Posts Tagged ‘guitar’

You heard it here first, or maybe you didn’t, but is back with a newly reformed who have been confirmed as a headliner of the 2009 Download Festival (UK).

The annoucement has come and follows the of the reformation of , lineup circa Of The Year,  for a European tour.

 

Faith No More - touring Europe this year!

- touring Europe this year!

 

This means no , older fans may be unhappy to hear, duties being handled by .

In 1998 we thought “everything’s ruined” when evidence of the breakup of this seminal emerged, and after digging the grave, saying “ashes to ashes” and drinking a for this once-great act over a decade ago, they’ve come back to get us on the and this is the thing.

Personally, I’m falling to piece over this , so I and toast the that brought us these classic albums…

  • 1985: We Care a Lot
  • 1987:
  • 1989: The Thing
  • 1992:
  • 1995: King for a Day… Fool for a Lifetime
  • 1997: of the Year
  • It’d take to keep me away from this gig.

     The other are and .

    We care a lot at the RMF and have our fingers on the pulse of the -loving world, and so for all those budding guitarists, pianists and other musicians out there that are looking for the chords and to ’s cover of the classic, “Easy” – here you go…

    For ease of playing, I’ve transcribed it in G, whereas the recorded version is in G#, so if you want to use these chords to play along to the record, you’ll have to tune your up a  half-step.

    Verse:

    G                                  Bm                                Am                        D
    You know it sounds funny but I just can’t stand the pain…

    G          Bm                          Am      DDDDD…   
    Girl I’m leavin’ you tomorrow….

     G              Bm                                              Am             D   
    Seems to me, girl, you know I’ve done all I can…

    G                Bm                       Am                  D
    You see, I beg, stole and I borrowed, yeah

     

    Chorus:

                            G        Bm      Am
    It’s why I’m easy

          D                            G      Bm     Am     D
    I’m easy like Sunday morning

                           G     Bm     Am    D           
    It’s why I’m easy

                                    F     C   DD G    (bass part: F, E, DD, G)
    Easy like Sunday morning

     

    Bridge:
                         F      Em      D
    I wanna be high, so high

                         F                                               Em     D
    I wanna be free to know the things I do are right

                         F        Em   D
    I wanna be free, just me

          Bb    F     Bb    C
    Oh babe

    ( solo: same chords as verse)
    (repeat chorus)

    End on the G

    Now don’t say we never give you anything. :)

     

     

     

     Incidentally… the 2009 Download UK lineup so far:

     

    , ,

    , , Whitesnake(plus special guests)

    Limp Bizkit, Pendulum,

    Motley Crue, The

    , , Trivium, , Billy Talent, Buckcherry, Anvil, The Blackout, Devildriver

     

     

    Best lineup ever?

     

    Take it easy, and don’t be having a midlife crisis over this .

    If this is your first visit to the RMF, please join our to discuss all things .

    http://www.realmusicforum.com/forums/

    Muso

     

    Can I stop with the stupid puns now?

    Who am I to talk about “ ”? 

    An important question to determine how much salt to apply to my posts. 

     I am 33 years old, but as a journalist, I am a complete newcomer.  This is my first and only and these are the frst articles that I have ever written. 

    As a musician, there is more of a story to tell.

    When I was very young, I told my parents I wanted to learn how to play the trumpet, so after months and months of badgering them, at age 7, they finally bought me a piano.

    The deal was that my grandmother was a piano teacher, so if I could prove an aptitude for , they’d buy me a trumpet later.

    By age 14,  I had reached grade 4 on piano, but the sorts of I was being taught on piano were a million miles from the I had wanted to play on trumpet, and further still from the I was now listening to, that being almost exclusively Iron Maiden.

    So, after much begging, I was bought my first electric , a Marlin Loner superstrat-style that I found at Grotts in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in late 1989.  A  that I loved intimately, learned my first chops upon, and was devastated when it was utterly destroyed (along with my amp) at a party at a bandmates house (that I wasn’t even invited to) when the bandmate in question decided to recreate the actions of endless famous and punk , by smashing the as hard as he could into the amplifier, repeatedly, until there was nothing left but firewood.  … and… roll.   Needless to say, that split up shortly afterwards.

    I picked up my second , a second-hand Squier in a sparkly blue finish with a varnished maple neck, for £110 at a show, again in Newcastle, shortly after the demise of the Marlin.  Being an avid Iron Maiden fan, I was delighted to own a that looked more like those wielded by my heroes, although I quickly found that it takes more than a that looks like a Strat, made by a subcompany, to sound like one of Maiden’s guitarists. 

