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Vinnie Moore The Maze Songbook ◆

It wasn’t a book. Not really. To Leo, it was a door.

But the next morning, when he touched the strings, he didn’t hear Vinnie Moore. He didn’t hear Bach or Parker. He heard a small, tentative melody—fragile as new grass pushing through a crack in stone. His own. Vinnie Moore The Maze Songbook

Rage first. Then despair. Then, sitting in the dark, his Strat across his knees, he understood. It wasn’t a book

He smiled. He had finally found the exit. But the next morning, when he touched the

He’d found it buried under a cascade of dusty seventies vinyl at a going-out-of-business sale in Philadelphia: Vinnie Moore – The Maze Songbook: Authorized Transcription . The cover was a lurid airbrush painting of a stone labyrinth under a violet sky, a lone guitar neck jutting out like a key. Leo, a conservatory dropout who now taught sulky teenagers how to play power chords for twelve dollars an hour, felt a jolt.

Leo snorted. Pretentious. But he tuned his beaten Stratocaster to the odd drop-D variant indicated in the margins. He started with the title track, “The Maze.” The opening riff was a spider: chromatic, skittering, trapping his fingers in knots he’d never known. But after the third failed attempt, something shifted. The pattern wasn't random. It was a map. Each wrong note felt like a dead end. Each correct pull-off, a corridor opening.