Tag Archives: drum set songbook

September Lesson Materials

Since I’m going to be teaching the Fall Session of Rock Band at one of my studios, I created a new ROCK BAND page (under FOR MY STUDENTS). It includes materials such as “Notes on the Low E and A Strings”, “12-Bar Blues in G, D, A, and Am”, “Strumming Rhythms Index, Book 1 Summary”, “TNT by AC/DC”, and an easy version of “Nothing Else Matters by Metallica”. I will continue to add materials (mostly songs) as I finish them. All of the materials that are instrument-specific will still be found on my GUITAR, BASS GUITAR, and DRUM SET pages.

For Drum Set, I moved 12-Bar Blues from my Recital Songbook to my Method Book, since I have 12-Bar Blues in my Ukulele, Guitar, and Bass Guitar Method Books, not in the Recital Songbooks. There is a version at the end of each Level that incorporates what the students have learned up to that point. I posted new versions of Levels 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.

The Guitar and Ukulele Recital Songbooks, Book 1 are now ready to sell. I posted a PDF of the first 6 songs so that students can still try try them out before deciding if they want to buy them. The PDFs also include some blank pages for songwriting, and there are still the recordings of songs 1 to 5 to listen to and/or play along with.

PDFs of all of these materials can be found under the FOR MY STUDENTS tab, on the ROCK BAND, GUITAR, DRUM SET, and UKULELE pages. As always, please let me know if you use any of these teaching materials with your students, and if you find them helpful, or if you have any questions or comments.

June Lesson Materials

Last month I had the fun idea to write a song for my students that is a medley of Mary Had a Little Lamb and Hot Cross Buns. The verses are Mary Had a Little Lamb (the three-both version) and the choruses are Hot Cross Buns, both with traditional harmony. For the bridge I used Mary Had a Little Lamb, but this time harmonized it in the relative minor key, and also used the version with the high note. It is intended to be sung and played on guitar or ukulele (words, melody, chords, and strumming rhythm), but can also be played by piano and bass guitar (if they know chords). I also transcribed I Can’t Help Falling in Love with You, as performed by Twenty One Pilots. Both of these songs are available in the keys of C Major and G Major on my UKULELE and GUITAR pages under the FOR MY STUDENTS tab.

In my last post I mentioned that I had created Recital Songbooks for guitar, ukulele, and drum set. One of the additions I’ve made since then is that I added 12-Bar Blues to the Drum Set Recital Songbook at the end of each section. There is a version with quarter notes on the cymbals, one with 8th notes on the cymbals, one with bass drum variations, and one that adds fills. The biggest addition I am making to those books is that I am making recordings of each of the songs in the Guitar and Ukulele Recital Songbooks (drum set students can play along with any song since the different chords don’t matter, as long as the drum set students use any of the songs in 4/4 time that are not 12-Bar Blues). I have already posted Ukulele Recital Songs 1-5, and I will continue releasing about 5 songs every week. Next week (the week of July 14th) I will release recordings of Guitar Recital Songs 1-5, the following week (the week of July 21st) I will release recordings of Ukulele Recital Songs 6-10, and the last week in July (the week of July 28th) I will release recordings of Guitar Recital Songs 6-10. After that I will continue to make new recordings as I add new songs to the songbooks. I’m also creating new pages for recordings called GUITAR RECITAL SONGBOOK and UKULELE RECITAL SONGBOOK under the FOR MY STUDENTS tab.

As always, please let me know if you use any of these teaching materials with your students, and if you find them helpful, or if you have any questions or comments.

Late April and May Lesson Materials

For the second half of April and all of May, I spent a lot of my time finishing a number of my method books. For Ukulele I have Chord-Strumming Books 1 and 2, and Note-Reading Books 1 and 2. For Guitar I have Chord-Strumming Books 1, 2, 3, and 4, Note-Reading Books 1 and 2, and Riff Exercises (formerly “Beginning Riff Exercises”) Book 1. I also completed Strumming Rhythms Index Books 1 and 2 which can be used with Ukulele and Guitar.

I also overhauled my Guitar and Ukulele pages, partially because I removed all of the books which are now for sale. On both pages I added “How to Tune…” PDFs, updated the Karate Belt requirements to include pages from the Strumming Rhythms Index, and on the Guitar page I added the Blue and Purple Belt requirements. I removed all of my Chord-Strumming materials, except for the “Practice Instructions and Fretboard” pages (in case anyone loses theirs and needs to print a new copy) and “Unit 1 (part 1)” (so that any student can work on their White Belt requirements, even if they haven’t bought the book yet). On both pages I added Chord-Strumming Recital Songbooks (which I will talk more about later) and kept the Progressions Using Only Three Chords, so that students who are having a difficult time learning new chords can make the most of the chords they do know. I removed the Strumming Rhythms Index except for page 1, so that students can still sample it for free before deciding if they want to buy the book, and on the Guitar page there are finger-picking exercises. Like with the chord-strumming books, I removed all of my Note-Reading materials, except for the “Practice Instructions and Fretboard” pages  and “Unit 1 (part 1)” (also part of the White Belt requirements). Both pages still have PDFs of Two Hanukkah Songs and Amazing Grace, and the Guitar page has a sample of Riff Exercises and all of my Advanced Exercises.

My new project last month was to create Recital Songbooks for Guitar, Ukulele, and Drum Set (with Piano and Bass Guitar Recital Songbooks coming in the future). These will be ongoing and I will continue to add more and more songs as time goes on. The initial idea was to provide songs for beginners to be able to play in a recital, even if they only know a few basics. I use standard short song form (to also teach them about verses, choruses and bridges) and follow along with my method books to incorporate new concepts (chords, rhythms, etc.) as they are learning them, so no matter where they are in the book, they are able to utilize what they know in a musical context.

I finished my Mallet Instruments (Treble Clef) Book 1 and it is now ready for sale, but Unit 1 (part 1) is still available to print for free as a sample. Unit 5: The Key of B-Flat Major is also done and available to print, and I also started working on a Bass Clef version (Level 1: The Key of C Major is available to print).

Throughout all of my method books, I made a conceptual change and now instead of referring to each section as a “UNIT” I know use the word “Level” (there may still be use of the work “Unit” in older PDFs). I talked with a few colleagues about it to get their opinions and we all agreed on the switch. Some of their thoughts were: “Unit sounds like a chore. Level sounds like when I get to the end, I’m closer to reaching the candy in the top shelf of the cabinet.” “Unit seems like a larger chunk that may be overwhelming to try and accomplish. I think of level as just one more step or rung of the ladder to get to that new skill.” “…level in reference to video games.” “UNIT just signifies a section (and sounds like homework) but LEVEL implies improvement and ascending.”

PDFs of all of these materials can be found under the FOR MY STUDENTS tab, on the GUITAR, UKULELE, DRUM SET, and MALLETS pages. As always, please let me know if you use any of these teaching materials with your students, and if you find them helpful, or if you have any questions or comments.