Table of Contents
Remembering Juan Tizol (1900-1984), jazz trombonist and composer.

Best Sheet Music download from our Library.

Juan Tizol (short biography)
Juan Tizol Martínez (22 January 1900 – 23 April 1984)[1] was a Puerto Rican jazz trombonist and composer. He is best known as a member of Duke Ellington’s big band, and for writing the jazz standards “Caravan”, “Pyramid”, and “Perdido”.
Juan Tizol was born on January 22, 1900 in the city of Vega Baja, Puerto Rico, into an illustrious family. The impact of the Tizols on the island is confirmed by several streets and squares that bear the name of eminent members of the lineage: doctors, politicians and musicians. In this last section is Manuel Tizol Márquez.
Come join us now, and enjoy playing your beloved music and browse through great scores of every level and styles!
Can’t find the songbook you’re looking for? Please, email us at: sheetmusiclibrarypdf@gmail.com We’d like to help you!
Manuel Tizol is considered by respected musicologists as the main personality of instrumental music in Puerto Rico during the first half of the 20th century, both in the classical and popular genres. In the first section he founded the San Juan Concert Society , which had an orchestra capable of performing the repertoires of all the great European masters of classical music. In addition, he established and directed the first Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra official . In the second field he formed a dance orchestra and led the San Juan Municipal Band . With both groups he made recordings for the Columbia and Victor labels , becoming one of the pioneering national artists in the recording industry.
Manuel Tizol was Juan Tizol ‘s uncle and he took care of his musical training. He taught him to play the violin and euphonium, as well as to read and write music. From the age of 10, Juan was a member of his uncle’s dance orchestra, playing the violin or euphonium at all types of social events.

Please, subscribe to our Library.
If you are already a subscriber, please, check our NEW SCORES’ page every month for new sheet music. THANK YOU!
Around 1916, a German orchestra visited Puerto Rico and it is very possible that Juan Tizol heard a piston trombone played by a musician for the first time. Whatever the case, at that time it is documented that Juan played the aforementioned instrument in the orchestra of the Old San Juan Teatro Apolo .
In 1920, Juan Tizol was part of a band made up entirely of Puerto Rican musicians with the aim of touring the US. Once they arrived in Washington they were hired by the Howard Theater to play at the shows and to accompany the bands. silent movies Once they ran out of this work, the band disbanded.
Juan Tizol remained in Washington and there were several bands that required his services. One of them was the White Brothers’ Band , whose members included trumpeter Arthur Whetsol . This musician was the one who told Duke Ellington about Juan Tizol . The result was that he hired him for his orchestra. It was the year 1929 .

The first thing Duke Ellington did when Juan Tizol joined his orchestra was to name him “ chief copyist . ‘s music into sheet music ” He was in charge of transcribing Duke . The trumpeter, Rex Stewart , summed it up this way:
“ Tizol ‘s orchestra was an important wheel in the gear that moved Duke . He had to transcribe into sheet music the ideas that his boss tried to make clear. This was not an easy job since there were times when these avant-garde concepts could not be written. Tizol then wrote a kind of sketch and later spent hours trying to faithfully interpret what the “boss” had tried to explain to him and translate it into a score.”

In 1933, musicologist HA Overstreet stayed with the Ellington Orchestra on one of its tours. As a result of his observations he wrote a book titled The Duke Reader in 1995. And among other things he says:
“…Juan Tizol had been busy writing the score for each musician’s arrangement of the trombone, saxophone and trumpet sections. Sometimes indicating them schematically for later elaboration. This approximate score served as a reference to resolve the discussions, since these appeared several times, until the entire arrangement was completed. These arguments, which are politely called exchanges of ideas, were pure and simple arguments. ‘s scores When the arrangement was finished and Tizol went from schematic to definitive , Ellington detected any deviation from them in the event that a musician did not adhere to them.
The first recording that Juan Tizol made (except for Back and Tan , for the short of the same title) was September 16, 1929. In that session, four songs were performed, one of them being titled The Duke Steps Out composed by Duke Ellington , Johnny Hodges and Cootie Williams .
Juan Tizol ‘s orchestra has an important role in the history of jazz, but not as an instrumentalist in Duke Ellington , but as a composer while he was a member of it.
I will start by naming his composition Caravan, which according to his own words he had already written before leaving Puerto Rico.
Tizol initially failed to appreciate the commercial potential of his song to the point that he sold his rights to Irving Mills ‘s manager, – who, apart from being Duke Ellington owned his own music publishing company – for $25. When Caravan became a big seller, Mills gave Tizol a portion of his royalties.

