Daily Studies for All Saxophones
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.58 (940 Votes) |
Asin | : | B00EUT256E |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 581 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-06-07 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Scales, arpeggios, tonguing, and playing in tune are essentials covered here in a manner that should lead to ease in using the language of jazz.. A professor of jazz studies at Western Michigan University, Kynaston lays a foundation necessary before the saxophone student can venture very far into jazz
Every saxophone player's bible. Rommel Nunez I came across this book at the 2015 TMEA convention while looking around for exercise books that weren't too complicated and convoluted with extraneous information. This book has it all. Tone, dexterity, phrasing, interval, and range exercises--it provides no shortage of aspects of your playing to work on. It truly is the one stop guide to becoming a great musician.. Jesse said Thick font, not very easy on the eyes. Very nice book. I purchased this as Texas State University required me to, but the font is so thick which can be a little aggravating at first.. ASC said The exercises in the Kynaston book look like they were handwritten. The font (if that term can be applied) that the notes are written in is more difficult to read than most other music instruction books, Voxman's Selected Duets for Saxophone, Vols 1 and "The exercises in the Kynaston book look like they were handwritten" according to ASC. The font (if that term can be applied) that the notes are written in is more difficult to read than most other music instruction books, Voxman's Selected Duets for Saxophone, Vols 1 and 2, for example. The exercises in the Kynaston book look like they were handwritten, they are very dark, and there is little spacing between them.. , for example. The exercises in the Kynaston book look like they were handwritten, they are very dark, and there is little spacing between them.