Heavy Metal Question

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no surrender

Post by no surrender »

undercoverjoe wrote:Well Axel is a girly man who broke up a great band so he sucks anyway.

I have always liked a less girly, deeper vocal style:


Felix

Jim Morrison

Jimi

Much 50's and 60's Motown (except when they sang falsetto)

Danzig

Greg Allman

Muddy Waters.
You just proved AXL WAS THE BAND. W/O him they are nothing. Pretty good for a "girly man". Axl has more raw talent in his finger than a HUNDRED of these so called REAL METAL bands today! If they stood on each other shoulders they couldn't reach axl! ONE HUNDRED!

Axl is one of the GREATEST FRONT MEN ever! he had it all... raw talent. blistering AT_TI_TUDE. charisma. stage presnts. HE redifined.. EDGE! He IS the MAN!
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Post by Banned »

no surrender wrote: You just proved AXL WAS THE BAND. W/O him they are nothing. Pretty good for a "girly man".
At least Velvet Revolver are capable of releasing an album and completing a tour. :wink:

no surrender wrote: EDGE! He IS the MAN!
Good call. Bono may be Person of the Year or whatever, but The Edge is still the coolest guy in U2.
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Post by Banned »

NS wrote...

AT_TI_TUDE. charisma. stage presnts. HE redifined...


If only he had stage penis.
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Post by no surrender »

undercoverjoe wrote:NS wrote...

AT_TI_TUDE. charisma. stage presnts. HE redifined...


If only he had stage penis.

THIS is NO girly man..
[THE frontman!the legend!
AT_TI_TUDE INCOPRORATED!
:shock:
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Post by Banned »

You ARE right, that is no girly man. If you omitted the man in the sentance you would have been right.

Maybe you could help him with some makeup tips.
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Post by no surrender »

undercoverjoe wrote:You ARE right, that is no girly man. If you omitted the man in the sentance you would have been right.

Maybe you could help him with some makeup tips.
whatever. obviously you have no clue. your prob cueing the bangles up right now .. haha :lol:
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Post by Banned »

I would love to cue up all of the Bangles right now baby.
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Post by Punkinhead »

SpellboundByMetal wrote:i dont like Zep and i dont like Plant/Page. Yeah, he sounds girly. i just cant get anything out of their songs.
I agree with that. Jimmy Page was and is a sloppy guitarist, mostly because of the heroin I am guessing. The vocals/lyrics are not all that impressive to me, the only lyrics that I care for are the Lord of the Rings tributes really.
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Post by YankeeRose »

undercoverjoe wrote:Well Axel... broke up a great band so he sucks anyway.


Axl "was" the band, "had" it all and he f'd it up...and while I also agree with your other Vocalist choices, there are many Zep tunes where Plant's voice goes LOW...he has a tremendous Vocal Range - this falls into the "to each their own"
category. :)



What do you know, unJoe? The Grimm was the only band recently who had a bag full of actual "Stage Presents"! I just love my Antlers, although some of the Bells fell off. :D
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Post by the herald »

Of course this will never go anywhere because we all have different opinions i love Jimi Page, i dont care if he was sloppy, who said rock and roll had to be mathmatical so when jimi hendrix used feedback i guess in some peoples opinion that was sloppy and makes him suck? thats what separates classical music from rock and roll is the freedom to go outside the musical scale to discover new techniques, new directions! whether they take drugs or drink evian its what appeals to someone at that moment in there life and how they relate to it.dont get me wrong scructure is fine improv is fine but combine the two and viola thats what im talkin about!!!! :shock:
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Post by no surrender »

the herald wrote:Of course this will never go anywhere because we all have different opinions i love Jimi Page, i dont care if he was sloppy, who said rock and roll had to be mathmatical so when jimi hendrix used feedback i guess in some peoples opinion that was sloppy and makes him suck? thats what separates classical music from rock and roll is the freedom to go outside the musical scale to discover new techniques, new directions! whether they take drugs or drink evian its what appeals to someone at that moment in there life and how they relate to it.dont get me wrong scructure is fine improv is fine but combine the two and viola thats what im talkin about!!!! :shock:
very nice and agreed.

knowlege has a way of stifling creativinty. it can make it more difficult to do what you know isn't 'right'. :?
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Post by Banned »

NS wrote:

"knowlege has a way of stifling creativinty"