‘s first recording Caravan was made by a combo called Barney Bigard & His Jazzopaters in which all its members were also members of the Ellington orchestra , including himself: Cootie Williams , trumpet; Juan Tizol , valve trombone; Barney Bigard, clarinet; Harry Carney , baritone sax; Duke Ellington , piano; Billy Taylor, double bass; Sonny Greer , drums. The recording was made on December 19, 1936.
Duke Ellington & His Orchestra: Caravan (1937)
Duke Ellington ‘s composition at the moment had no intention of recording Tizol , but its exotic rhythm led him to perform it at the Cotton Club . The club parades were broadcast on radio throughout the country and listeners were dazzled by the song. This led Ellington to record it with his orchestra and this happened on May 14, 1937: Rex Stewart , cornet; Wallace Jones , Cootie Williams , trumpets; Lawrence Brown , Tricky Sam Nanton , Juan Tizol , trombones; Barney Bigard , clarinet; Johnny Hodges , Otto Hardwick , alto saxes, Harry Carney , baritone sax; Duke Ellington , piano; Fred Guy , guitar; Hayes Alvis or Billy Taylor , double bass; Sonny Greer , drums.

Caravan entered the top 20 and Duke Ellington kept it in the band’s repertoire until the rest of their days. recordings He left more than 100 Caravan . One of them a few weeks before his death.
It would be mid-1941 when several members of Duke Ellington ‘s orchestra were trying to find a jazz club in the alleys of New Orleans (where they had given a concert) and after kicking around for a while, Juan Tizol asked if anyone knew Where they were, one of the musicians answered that on Perdido Street (that’s how it is in Spanish). Tizol , whose native language was Spanish, smiled fangly when he realized that they were lost right on Perdido Street.
Duke Ellington – Perdido
The writer Stuart Nicholson relates in his book Reminiscing in Tempo: A portrait of Duke Ellington that Juan Tizol told him that he wrote a song while riding the train which he titled Perdido in reference to Perdido Street in New Orleans.

Perdido , given its harmonic structure, is one of the most used by jazz musicians of all eras and styles to perform in jam sessions .
band played it The first time the Ellington was in a radio program held on December 3, 1941. Almost two months later, on January 21, 1942, the aforementioned orchestra entered a Chicago studio where they recorded four songs. . One of them was Lost. When the single that contained it was released, it reached number 21 on the list of best-selling songs.
In all the books, essays, and articles about Juan Tizol, the confrontation he had with Charles Mingus always appears.
In February 1953, the double bassist joined Ellington ‘s band as a replacement. In the subsequent rehearsal, Juan Tizol gave him a sheet of music with the notes he had to play in a certain part of a song. When the time came Mingus ignored the score and played the notes an octave higher . This change infuriated Tizol and he went to the double bassist to tell him that if he wanted the double bass to sound like a cello he would have hired a cellist. A scuffle broke out between them, but it didn’t get any bigger.

However, Charles Mingus ‘s autobiography titled “ Less than a Dog” describes a completely different account of the confrontation. According to the double bassist , when Tizol addressed him, he blurted out: “You, like all blacks, don’t know how to read a score” (an absurd phrase when it comes to the Ellington orchestra) and also showed him a knife. Mingus did not give up and went to a wall where he grabbed a fire axe. Tizol ran away and then Mingus approached the chair where the trombonist was sitting and broke it in two with an ax blow.

‘s book When everything had calmed down, and according to Mingus , Ellington said to the double bassist: “For a moment I hoped that you had decided to start playing, but instead you broke Juan ‘s chair in two with a ax Seriously, Charles , that’s destructive. Everyone knows that Juan has a knife, but no one has taken him seriously. He likes to take it out and show it to people, you understand? I’ve never fired anyone, but you have to leave the band. I have enough problems already. Juan is an old problem, but I know how to handle him, but it seems that you have some new tricks that I don’t know about, so I am forced to ask you to be so kind and tender your resignation.
Charles Mingus ‘s band only lasted three days in Ellington . Scholars of jazz history give little credence to the account of the Tizol/Mingus incident as it appears in the double bassist’s book.
Juan Tizol left the Ellington Orchestra in 1944 because his wife, Rosebud , became ill and he wanted to spend more time with her at their home in Los Angeles. At that time, Harry James had his center of activities in that city and offered the trombonist a position in his orchestra, which he accepted. In the end the musical relationship between James and Tizol lasted until 1951. During that time they recorded several albums together. One of the songs was a composition written by both of them titled Keb-Lah and arranged by Tizol (which has a Caravan feel to it ). The recording was on July 5, 1946.

