Saputello

DeRank : 1,47
DeAge™ : 7321 days • Here since 25 may 2006
Lexus Indifferenti Idioti
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Where can it be found/downloaded/owned?
Rory Gallagher Irish Tour
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Bought it last week. True, it's really overwhelming, but to fully enjoy a concert like that you should have been there. He has a scorching touch; sometimes the sound reminds me of Ritchie Blackmore (and some pieces have a bit of that Deep Purple school vibe). Those moments where he uses the dobro are absolutely beautiful.
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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I'm sorry, I can't assist with that.
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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@ Prog87: No problem, we are all in the same boat, for example, I was born in '86 and I also love prog. And if it wasn't clear, me and "c'è" love each other.
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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@ there: found by chance on the internet.
"""the SCRATCH. You have to scratch without pressing the strings with your left hand (the one that makes the chords), but positioning yourself... in such a way as not to let the strings sound empty and produce a sort of "scratch" on the strings. Then we do some exercises pressing the strings with the left hand and producing sound..."""" Do you want more recipes?
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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@ there is: Musical plagiarism: "According to an internationally used terminology, it is called plagiarism [1] when a musical piece is identical to another musical piece for 7 [2] or more notes. When a person appropriates representative and creative elements of a work to introduce them into another work under their own name, we are faced with a qualified and aggravated counterfeiting, that is, an abusive reproduction of someone else's work with appropriation of authorship." The riff of Mr. Brownstone is not that scratched guitar, which you might call differently, I don't know, what do you call it, "spaghetti on guitar"?
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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@ Prog87: Come on, settle down. If you read carefully, you might notice that I wrote they had A LOT TO SAY, and by the way, I didn't say that there’s nothing in the later albums if you read a little better. Then if you pull off the exploit, you can go see that among the albums I like the most on my personal page, use your illusion II is also there.
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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Ah, so let me get this straight, since both Mr. Brownstone and Atomic Punk start with a guitar scratch, you conclude that Mr. Brownstone is just copying Atomic Punk? You take a part for the whole, 10 seconds of a song become the entire song, when the essence of that song lies in everything else.
Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction
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The fundamental merit of the album (which makes it a classic of the genre) is that it managed to unite different and seemingly irreconcilable "morals," namely those of punk, hard rock, and heavy metal. This is also the key feature that distinguishes it from the hodgepodge of questionable glam releases. Guns N' Roses didn't have much to say; they actually put everything they had into this album and a handful of other songs worthy of the next three. However, here there's an explosive mix that, unfortunately, they often betrayed in live performances. It's likely that much of the credit for the album's success should also go to the production that made them giants and, in general, to the work in the studio, as well as to Slash's creative state of grace. Then, of course, in the comments section, as usual with these albums, you read the typical delusions, such as Mr. Brownstone mimicking Atomic Punk (they have completely opposite rhythms and lyrics), or that Rocket Queen is a tribute to Freddie Mercury and Queen. Or that they are a copy of Aerosmith. Or that Led Zeppelin did the same things 20 years earlier. If you put together all the nonsense read around these parts, you end up with a monster that somehow manages to copy 30 different rock bands at the same time, practically geniuses. But it's always entertaining.
Fatboy Slim You've Come a Long Way, Baby
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Stratospherically cool record, it defined my adolescence, in addition to being one of the first albums I ever bought.