Your prescription for the guitar playing blues






Dear Tony,

Thank you for having such a great product! My name is Rick Morris, and I play Guitar in a cover band in the north Atlanta area. Our name is MidLife Crisis, and we are having a blast playing music for people. Your leads have helped me immensely!

THANK YOU !

Rick Morris
Atlanta, GA



I am just writing to say that once I eventually worked out how to use it, it is simplicity itself, and I am living proof that it is simple for blind people to use as well.

Without a shadow of a doubt I will be ordering all and any CD's that you bring out, it is the most perfect way of learning guitar lead that I have ever seen.

Finally, I would like to thank you for all the help I was given along the way, and hope that you bring out many more CD's. Thank you

Scottie
London, England


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Featured Songs and Artists

Ritchie Valens – La Bamba

Ritchie Valens’ short career in Pop music lasted less than nine months, but during that time, the young Mexican American singer/songwriter managed to record some of the greatest and most influential songs of the 1950’s, and collected two million-seller songs. His life of only seventeen years was cut short in a tragic airplane crash on February 3, 1959

His first single, the self-penned tune 'Come On Let's Go', sold 750,000 copies and endeared Ritchie to the hearts of teenagers all over the USA .

Shortly after this, he wrote, “Donna,” a song for his high school sweetheart, Donna Ludwig. The song was recorded as a single and rapidly climbed the 1958 hit charts. It became his biggest all-time hit and his first million-seller. The flip side of the release was, “La Bamba,” a traditional Spanish song, with a rock n' roll beat added to it. “La Bamba” also charted and became another million-seller.

The La Bamba guitar tab reveals the creative union of a traditional Spanish folk melody with a rock ‘n’ roll rhythm underneath. The combination produces a pop song with a vibrant pulse, the necessary ingredients for a hit song. La Bamba guitar licks – derivations from Spanish folk motifs - permeate throughout the song, and capture the essence of late Fifties era rock n' roll music. The La Bamba guitar solo is considered classic in the rock and pop repertoire.
 

Ritchie showed considerable talent at an early age. When he was twelve years old, he had already written several songs, mostly inspired by Mexican music. He became a feature at school assemblies, singing and playing the guitar. When Ritchie was seventeen, he was spotted by Bob Keane, president of Del Fi Records in Hollywood, and offered recording contract. Bob Keane also became his manager. This meeting is skillfully dramatized in the 1987 film, La Bamba, starring Lou Diamond Phillips as Ritchie Valenzuela. His name was later changed to Valens.

In 1958, Keane took Ritchie to Gold Star Studios in Hollywood, CA, with a full band backing him. The first songs recorded at Gold Star, at a single studio session one afternoon in July 1958 were "Come On, Let's Go", an original (credited to Valens/Kuhn, Keane's real name), and "Framed." Pressed and released within days of the recording session taking place, the record was a huge success. Valens' next record, a double A-side, which was the final record to be released in his lifetime, had the songs "Donna" ( a real girlfriend), coupled with "La Bamba.”

Ritchie Valens’ guitar music will always stand out as a one-of-a-kind sound, and a sound that continues to enrich music fans everywhere.

To order the La Bamba guitar lesson or to see what other Ritchie Valens’ songs are available, please check the Song Library page on our website.



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