That same year, 1951, Juan Tizol ‘s band returned to his position in Ellington , and it was for a reason that the latter tells it this way in his book “Music is my Lover” from 1973:
“In 1951, Johnny Hodges , Lawrence Brown and Sonny Greer left the band at the same time. Shortly after, I traveled to Los Angeles and received a call from the Tizols : “Come have dinner with us.” At his house Tizol told me: “All you have to do is ask us and Louis Bellson , Willie Smith and I will leave Harry James to play with you.”
That was the solution they had in mind.
Naturally I was worried about who it might affect and who might be offended by something like that, since I had never had the habit of stealing musicians from other orchestras, but the situation at that moment was a real emergency. The truth is that that sounded too good to be true. If I had been talking to people I didn’t know I would have suspected that they were setting me up of some kind, but I knew Tizol and Rosebud perfectly well . In addition to having Juan Tizol again , Willie Smith was the best alto saxophone player in the world and everyone said the same about drummer Louis Bellson.
We put the plan in motion and everything went well.”
This second stage of Tizol with Ellington lasted three years, after which the trombonist settled on the North American West Coast where he remained until the end of his days. He made sporadic appearances live and in recording studios with the Harry James , Nelson Riddle and Louis Bellson orchestras . There was a third stage of Tizol with Ellington in the 60s and 61s in which he participated in some record recordings.

Juan Tizol left this world on April 23, 1984 in the city of Inglewood, California, two years after losing his wife Rosebud.
Please, subscribe to our Library.
If you are already a subscriber, please, check our NEW SCORES’ page every month for new sheet music. THANK YOU!
According to Will Friedwald, Frank Sinatra’s biographer, Tizol was in fact the first prominent orchestral composer to fuse Latin Music with Big Band Jazz Music.

