bootstrap template
Bon Jovi - Greatest Hits Songbook (Guitar Recorded Versions)

ebooks Bon Jovi - Greatest Hits Songbook (Guitar Recorded Versions) by Bon Jovi in Arts-Photography

Description

(Fake Book). This follow-up to the popular Your First Fake Book includes over 100 more great songs that even beginning-level musicians can enjoy playing! It features the same larger notation with simplified harmonies and melodies; all songs in the key of C; and introductions for each song; to add a more finished sound to the arrangements. The songs are in many musical styles and include: Alfie * All I Ask of You * All My Loving * Always on My Mind * Autumn in New York * Blue Skies * Cabaret * Crazy * Fields of Gold * Go the Distance * God Bless the Child * Great Balls of Fire * Hey; Good Lookin * How Deep Is Your Love * Ill Be There * If * Imagine * Jailhouse Rock * Kansas City * Memory * Michelle * Misty * My Girl * My Heart Will Go On * People * Stand by Me * Star Dust * Tangerine * Tears in Heaven * Tennessee Waltz * Unchained Melody * What a Wonderful World * Whatll I Do? * Youve Got a Friend * and more.


#1479420 in eBooks 2011-08-01 2011-08-01File Name: B00G9586AQ


Review
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful. I never saw number 935 beforeBy sailing up chit speakPhotography is our perfect technology for making everything look this tiny. There could be a new subculture of people familiar with the numbers from one to a thousand who can build up a feeling like a Gordon Lightfoot song:Ive had a hundred more like youso dont be blue.Ill have a thousand fore Im through. For Lovin MeMany of the paintings shown in 1000 Portraits of Genius (2011) by Victoria Charles and Klaus H. Carl are self-portraits of an artist. Number 827 shows Richard Gerstl (1883-1908) in 1908 like the kind of picture a teacher who confiscated a cell phone for causing disruption in a classroom might find if any of her students were likely to show up on the same page as two self-portraits of Egon Schiele (1890-1928).There are photographs of sculptures like the marble Abraham Lincoln (1922) in the memorial in Washington; D.C.; shown in number 878. Balthus painted numbers 886; 887; and 956; one of which shows The King of Cats (1935).Pictures have gone in some weird directions. Number 888 is Salvador Dali (1904-1989); Spanish; Portrait of Gala with Two Lamb Chops Balanced on her Shoulder; 1933. Oil on panel; 6.8 x 8.8 cm.Only the final portion of the book claims to be contemporary. Culture that claims to have an antiquity; some middle ages; baroque; and something that was modern before what this book calls "mass trauma and a redistribution of power across the world" (p. 461) that feels like the battle of Gog and Magog for the greatest cultivation of stupidity "leading to the escalation of a military artillery build-up and several outbursts of armed violence; primarily the Vietnam War" (p. 461) has had an upmanship that "imposed an evolution on the modern human psyche." (p. 461).Philosophy as a wordy autobiography of modern philosophers can only produce crimes against humor until copycat crimes become the way in which "Appropriation and imitation are commonly explored within contemporary portraits. Popular historical portraits are often reproduced as a form of satire or social criticism." (p. 461). Giggle if you can.

© Copyright 2025 Non Fiction Books. All Rights Reserved.