You have very creative spelling, so therefore you must not be hampered by knowledge.
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Post by Punkinhead »

the herald wrote:Of course this will never go anywhere because we all have different opinions i love Jimi Page, i dont care if he was sloppy, who said rock and roll had to be mathmatical so when jimi hendrix used feedback i guess in some peoples opinion that was sloppy and makes him suck?
That's not what I am talking about. I am talking about the notes Page misses that end up sounding dead in some of his runs. Feedback isn't sloppy but, dead shit is.
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Post by bassist_25 »

no surrender wrote: knowlege has a way of stifling creativinty. it can make it more difficult to do what you know isn't 'right'. :?
That's bullshit that lazy-ass musicians say to justify their lack of knowledge. I still don't get the whole "It's cool to not know how to play your instrument" mentality. If anything, knowledge helps you actualize the music in your head. If I'm playing and I hear a dorian scale going through my mind, it's going to be a lot easier to actualize that on the fretboard if I can recognize it as a dorian scale rather than play guessing games until I find the right notes. Likewise, if I'm sitting in and someone says, "Paul: Bb, I, vi, VI, V," it's going to be a lot better than trying to watch the guitarist or keyboardist hands to see what chords I'm suppose to be playing.

I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul. What I'm saying is the whole "knowledge stiffles creativity" argument has no basis in reality. I don't sit down with my guitar/bass, play a 7th chord and then say, "Damn it, I have to resolve this tritone now, or what I'm playing won't be correct."
Last edited by bassist_25 on Wednesday Dec 21, 2005, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by bassist_25 »

the herald wrote:Of course this will never go anywhere because we all have different opinions i love Jimi Page, i dont care if he was sloppy, who said rock and roll had to be mathmatical so when jimi hendrix used feedback i guess in some peoples opinion that was sloppy and makes him suck? thats what separates classical music from rock and roll is the freedom to go outside the musical scale to discover new techniques, new directions! whether they take drugs or drink evian its what appeals to someone at that moment in there life and how they relate to it.dont get me wrong scructure is fine improv is fine but combine the two and viola thats what im talkin about!!!! :shock:
I never really liked sloppy guitarists. I like to hear all of the notes being played, and if they're not being executed cleanly, it just ruins the whole experience for me. That's what I always loved about Robben Ford: He's so damn clean in his playing. Every note he plays is clear and precise, even if he's just wanking on some pentatonic stuff.
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Post by no surrender »

bassist_25 wrote:
no surrender wrote: knowlege has a way of stifling creativinty. it can make it more difficult to do what you know isn't 'right'. :?
That's bullshit that lazy-ass musicians say to justify their lack of knowledge. I still don't get the whole "It's cool to not know how to play your instrument" mentality. If anything, knowledge helps you actualize the music in your head. If I'm playing and I hear a dorian scale going through my mind, it's going to be a lot easier to actualize that on the fretboard if I can recognize it as a dorian scale rather than play guessing games until I find the right notes. Likewise, if I'm sitting in and someone says, "Paul: Bb, I, vi, VI, V," it's going to be a lot better than trying to watch the guitarist or keyboardist hands to see what chords I'm suppose to be playing.

I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul. What I'm saying is the whole "knowledge stiffles creativity" argument has no basis in reality.
did hendrix follow 'theory'?

what i am saying is knowlege makes for boundries. the more you know the harder it is to play outside the box. creative play comes from heart not the mind. from pasion not mathmatics. if the ladder were true every music teacher on earth would be a creative genius. actually the reverse is mostly true. :?
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Post by BDR »

YankeeRose wrote:The Grimm was the only band recently who had a bag full of actual "Stage Presents"!
Hey, we've been passing out free Snickers bars at every show for a couple months now ...

r:>)
That's what she said.
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Post by BDR »

no surrender wrote:what i am saying is knowlege makes for boundries. the more you know the harder it is to play outside the box. creative play comes from heart not the mind. from pasion not mathmatics.
You could have the perfect idea for the best novel ever written, complete with character bios, plot twists and a suspensful climax; however, if you cannot read or write, it is impossible to bring this idea across to those around you.

If anything, knowledge eliminates boundaries.

r:>)
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Post by bassist_25 »

no surrender wrote:
bassist_25 wrote:
no surrender wrote: knowlege has a way of stifling creativinty. it can make it more difficult to do what you know isn't 'right'. :?
That's bullshit that lazy-ass musicians say to justify their lack of knowledge. I still don't get the whole "It's cool to not know how to play your instrument" mentality. If anything, knowledge helps you actualize the music in your head. If I'm playing and I hear a dorian scale going through my mind, it's going to be a lot easier to actualize that on the fretboard if I can recognize it as a dorian scale rather than play guessing games until I find the right notes. Likewise, if I'm sitting in and someone says, "Paul: Bb, I, vi, VI, V," it's going to be a lot better than trying to watch the guitarist or keyboardist hands to see what chords I'm suppose to be playing.