To demonstrate that the musicians of Ellington’s orchestra, and he himself, learned very well the lessons on hot Latin rhythms that Juan Tizol taught them, I leave you the song composed by the trombonist titled Moon over Cuba and that Ellington and his boys recorded on July 2, 1941 in Hollywood.
Moon Over Cuba (1999 Remastered)
Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra.
Personnel:
Trombone: Joe Nanton Trombone: Lawrence Brown Trombone, Composer: Juan Tizol Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone: Barney Bigard Alto Saxophone, Clarinet: Johnny Hodges Alto Saxophone: Otto Hardwick Tenor Saxophone: Ben Webster Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Clarinet: Harry Carney Piano, Composer: Duke Ellington Guitar: Fred Guy Bass: Jimmie Blanton Drums: Sonny Greer.
Juan Tizol Discography (on Wikipedia)
As sideman
With Louis Bellson
Journey Into Love (Norgran, 1954)
Drumorama! (Verve, 1957)
Music, Romance and Especially Love (Verve, 1957)
The Brilliant Bellson Sound (Verve, 1960)
Louis Bellson Swings Jule Styne (Verve, 1960)
Live in Stereo June 28, 1959, at the Flamingo Hotel Vol. 1 (Jazz Hour, 1992)
With Duke Ellington
Ellington Uptown (Columbia, 1951)
Ellington '55 (Capitol, 1954)
Seattle Concert (RCA Victor, 1954)
Ellington Showcase (Capitol, 1956)
Liberian Suite and a Tone Parallel to Harlem (Columbia, 1956)
Piano in the Background (Columbia, 1960)
Selections from Peer Gynt Suites Nos. 1 & 2 and Suite Thursday (Columbia, 1960)
The Nutcracker Suite (Columbia, 1960)
Paris Blues (United Artists, 1961)
With Harry James
Dancing in Person with Harry James at the Hollywood Palladium (Columbia, 1954)
Soft Lights, Sweet Trumpet (Columbia, 1954)
Harry James in Hi-fi (Capitol, 1955)
Jazz Session (Columbia, 1955)
Juke Box Jamboree (Columbia, 1955)
More Harry James in Hi-fi (Capitol, 1956)
Requests On-the-Road (MGM, 1962)
With others
Count Basie, First Time! The Count Meets the Duke (Columbia, 1962)
Benny Carter, Cosmopolite (Norgran, 1954)
Nat King Cole, After Midnight (Capitol, 1956)
Nat King Cole, The Piano Style of Nat King Cole (Capitol, 1956)
Maxwell Davis, Compositions of Duke Ellington and Others (Crown, 1960)
Ella Fitzgerald, Get Happy! (Verve, 1959)
Ella Fitzgerald, Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Song Book Vol. 1 (Verve, 1960)
Peggy Lee, The Man I Love (Capitol, 1957)
Peggy Lee, Jump for Joy (Capitol, 1958)
Frank Sinatra, Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely (Capitol, 1958)
Juan Tizol Discography (on the Discography of American Historical Recordings)
| Artist or Composer / Score name | Cover | List of Contents |
|---|---|---|
| Jim Brickman – Nothing Left To Say | JIM BRICKMAN – Nothing left to say | |
| Jim Brickman – The Collection – Words & Music |
|
Jim Brickman – Collection |
| Jim Brickman – The Disney Songbook |
|
Jim Brickman -Disney songbook — Jim Brickman – The Disney Songbook contents |
| Jim Brickman – Valentine | ||
| Jim Brickman By Heart |
|
Jim Brickman By Heart |
| Jim Brickman Christmas Themes |
|
Jim Brickman Christmas Themes |
| Jim Brickman Circles |
|
|
| Jim Brickman Escape Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar |
|
Jim Brickman Escape Songbook Piano Vocal Guitar |
| Jim Brickman Greatest Hits |
|
Jim Brickman Greatest Hits songbook contents |
| Jim Brickman Old Times |
|
|
| Jim Brickman One And Only |
|
|
| Jim Brickman Piano Anthology |
|
Jim Brickman Piano Anthology |
| Jim Brickman Picture This Piano solo collection |
|
Jim Brickman Picture This Piano solo collection |
| Jim Brickman The Gift Piano Solos |
|
Jim Brickman The Gift Piano Solos sheet music contents |
| Jim Brickman The Promise | Jim Brickman The Promise | |
| Jim Brickman Winter Peace | Jim Brickman-Winter Peace | |
| Jim Croce The Very Best of – Guitar Recorded Versions Tablature |
|
Jim Croce The Very Best of – Guitar Recorded Versions Tablature |
| Jim Ferguson All Blues Comping Styles,chords & Grooves For Jazz Guitar (Book +audio Mp3 with Tablature) |
|
All Blues For Jazz Guitar Comping Styles Chords And Grooves by Jim Ferguson Guitar Tablature |
| Jim Hall – Solo on I Hear A Rhapsody from Undercurrent with Bill Evans |
|
|
| Jim Hall – Solo on My Funny Valentine from Undercurrent with Bill Evans |
