest currently offered at MBH):  three 12-bar verses with that distinctive, Latin-flavored, 16-bar, minor-key bridge thrown in.  This is a really cool solo performance piece.  (NOTE:  The second verse contains several 6 hole overblows.  If you're not an overblower, you can simply repeat the first verse.) 
That's all for now.  I've got several new videos in the works and will have more for you before Christmas.  Enjoy your holidays, eat some turkey and trimmings if you get the chance, stay healthy, and please please PLEASE find a way of not fighting with your in-laws--unless they're full-time tongue blockers, in which case go right ahead and battle.
I'll catch you down the line.

--Adam



402 Meadowlawn Drive Oxford, MS 38655 www.modernbluesharmonica.com asgussow@aol.com

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