I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul. What I'm saying is the whole "knowledge stiffles creativity" argument has no basis in reality.
did hendrix follow 'theory'?

what i am saying is knowlege makes for boundries. the more you know the harder it is to play outside the box. creative play comes from heart not the mind. from pasion not mathmatics. if the ladder were true every music teacher on earth would be a creative genius. actually the reverse is mostly true. :?
Go back and read what I posted!!! Did I say that theory is a replacement for creativity. Oh wait, no; I said just the complete opposite:
bassist_25 wrote:I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul.
I'm a big fan of architecture. I'm in awe at the asthetic beauty of many buildings. They're obviously built by some creative individuals. Still, those architects needs to have a firm grasp of geometry or their buildings are going to fall over. If you don't have a simple graps of some musicial concepts, your going to be playing your instrument out of key. So you think knowledge creates boundaries? Go watch a Jazz combo. I'm not talking about some psuedo-new wave-swing band. I mean an honest to God Bebop Jazz group. You'll see some of the most creative musicians on the face of the Earth, and I can guarantee that most of them up on the bandstand probaly have at least undergraduate (if not graduate) degrees in music.
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Post by Banned »

NS askes...

"did hendrix follow 'theory'? "

Jimi was a studio musician before he got signed and even some during his heydey.

One does not become a studio musician without knowing music theory and reading music.

I have a music book about Jimi's writing and playing and it is all about how vaired his theoretic approach was. It is called "Variations on a Theme".

After you read it, let us all know if Jimi followed a little music theory.
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Post by FretBored »

undercoverjoe wrote:NS askes...

"did hendrix follow 'theory'? "

Jimi was a studio musician before he got signed and even some during his heydey.

One does not become a studio musician without knowing music theory and reading music.

I have a music book about Jimi's writing and playing and it is all about how vaired his theoretic approach was. It is called "Variations on a Theme".

After you read it, let us all know if Jimi followed a little music theory.
Was there much in there about the Leslie Speakers and Feedback?
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Post by Banned »

Mostly about how he played "Red House" very differently at different live shows from a theoretical viewpoint.

When I get it back (ha ha) I will let you borrow it.
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Post by Punkinhead »

bassist_25 wrote:
no surrender wrote:
bassist_25 wrote: That's bullshit that lazy-ass musicians say to justify their lack of knowledge. I still don't get the whole "It's cool to not know how to play your instrument" mentality. If anything, knowledge helps you actualize the music in your head. If I'm playing and I hear a dorian scale going through my mind, it's going to be a lot easier to actualize that on the fretboard if I can recognize it as a dorian scale rather than play guessing games until I find the right notes. Likewise, if I'm sitting in and someone says, "Paul: Bb, I, vi, VI, V," it's going to be a lot better than trying to watch the guitarist or keyboardist hands to see what chords I'm suppose to be playing.

I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul. What I'm saying is the whole "knowledge stiffles creativity" argument has no basis in reality.
did hendrix follow 'theory'?

what i am saying is knowlege makes for boundries. the more you know the harder it is to play outside the box. creative play comes from heart not the mind. from pasion not mathmatics. if the ladder were true every music teacher on earth would be a creative genius. actually the reverse is mostly true. :?
Go back and read what I posted!!! Did I say that theory is a replacement for creativity. Oh wait, no; I said just the complete opposite:
bassist_25 wrote:I'm not saying that theory is the be all, end all of playing; you still need soul.
I'm a big fan of architecture. I'm in awe at the asthetic beauty of many buildings. They're obviously built by some creative individuals. Still, those architects needs to have a firm grasp of geometry or their buildings are going to fall over. If you don't have a simple graps of some musicial concepts, your going to be playing your instrument out of key. So you think knowledge creates boundaries? Go watch a Jazz combo. I'm not talking about some psuedo-new wave-swing band. I mean an honest to God Bebop Jazz group. You'll see some of the most creative musicians on the face of the Earth, and I can guarantee that most of them up on the bandstand probaly have at least undergraduate (if not graduate) degrees in music.
This is pretty much a longer version of what I was going to post....My thoughts exactly.....
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Post by onegunguitar »

Looks like this thread is turning into an argument session like usual,imagine that.
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Post by YankeeRose »

BadDazeRob wrote:Hey, we've been passing out free Snickers bars at every show for a couple months now ... r:>)

Pishaw! Deathmaster got a Comic Book (I don't think it was a "Super Man" one, sorry dude! :)) and Esa had a Christmas Ball in her decolletage. Now, I'm not certain if she pulled it out of the bag or it was given to her by someone else who got it...and I of course, reached in and pulled out Red and Green Antlers, with Gold Bells on them, no less! :yay: I would enjoy a "satisfying Snickers", but these were REAL "Stage Presents", so kudos to The Grimm!
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