|
|
| Jim Hall – Stella by starlight transcription | Jim Hall – Stella by starlight transcription | |
| Jim Hall Exploring Jazz Guitar |
|
Jim Hall Exploring Jazz Guitar |
| Jim Hall Guitar Signature Licks By Adam Perlmutter |
|
Jim Hall Signature Licks By Adam Perlmutter |
| Jim Hall Music – Principles of Guitar Improvisation Jazz Guitar Master Class |
|
Jim Hall Music – Principles of Guitar Improvisation Jazz Guitar Master Class contents —- Jim hall |
| Jim Hall The Best – of Guitar Recorded Versions Tablature |
|
Jim Hall The Best – of Guitar Recorded Versions Tablature |
| Jim Mc Neely – Piano Comping Workbook Text: English / français / deutsch |
|
Jim Mc Neely – Piano Comping Workbook |
| Jim Morrison The Lizard King The Essential Jim Morrison (Book Biography) |
|
|
| Jim Snidero – Easy Jazz Conception Trumpet |
|
Jim Snidero – Easy Jazz Conception Trumpet |
| Jim Snidero Trombone Easy Jazz Conception |
|
|
| Jim Steinman Collection Greatest Hits |
|
|
| Jimi Hendrix Axis Bold As Love (Guitar Book with Tablature) |
|
Jimi Hendrix Axis Bold As Love (Guitar Book) |
| Jimi Hendrix Note For Note (guitar with Tablature) |
|
Jimi Hendrix Note For Note Guitar songbook |
| Jimi Hendrix The Jimmi Hendrix Experience Electric Ladyland (Guitar with Tablature) |
|
Jimi Hendrix The Jimmi Hendrix Experience Electric Ladyland guitar |
| Jimi Hendrix – Live At Woodstock (guitar sheet music Book with Tablature) |
|
Jimi Hendrix Live At Woodstock (guitar sheet music Book) |
| Jimi Hendrix – All Along The Watchtower (audio Mp3 Tabs And Backing Track) Guitar Techniques with Tablature |
|
|
| Jimi Hendrix – Are You Experienced Guitar TAB Songbook |
|
Jimi Hendrix – Are You Experienced Guitar Songbook |
| Jimi Hendrix – Blues Songbook Guitar Tab Tablature Complete Transcriptions of recorded versions |
|
Jimi Hendrix Songbook |
| Jimi Hendrix – Experience Hendrix (Songbook) Piano Vocal Guitar |
|
Jimi Hendrix – Experience Hendrix (Songbook) Piano Vocal Guitar |
| Jimi Hendrix – Guitar Signature Licks Vol. 2 (Chad Johnson) with Tablature |
|
Jimi Hendrix – Guitar Signature Licks Vol. 2 (Chad Johnson) |
| Jimi Hendrix Band Of Gypsys Guitar Songbook with Tablature |
|
Jimi Hendrix Band Of Gypsys Guitar Songbook with Tablature — Jimi Hendrix Band Of Gypsys Guitar Songbook |
| Jimi Hendrix First Rays Of The New Rising Sun Guitar TABs |
|
Jimi Hendrix First Rays Of The New Rising Sun Guitar TABs contents |
| Jimi Hendrix Jazz Play Along Vol. 80 – Jimi Hendrix with MP3 audio tracks 10 Classic Tunes (Guitar) |
|
Jimi Hendrix 10 Classic Tunes Jazz Play Along Vol. 80 Guitar |
| Jimi Hendrix Omnibook For C Instruments Transcribed from his recorded solos (TAB) |
|
Jimi Hendrix Omnibook For C Instruments |
| Jimi Hendrix Star Licks (with MP3 audio tracks play along) |
|
|
| Jimi Hendrix Style Guitar Songbook – Guitar Signature Licks with Tablature |
|
Jimi Hendrix Style Guitar Songbook |
| Jimi Hendrix The Illustrated Story (Gaar, Gillian) Book |
|
|
| Jimi Hendrix Woodstock Recorded Versions with Tablature |
|
Jimi Hendrix Woodstock Recorded Versions with Tablature |
| Jimi Hendrix, In Deep with – A Complete Exploration of His Innovative Guitar Style (Andy Aldedort) Guitar TABs |
|
Jimi Hendrix, In Deep with – A Complete Exploration of His Innovative Guitar Style (Andy Aldedort) Guitar TABs |
| Jimmie Davis And Charles Mitchell You Are My Sunshine Piano Vocal Guitar |
|
|
| Jimmy Dorsey Sax Atlo Method – Método de saxofón (text in Spanish and Portugese) |
|
|
| Jimmy Giuffre Sketch-Orks |
|
Jimmy Giuffre Sketch-Orks |
| Jimmy McHugh – Songbook | Jimmy McHugh – Songbook | |
| Jimmy Page Guitar Book Super Rock Guitarist with Tablature |
|
Jimmy Page Guitar Book Super Rock Guitarist |
| Jimmy Raney Anthropology (Jimmy Raney Solo) |
|
|
| Jimmy Raney Pennies From Heaven |
|
|
| Jimmy Raney The Song Is You Ab (Jimmy Raney Solo) Birdand Sessions 1952 |
|
|
| Jimmy Sax No Man No Cry (Tenor Saxophone) | Jimmy Sax No Man No Cry | |
| Jimmy Sax No Man No Cry Tenor Saxophone | Jimmy Sax No Man No Cry | |
| Jimmy Smith Sounds Of Jimmy at the Organ Vol. 1 |
|
|
| Jimmy Smith Sounds Of Jimmy at the Organ Vol. 2 |
|
|
| Jimmy Van Heusen But Beautiful (Jazz Standard) |
|
|
