| | |  | FOLK MUSIC | Home » » Guitar Portraits The Music and Thoughts of Buster B. Jones, Stefan Grossman and John Miller | | | | | | | Description: | | In 1988, Buster Brad Jones entered Guitar Player Magazine's International Guitar Competition with his own composition Back Porch Boogie and a rendition of Limehouse Blues. He entered on a whim, at the last minute, using a $1.50 K-Mart cassette tape and a boom box. There were almost 900 entries, and he won on the first ballot. In 1990, he won the National Fingerpicking Championship at Winfield, Kansas. In the last years he has performed with Chet Atkins, Tommy Jones, Marcel Dadi, Thom Bresh and John Knowles. He is a regular at the annual conventions in Nashville and France of the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society. In France they have dubbed him LE MACHINE GUN.
Stefan Grossman has been recording, performing and writing about acoustic fingerstyle techniques and styles for over forty years. During the period from 1965-1975 he studied and traveled with some of the legendary figures in the story of blues guitar i.e. Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi John Hurt, Fred McDowell, Son House and Skip James. In the last years he has recorded and performed solo as well as with John Renbourn, Paul Simon, Sam Mitchell Jo Ann Kelly, Duck Baker and Mickey Baker.
At the age of 12, John Miller was inspired to play the guitar after seeing Mississippi John Hurt perform at the Philadelphia Folk Festival. He bought his first guitar at the age of 16 and launched into an intensive period of study of Country Blues guitar, learning the music of John Hurt, Mance Lipscomb, Bo Carter, Blind Blake and other greats. By the time he was twenty-seven, John had released five solo albums to international critical acclaim. Those albums ranged from Country Blues and Old Time country music to the songs of George Gershwin. For the next 15 years, John focused on teaching, founding two music camps, composing and building a vocabulary in Jazz and Latin music. | | | Product Details: | | | Actors:
| Various Artists | | Director:
| Assorted | | Format:
| Color, DVD, NTSC | | Language:
| English | | Number of Discs:
| 1 | | Studio:
| Vestapol | | Run Time:
| 103 minutes | | DVD Release Date:
| February 24, 2004 | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 1 reviews |
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- Mint | | | $119.99 | New | |
| New | |
| $17.19 | New | | | $17.20 | New | | | $19.98 | New | | | $20.25 | New | | | $20.29 | New | | | $24.95 This item is eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. | New | | | $29.45 | New | | | $119.99 | New | |
| Used | |
| $13.50 | Used
- VeryGood | | | $19.75 | Used
- Mint | | | $19.76 | Used
- Good | | | $29.45 | Used
- Mint | |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Buster B. Jones, Stefan Frossman, John Miller Guitar Portraits.Aug 03, 2011
By Ken Thought originaly, that all three might be discussing music and ideas together and performing and sharing tunes together. But all are treated seperately. This is quite ok. Buster comes first and I knew nothing of him to begin with. He's an absolute machine of course and very interesting particularly his Merl Travis, Chet Atkins and Jerry Reed demo. Wonder if Buster is familiar with our incredible machine from Australia ie Tommy Emannuel?
Stefan Grossman has performed and talked about his influences and particular pieces he plays throughout his whole output in recording and instructional catalogue over the years, so nothing was new coming from him. Still, for those not familiar with Grossman, they will get much from his discussion and performance pieces. Apart from his great Blues For the Mann piece which is his most difficult offering, he plays well within himself and on such a DVD as this, that is not a bad thing. John Miller like Grossman presents with restraint in his offering. But his contribution like Grossman's is no less inspiring and interesting for guitarists and enthusiasts. As said elswhere, he's an absolute champion of his craft.
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