    Endless hours of practice later and a broadening of musical tastes to include pre-Britpop proper /alternative and grunge, heavier (than Maiden) like Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Testament, Helloween, and other -based hard like Van Halen, AC/DC, Deep Purple and Guns’n'Roses, and it became obvious that a regular clone just wasn’t up to the job anymore.

    A third trip up to Newcastle was in order, this time to Windows, where in the basement I found a brand new black Ibanez RT150 for sale for… I can’t remember exactly, either £189 or £289, but either way, to me it seemed a fortune and I was absolutely delighted with its heavy--esque spikysuperstratness, humbucker pickups, and delightfully slim neck profile that allowed much easier movement for all those speedy scalar exercises and searing heavy solos that I was attempting to play.  For the first time ever, I owned two .  I was becoming.  Or to put it another way, I had tasted for the first time the ailment that I would later know as GAS – Gear Aquisition Syndrome.

    Soon afterwards, I finished my A-levels in Physics, Pure & Applied Maths and Computing, and relocated to Stafford to attend Staffordshire University where I hoped to gain a degree in Computing but instead met a guy who would change my life forever. 

    He was the other guitarist in the first I played in after moving South, wielding an  Ibanez “Jem” that he had built himself from individual genuine Ibanez Jem parts, Desert Yellow with pink pickups, pyramid inlays, Floyd Rose whammy system…. a true beauty of a , and if the sight of the wasn’t impressive enough to my 18-year-old “metaller’s” eyes, hearing it in his hands was breathtakingly awe-inspiring.  MAN, that guy could play!  I’d never even heard of sweep-picking until he demonstrated it, effortlessly gliding around the Jem’s neck with creamy legato solos as if he’d been born with it umbilically attached to his body.

     I was blown away.  I was in a with this guy.  Learning his tricks, his chops, his finger exercises, being introduced to by and I’d never heard of but who made the musicians in my own collection seem like technical beginners… , Joe Satriani, Steve Vai… and my friend had already convined me that I could be just like these guys with enough practice.  Could life get any better than this? 

    It was at some point during this first year at uni that computing had started to lose its appeal, and as such my studies suffered and I failed the first year.  My bandmate and mentor, having completed his own studies, moved back to his old stomping ground of London, and so, still believing it was my best shot at a career, I managed to get back onto the 1st year again, but my heart just wasn’t in it and the , now with only myself on , was preparing to play our first gig.  MY first gig.  Battle Of The at Staffordshire University’s midtown bar, The Whitely Bar, the best venue in town, now unfortunately a collection of classrooms belonging to Stafford College.

    I was terrified before the gig.  Absolutely terrified.  I was shaking, I didn’t know if I could do it.  I’d only ever played in private jam sessions and practices, never in front of a crowd, and we were the first on.

    For the entire first song I couldn’t even look at the crowd.  Every time I approached the mic to do backing vocals I could feel my legs shaking.  I’ve never felt so self-conscious in my life.  But then the first song ended and the weirdest thing happened.  Something I’d never experienced before.  Something that had never happened in all the months of practices we’d had  in preparation for gigging .  Something I simply hadn’t accounted for in my mind.

    We played the last chords of the song and ended as usual, but then unlike the usual moment’s silence that followed the end of each song in our practice sessions leading up to the gig, there was another noise.  Utterly unexpected…  the sound of a crowd cheering and clapping… what the hell?   This was a completely new experience.  Instantly, my fears evaporated.  My self-consciousness disappeared.  This stage was my world.

    The rest of our set is something of a blur.  Heightened emotions, and yet feeling utterly relaxed, my next memory of that evening is wandering, nay, floating around the room in a post-gig stupor, I had my first ever epiphany.  This was my future.  Whatever happened, I wanted to play on stage for the rest of my life.  All the indecision, all the searching, all the teenage angst about my place in the world, gone in an instant.  I was a guitarist, and I’d be a guitarist until the day I died.

    I didn’t even bother with the second half of that second first-year of my degree, instead choosing to stay at home spending all day everyday practicing the “best bits” from the “Steve Vai 10-hour Workout” over and over and over and over and over, and continuing to write and gig with the .  To my parents’ dismay, I was throwing away a computing career to be in a .

