

🎵 Elevate your fingerpicking game with 100 iconic songs—because your guitar deserves the spotlight!
This comprehensive 408-page fingerpicking guitar songbook features 100 timeless solo arrangements across multiple genres, presented in both tablature and standard notation. Tailored for intermediate players, it offers a rich repertoire to expand skills and personalize technique, making it an essential companion for any serious guitarist.




| Best Sellers Rank | #197,326 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #54 in Folk & Traditional Songbooks #268 in Guitar Songbooks #363 in Guitars (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 799 Reviews |
E**W
Terrific
Outstanding selection of songs arrangements and great condition
J**N
Great Arrangements for Solo Guitar
This is not a technique book so if you are unfamiliar with finger style technique, you'll need to find a primer somewhere else. However, once you have some technique, you need some repertoire. This book is chock full of great material. I've been learning solo finger style songs for a short while now. Much of the material I learn can be extremely easy to impossible. I would grade the arrangements in this book about intermediate. These songs are instantly recognizeable and the more intimately you know the song, the easier it is to learn. I'm at least familiar with over half the songs in this book, and the other half will provide good future study material. One issue you may encounter is there are no "suggested" fingerings. For those who don't know, suggested fingerings are little notes written into the notation that help you figure out which finger to use to navigate tricky passages. These are very helpful especially if you are like me and try to finger a chord the way you learned them in chord books, then get your fingers all twistered up trying to keep the melody going. You'll often find the chords may be played in a more unorthodox fingering in order to facilitate the moving melody lines. Tip - Keep a pencil handy and make these fingering notes for yourself.
S**O
Great for beginners
I've been self-teaching my guitar for a few years now. I initially started off with Fingerpicking songbooks from Hal Leonard. This thick volume is very similar to those books. If you are a beginner to fingerstyle guitar, this volume may be a useful practice tool. I was a big fan of these types of songbooks when I was new to guitar and especially fingerstyle solo guitar. However, now that I'm a bit more skilled, the series is not challenging enough for me. The arrangements are mostly single notes arpeggios with an occasional thumb-picked baseline here and there. Arrangements are mostly limited to the first five frets with a focus on the first three frets. The songs are recognizable but very simplistic. For a beginner, it is great to be able to play more contemporary tunes. However, as you progress these arrangements quickly grow repetitive and tiresome. If you're a beginner interested in fingerpicking guitar and don't already have some of the Hal Leonard Fingerpicking song books (i.e Fingerpicking Acoustic Rock - Guitar Solo , Fingerpicking Pop: 15 Songs Arranged for Solo Guitar in Standard Notation & Tab ), this volume has quite a selection of songs to keep you entertained for a while. I had many of the Hal Leanoard Fingerpicking books and a lot of the songs in that series are replicated in this volume. (You can check the Hal Leonard website for the complete songlist) If you've feel you moved beyond simple fingerstyle patterns and have your sights at more complicated fingerstyle arrangements like Sungha Jung, Chet Atkins or Tommy Emmanuel OR you are looking for companion fingerstyle guitar I'd probably skip this.
J**S
Good for sight-reading
Found a couple of Arrangements online that were part of this book so I decided to get the whole thing. I really like the song selection in this compilation. Sometimes the arrangement seems a little confusing and more difficult than it needs to be. Other than that it is just a fun book that will bring hours of good practice.
R**3
Great Song Selection
I love the song selection. There are a lot of tasteful ballads , and a lot of all time greats. Just wish there are chord diagrams, since a lot of songs incur unusual chords. I will take my time to slowly learn most of the songs. Even if I manage to play and sing to half of them, it would have been great value. the prints are large enough and clear.
M**Z
A lifetime of beautiful songs
I've only been spankin the plank now for 3 years and I'm stretching myself every which way. For the quiet, peaceful, acoustic tunes, I love this book. I'm only on my 2nd song so far and I can say that it's challenging and truly beautiful when played right. I'm still awaiting for that part! I see 2 songs that I've been playing differently and the versions here are much more involved. I'm really going to give every tune an attempt.
A**R
Great Music for all Solo Guitarist.
This is one of the best written song book for solo guitar. The music repertoire extends from the late 60s to 2000's. It arrangements notations and chords sounds like the recordings. This is an excellent book for intermediate to advance players. As a professional player I love the music because it is arranged in a nice simple form and give me flexibility to embellish and improvise the music. Thank you for your wonderful transcriptions; it's not an easy task to arrange music for guitar as an solo instrument.
R**W
Same mode
If you like to play one or 2 notes at a time, this is for you. These songs are not arragenents for guitar, they are just melodies with the chords on top. You can strum the chords.... and finger pick the melody, but the sound is not rich (although I do that some times...I do not feel real satisfaction). I suppose that with time and dedication you can come up with your own arrangenent, but I am not at that level... My point is that the songs are not arraged for the guitar. 90% of the books I see fit this type of scheme even when they describe it as arrangements. Due to that, I started to buy arragements from authors that wrote specifically songs for the guitar and that is what I recommend (like Andres Segovia, Agustin Mangore, Francisco Tarrega, etc). They are a lot more difficult but a lot more satisfying..you really learn the the guitar.. I have not found a book with that type of arragements for popular or midern music... one note: zif you by the authirs I am recommending, you need some playing base... not necessarilly formal (I like to just learn by my self as a form of therapy) but you need some knowledge reading and playing the guitar (this may shock you but tab is not recomended unless you are really fenomenal or you have a natural skill). Of course, it is my opinion and regardless, you get to your own level and have fun and satisfaction in the way with practice and dedication. Have fun.
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