| Jimmy Van Heusen But Beautiful Jazz Standard Piano Solo Arr Musescore File.mscz | ||
| Jimmy Van Heusen But Beautiful Jazz Standard Piano Solo Arr sheet music |
|
|
| Jimmy Yancey 5 Famous Boogie & Blues solos |
|
|
| Jingle Bells | ||
| Jingle Bells – Guitar TABlature |
|
|
| Jingle Bells Jacob Koller Arangement | Jingle Bells Jacob Koller Arangement | |
| Joan Baez Songbook (arrangements by Elie Siegmeister) |
|
Joan Baez Songbook |
| Joan Manuel Serrat Antología |
|
Serrat, Joan Manuel – Partituras Antologia |
| Joan Osborne – One Of Us | ||
| Joao Bosco 1 Guitar Songbook by Almir Chediak |
|
Joao Bosco 2 Guitar Songbook by Almir Chediak.pdf |
| Joao Bosco 2 Guitar Songbook by Almir Chediak |
|
Joao Bosco 2 Guitar Songbook by Almir Chediak.pdf |
| Joao Bosco 3 Guitar Songbook |
|
Joao Bosco 3 Guitar Songbook |
| Joao Gilberto Songbook Guitar Chords And Tabs By Julien Levêque |
|
Joao Gilberto Songbook Guitar Chords And Tabs By Julien Levêque |
| Joao Gilberto Songbook Vol. 1 (Guitar) |
|
Joao Gilberto Songbook Vol. 1 (Guitar) |
| Joao Nogueira Sambabook Transcriptions for Guitar |
|
Joao Nogueira Sambabook Transcriptions for Guitar |
| Joaquim Antonio da Silva Flor Amorosa Guitar TABs Tablature | Joaquim Antonio da Silva Flor Amorosa Guitar TABs Tablature 1st page | |
| Joaquim Antonio da Silva O Pato Guitar TABs Tablature | Joaquim Antonio da Silva O Pato Guitar TABs 1st page | |
| Joaquin Rodrigo Elogio De La Guitarra (Arr. By Angelo Gilardino) |
|
|
| Jobim – O Grande Amor (guitar chords).mscz | ||
| Jobim – One Note Samba (guitar chords and TABS) |
|
|
| Jobim – One Note Samba (Guitar Tabs Sheet Music) (Musescore File).mscz | ||
| Jobim How Insensitive (Musescore File).mscz | ||
| Joc de jocs – Jocs i cançons tradicionals catalanes amb partitures i lletres |
|
|
| Jocelyn Pook How Sweet The Moonlight Countertenor Soprano Keyboards |
|
|
| Jody Fisher The Art of Solo Guitar Book 1 with audio MP3 tracks to play along |
|
|
| Jody Fisher The Art of Solo Guitar Book 2 with audio MP3 tracks to play along |
|
|
| Jody Fisher Guitar Chord and Scale Finder A handbook for the improvising guitarist |
|
|
| Jody Fisher The Total Jazz Guitarist A fun and comprehensive overview of jazz guitar playing |
|
|
| Joe Bonamassa – Blues Deluxe (Guitar Tab Sheet Music) |
|
|
| Joe Bonamassa Collection (sheet music and TAB) |
|
Joe Bonamassa Collection (sheet music and TAB) |
| Joe Bonamassa Driving Towards The Daylight Guitar Vocal |
|
Joe Bonamassa Driving Towards The Daylight Guitar Vocal |
| Joe Bonamassa Intro Guitar Licks (Musescore File).mscz | ||
| Joe Bonamassa licks | Joe Bonamassa licks | |
| Joe Bonamassa Redemption Guitar TAB |
|
Joe Bonamassa Redemption Guitar TAB |
| Joe Bonamassa Royal Tea Guitar TABs |
|
Joe Bonamassa Royal Tea Guitar TABs |
| Joe Cocker – You Are So Beautiful | ||
| Joe Cocker – You Can Leave Your Hat On | ||
| Joe Cocker Best Of Joe Cocker Piano Vocal Guitar |
|
Joe Cocker Best Of Joe Cocker Piano Vocal Guitar |
| Joe Cocker Mad Dogs And Englishmen |
|
Joe Cocker Mad Dogs And Englishmen |
| Joe Cocker Pardon Me Sir Songbook Piano Vocal Chords |
|
Joe Cocker Pardon Me Sir Songbook |
| Joe Cocker The Best Of Songbook |
|
Joe Cocker The Best Of Songbook |
| Joe Cocker You Are so Beautiful Billy Preston and Bruce Fisher Piano Vocal Guitar chords |
|
|
| Joe Coker – Unchain My Heart (Piano vocal) |
|
|
| Joe Dassin – A Toi | ||
| Joe Diorio Intervallic Designs for Jazz Guitar Ultramodern Sounds for Improvising |
|
|
| Joe Diorio John Coltrane Giant Steps (Guitar) With Tablature |
|
|
| Joe Elliott Introduction To Jazz Guitar Soloing A Comprehensive Improvisation Method |
|
|
| Joe Henderson Jazz Solos |
|
Joe Henderson Jazz Solos |
| Joe Henderson Artist Transcriptions Saxophone selections from Lush Life and So Near, so far |
|
Joe Henderson Artist Transcriptions Saxophone selections from Lush Life and So Near, so far |
| Joe Hiaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle – Promise Of The World (Ending Theme) Piano Solo (Musescore File).mscz | ||
| Joe Hisaishi A Town With An Ocean View | Joe Hisaishi A Town With An Ocean View | |
| Joe Hisaishi Encore (Piano Solo Sheet Music) Complete |
|
Joe Hisaishi Encore (Piano Solo Sheet Music) Complete |
