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Which main riffs and licks can you play?
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PANick11



Joined: 25 Jul 2002
Posts: 402

PostPosted: Mon Feb 21, 2005 7:18 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

:)



hey dude!, thanks for listening to that tune!



that boosts my weekly listens up to.......3



HA HA!!



Those SRV tunes are deceptively tricky!

a lot of it is just being able to swing like that!!

and being aggressive!, just sweep pick and bang on your guitar! and Pull pentatonics and string bends right out of those 5 chords he liked to use!



Have you seen this Kid from "Los Lonely Boys" play?



he has a real similar mojo , just these huge sweeping picking motions and this groovy ability to swing like mad!!!



those guys are very cool!

and they write killer songs too!....

I tend play a lot more inside and precise than that, to my detriment somtimes I think...

I used to be a lot more aggressive and loose about it all.





:)



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lolson



Joined: 28 Jun 2003
Posts: 1009

PostPosted: Fri Feb 25, 2005 11:20 pm    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

new



Audioslave: Like A Stone

Judas Priest: Metal meltdown

MoonWolfs: crying wolf

Hammerfall: Renegade




Let there be ®ock

on Interconnected on AcidPlanet with Christofer @ home

Edited by: lolson  at: 2/25/05 23:26
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RonOnGuitar



Joined: 08 Jan 2003
Posts: 1916

PostPosted: Sat Feb 26, 2005 4:53 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

Quote:
I can't play any riffs or licks except for the stuff I've written




It that true, Chris? (or are you kiddin'?)



Of course, the advantage of that would be - if you only do your own riffs, then nobody can tell you that you're playing it wrong. hahaha!



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RonOnGuitar



Joined: 08 Jan 2003
Posts: 1916

PostPosted: Sat Feb 26, 2005 4:59 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

Audioslave: Like A Stone

NOPE!

Judas Priest: Metal meltdown

NOPE!

MoonWolfs: crying wolf

NOPE!

Hammerfall: Renegade

NOPE!



Sorry, lolson, but I be lost on those ones too!!



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lolson



Joined: 28 Jun 2003
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PostPosted: Sat Feb 26, 2005 10:00 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

®on I had been surprised if you hared of Moonwolfs,

they ar not famous






Let there be ®ock

on Interconnected on AcidPlanet with Christofer @ home

Edited by: lolson  at: 2/26/05 10:06
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lolson



Joined: 28 Jun 2003
Posts: 1009

PostPosted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 12:04 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

here is the list



Slayer: Dead skin mask

Slayer: Bloodline

Slayer: Raining blood

Black label society: Stillborn

Gary More: I still got the blues

Jimi hendrix: Foxy lady

Jimi hendrix: All along the Watchtower

Metallica: sad but true

Metallica: Enter sandman

Metallica: Wherever I may roam

Deep Purple: Black night

Deep Purple: Smoke on the Water

Black sabbath: Children of the grave

Black sabbath: Paranoid

Black sabbath: Iron Man

Black sabbath: Electric funeral

Black sabbath: Embryo

Black sabbath: Sabbath Bloody Sabbath

Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

Dio : Holy Diver

Yngwie Malmsteen: Baroque & Roll

Yngwie Malmsteen: Bedroom Eyes

Hammerfall: Hearts on fire

Motörhead: Ace Of Spades

AC/DC: Hells bells

AC/DC: Hail Cesar

AC/DC: Hard as a rock

Judas Priest: The Hellion...Electric Eye

Judas Priest: Breaking The Law

Beethoven: Fur Elise

Neil Young: Keep on Rocking in the Free World

10CC: Wall Street Shuffle

Slayer: New faith

Iron Maiden: Run To The Hills

Scorpions: Hurricane

Pantera: Walk

????: Peter Gunn

Survivor: Eye Of The Tiger

Rolling Stones: Satisfaction

Rolling Stones: Paint it black

Iron Maiden: The wicker man

Iron Maiden: 2 minutes to midnight

Iron Maiden: Sign of the cross

Iron Maiden: Fear of the dark

Iron Maiden: Hallowed be thy name

Audioslave: Like A Stone

Judas Priest: Metal meltdown

MoonWolfs: crying wolf

Hammerfall: Renegade



New

Iron Maiden: Dream Of Mirrors




Let there be ®ock

on Interconnected on AcidPlanet with Christofer @ home

Edited by: lolson  at: 3/30/05 17:49
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RonOnGuitar



Joined: 08 Jan 2003
Posts: 1916

PostPosted: Thu Mar 31, 2005 8:07 pm    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

Hej Lolson, here's a column about one riff you might know!



Best song ever picks me up when I'm feelin' blue

March 30, 2005

BY RICHARD ROEPER SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST



Maybe it was during the Grammy Awards, when an all-star band jammed to this song onstage, reminding us of a time when you had to play an instrument to be considered a musician. Maybe it was when I was at P.J. Clarke's on State Street on the Saturday before St. Patrick's Day, and green-clad revelers of all ages started dancing when the song came on the jukebox. I didn't see a man who danced with his wife, but I did see a girl who wasn't born when the song was released -- and she was singing along with every word, as if it had been her homecoming theme.







Maybe it was when I heard the song as the theme for a NASCAR video game.



Maybe it was when Hilary and Hailey Duff appeared at an event at the W Hotel City Center on Adams a couple of weeks ago, and the crowd went wild when DJ AM incorporated the song's famous opening riff into his mix.



