Does anyone know of a Gypsy chord book that is in the same, simple and easy illustrated style, and as nearly extensive, as Robin Nolan's Gig Book? I like the Gig Book because it shows the grilles and where and what fingers should be on the fret and in mostly three-note chords. I'm self-taught on the guitar, so these easily played and easily illustrated grilles are extremely helpful.
I want to learn more Gypsy jazz chords to tunes not available in the Gig Book and am also interested in playing other chord interpretations. I have difficulty with Colin Cosimini's Chord Books because only a small percentage of the chords are actually illustrated, and Michael's Horowitz's Gypsy Rhythm book (Vol 1) illustrates only 8 songs.
Comments
Here it is. (PDF)
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
http://www.grilles-manouches.net/index.html
Merci Beaucoup!
Take it for what you will - I'm still a babe myself. But I feel I've gained immeasurably from these works - would never really have been able to pick up a grille, fakebook, etc., and just go, without having the chord and progression vocabulary well in hand.
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
Best regards!
P.S. I have been performing regularly with a gypsy jazz group, and getting paid. I've just been playing what I'm capable of playing, mostly from making use of Nolan's Gig Book and what I can pick up from watching Youtube videos and studying where the musicians are on the fretboard.
Maybe it's just me, but i think this is the reply that hits the nail on the head. It's the first one that stays most on point.
To the OP: Nolan's book contains just about every chord permutation used in every gypsy tune out there. It's not a matter of usung the chords he shows you JUST for the tunes he shows them to you in, but learning them so that you can spply them anytime.
Believe me, i'm having my own problems learning this genre, so i shouldnt be dispensing advice, but i think this poster responded to your question most directly.