| Joe Hisaishi Hana Bi (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | Joe Hisaishi Hana Bi (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | |
| Joe Hisaishi Nostalgia (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | Joe Hisaishi Nostalgia (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | |
| Joe Hisaishi Richly Arranged Piano Solo |
|
Joe Hisaishi Richly arranged Piano Solo contents Joe Hisaishi Richly arranged Piano Solo |
| Joe Hisaishi Sbornik Not |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi Silencio De Parc Güell From Encore (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | Joe Hisaishi Silencio De Parc Güell From Encore (Piano Solo Sheet Music) | |
| Joe Hisaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle Guitar Tab Sheet Music |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle Main Theme Piano 4 Hands |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle Theme Full Score piano arr. |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Totoro theme piano solo sheet music |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi Howl’s Moving Castle Piano solo arr. |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – A Town With An Ocean View |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Adoria No Umi He (From Porco Rosso) Guitar Arr. With Tablature |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Always with me | Joe Hisashi-Always with me_compressed | |
| Joe Hisaishi – Always With Me (Reprise) from Spirited Away Easy Piano version |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Always With Me (Reprise) from Spirited Away Easy Piano version.mscz | ||
| Joe Hisaishi – Ano Natsu He (One Summer Day From Spirited Away) Guitar Arr. With Tabs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Ashtaka to San from the film Princess Mononoke (Guitar arr. with TABs) |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Gogatsu no Mura (Village in May) from My Neighbor Totoro Guitar TABs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Going Out from Kikujiro | Joe Hisaishi – Going Out from Kikujiro | |
| Joe Hisaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle – Promise of the World (Piano Solo arr.) | Joe Hisaishi – Howl’s Moving Castle – Promise of the World (Piano Solo arr.) | |
| Joe Hisaishi – In Loving Memory Of Allie from Ni No Kuni |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Innocent from Castle in the Sky Laputa Guitar Arr. With Tabs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Jinsei no Merry go round (from Howl’s moving castle – Guitar Tablature arr. |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Merry Go Round Of Life Small Ensemble |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Nostalgia (Musescore File).mscz | ||
| Joe Hisaishi – One Summer’s day (The name of life) いのちの名前 (inochi no namae) from Spirited Away |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – One Summer’s Day from Encore Spirited Away | Joe Hisaishi – One Summer’s Day from Encore Spirited Away | |
| Joe Hisaishi – Overture (from Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind) Guitar arr. with TABs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Requiem (from Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind) Guitar arr. with TABs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Sampo from My Neighbor Totoro Guitar Arr. With Tabs |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Spirited Away Waltz Of Chihiro (Easy Piano Solo) |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Spirited Away Waltz Of Chihiro (Piano Solo Arr. Kyle Landry) |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Spirited Away Piano Solo Book |
|
Joe Hisaishi – Spirited Away Piano Solo Book |
| Joe Hisaishi – Suites Of Spirited Away Cello Piano Sheet Music |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – Summer Guitar Arr. With Tabs from the film Kikujiro (Kikujirō no Natsu) |
|
|
| Joe Hisaishi – The Path Of The Wind (Easy Piano Solo) From The Film My Neighbor Totoro | Joe Hisaishi – The Path Of The Wind (Easy Piano Solo) From The Film My Neighbor Totoro | |
| Joe Hisaishi – The Path Of The Wind Kaze no Toori Michi (from My Neighbor Totoro) Piano Solo |
|