Maybe it was when the song popped up during a screening of the upcoming Matthew McConaughey-Penelope Cruz movie "Sahara" -- just the latest of many, many, many films to use this tune on the soundtrack.



Maybe it was all those factors, building to a crescendo.



All I know is that somewhere along the way, it hit me.



"Sweet Home Alabama" is the greatest rock and roll song of all time.



Some Lynyrd Skynyrd purists will tell you that "Sweet Home Alabama" isn't even the greatest Skynyrd song of all time, that the honors should go to "Tuesday's Gone" or some lesser-known album cut. (But probably not the overrated "Freebird.") Still, no Lynyrd Skynyrd song, and few rock songs from any band, have cut such a wide and lasting swath through the popular culture, while somehow retaining power and freshness.



'Big wheels keep on turnin' '







When I hear the first notes of "Stairway to Heaven" or "Smoke on the Water," I lunge for the radio dial. Enough is enough. When I hear the first notes of "Sweet Home Alabama," well, I turn it up.



The opening guitar lick is one of the most recognizable and electrifying intros in the history of popular music, right up there with the first notes of "Ohio," "Layla," "Baba O'Reilly" and "Revolution."



The lead vocals are muscular and clear and unapologetic.



Everybody knows the first line: "Big wheels keep on turnin.' " Not everybody knows the second line ("Carry me home to see my kin"), but it doesn't matter, you can keep singing anyway and catch up with "And I think it's a sin, yeah."



The chorus is just about perfect. You cannot and should not resist singing along with it.



The guitar work is killer.



The chick-singer background work is heavenly.



The lyrics matter. Yes, they're a bit incendiary. The founding members of Lynyrd Skynyrd were from Florida, and they embraced the Confederate flag as a stage prop. "Sweet Home Alabama" was written in part as a response to Neil Young's "Southern Man," and it includes a line seemingly sympathetic to Gov. George Wallace. But Ronnie Van Zant and his bandmates in Skynyrd also recorded "The Ballad of Curtis Lowe," an important song that embraced black music and spoke of the young Van Zant's rebellion against institutional racism.



It's everywhere







Taken as a whole and in the context of the times, "Sweet Home Alabama" is not in any way a racist song. Neil Young understood that, and so did Jimmy Carter, a liberal who welcomed the band's support.



Enough with the defense. If I'm casting my vote for the song with the best message about tolerance and peace and love, I could come up with countless better selections, from "Turn! Turn! Turn!" by the Byrds to "What's Going On?" by Marvin Gaye.



But we're talking pure rock. And as piece of pure rock, "Sweet Home Alabama" kicks @#%$.



It's also a pop culture touchstone, more so now than 30 years ago. "Sweet Home Alabama" has been featured in "Forrest Gump," "The Girl Next Door" and "To Die For," among other films. Of course there's also the movie "Sweet Home Alabama," with a cover version from Jewel.



In "Con Air," when the inmates take over the plane and party to the sounds of "Alabama," Steve Buscemi's Garland Greene character makes the immortal observation: "Define irony: a bunch of idiots dancing around on a plane to a song made famous by a band that died in a plane crash."



Then there's the scene in "8 Mile" when Eminem's B-Rabbit customizes the lyrics to reflect the sad state of his own life: "Cuz I live at home in a trailer/Mom I'm comin' home to you!"



Over the last five decades, there have been enough great rock and roll songs to make an iPod cry. Rolling Stone magazine recently listed its top 500, with Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" at the top. I could list 100 stronger contenders, from "Won't Get Fooled Again" to "Smells Like Teen Spirit" to "Hey Jude" to "November Rain" -- but none surpasses "Sweet Home Alabama."



Turn it up.



from:

Chicago Sun Times column

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lolson



Joined: 28 Jun 2003
Posts: 1009

PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 2:51 pm    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

New:

Black label society: Counterfeit god

Mastodon: Iron Tusk




Let there be ®ock

on Interconnected on AcidPlanet with Christofer @ home

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PANick11



Joined: 25 Jul 2002
Posts: 402

PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2005 4:09 pm    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

Thats a good call Ron.



learning to play tunes like "gimme three steps" and "sweet home alabama" will really teach you a lot about rock guitar..



I think learning a handfull of the ZZtop southern power blues tunes will open you mind a bit too...There's just some great voicings and melodic ideas in these tunes that will apply to every 1.4.5 sort of progression you ever play..

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HatefulMusic
Ears bleeding yet?


Joined: 08 Jun 2003
Posts: 793

PostPosted: Sun Apr 17, 2005 3:37 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

God took out Skynyrd for good reason.



Theo

HatefulMusic.com

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PANick11



Joined: 25 Jul 2002
Posts: 402

PostPosted: Sun Apr 17, 2005 5:40 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

HA HA HA!!!!





you have a very dark streak in you Theo....



:)



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HatefulMusic
Ears bleeding yet?


Joined: 08 Jun 2003
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 17, 2005 5:53 am    Post subject: Re: Which main riffs and licks can you play? Reply with quote

Panick - You're just now noticing? :evil



I graduated high school in Arkansas in '82. I never want to hear another damn Skynyrd tune in this lifetime.



For "real" Southern Rock, it's tough to beat Molly Hatchet. Or Little Feat (the old stuff with Lowell George -- not that newer lame-@#%$ "Representing the Mambo"crap).



Theo

HatefulMusic.com

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