    Alas, that split explosively after a year or so, but my love of , of gigging, of playing in a room with other musicians and a newfound love of recording remained, and I quickly found myself in another , although not the style of I had previously dreamed of playing in.. 

    My tastes had broadened even further by now.  had led me to Rush, Marillion and It Bites, , Led Zeppelin.  Industrial, alternative and like Nine Inch Nails, , , Levellers, Pop WILL Eat Itself, The Wonder Stuff and Sisters Of Mercy had led me to Senser, Jamiroquai, Skunk Anansie, Living Colour, and I was starting to take more of an interest in and , although at the time I really didn’t know where to start.  I think my first CDs were Larry Carlton’s Kid Gloves and George Benson’s gratest hits.

    The new was very different from anything I’d ever done.  I’d be the sole guitarist, the rest of the lineup being a superb  bass-player (the first bassist I’d ever heard that could play slap properly), two “keyboardists” who were both into trance and were closer to what I now know as “programmers” than keyboardists, a female soul vocalist in the Aretha mould, and a hardware sequencer covering the rest. 

    The was a combination of Chic-esque disco, , soul and “modern” electronica, but with occasional ridiculous solos.

    I had sold my Squier Strat to a friend from uni, and had since bought my first “ – a beaten-up old vintage blonde Strat that someone had said they’d found in their attic, which appeared to be a late 50’s / early 60’s model, but actually turned out to be completely fake.  It cost me £300 and played like a dream.  The neck was much thinner than any I’d owned and it actually sounded like a Strat, although in hindsight slightly on the bright side, whereas my old Squier had sounded like a piece of balsa wood with some pickups glued to it.

    At first employed as a session guitarist (my first ever session gig), I was almost immediately asked to join the , and I stayed with them for seven whole years through a variety of lineup changes. 

    In this entire time, this didn’t play a single gig.  We always had almost an ’s worth (or a set’s worth) of material, but no sooner were we writing a new song, we were “ditching” one of the older ones because it sounded poor in comparison with the new song.

    That is not to say the entire experience was non-productive.  Quite apart from the learning experience and associated musical resarch and practice that comes with spending so long playing an unfamiliar genre, we did manage to make a whole $550 USD from our 14,000 downloads from the once-great unsigned community website, MP3.com

    Not long after joining this , I bought another .  This time a one, albeit a one, which was a second-hand 90’s re-issue of a 60’s , in salmon pink.  I didn’t care about the colour, I was in a disco – it’d be good for the image.  It was £230 and is still a staple of my arsenal.

    This was a complete contrast to the blonde fake-strat.  It had a deeper tone, a much thicker D-shaped neck, actual sustain, and although slightly harder to play, was much closer to providing a usable disco/ sound

    Not long after I had joined that , the “keyboardists” had left to pursue more trancey dreams, but at one point we had eleven people in the including the horn section, percussionist and 3 backing vocalists.  To date, the largest I’ve ever been in, albeit never played with alltogether in the same room at once, and in fact only ever being in the same room as all of them at once on one occasion – the photoshoot for the MP3.com page.

    That is not to say that I didn’t gig for those 7 years.  At the same time as being in that , I played in numerous other , mainly and covers, but also original material in a post- hardcore / nu- , (first as guitarist, then as bassist one day when our bassist failed to turn up for a gig and was never seen by any of the again, then as drummer – an instrument I had been lrarning on and off for years from living in shared houses with various drummers), and also wrote solo material (I was reviewed in Guitarist magazine as “one to watch” and “needs to buy a tuner” in a postage-stamp-sized article on the readers demos page in the mid-to-late 90’s).  I also did a few solo acoustic gigs here and there and regularly went to “jam nights” wherever I could find them in the area.

    At around this time, I bought another , an Ovation Celebrity, a roundbacked electro-acoustic, for around £400.  Not an outstanding , but it played like an electric and did the job for me for all my electro-acoustic needs (which in fairness were few).

    When I first joined the disco , I was unemployed.  I soon found myself working in a large factory, where I tested and calibrated and wired and assembled for as long as I could take, before deciding that I could be an electrical or electronic engineer and should return once more to university.

    I decided to visit the uni to see which courses were available and while being shown around, the guide opened a door and announced “and this is our new Technology department, part of the School Of Engineering”.

    And so ended my desire to be an electrical or electronic engineer.

    Seven days after that initial visit to the university, I had left my job and started my new university course… a B.Sc.(hons) in Technology, which I graduated 3 years later with a 2:1 (a “B+” to the rest of us).

    While at uni, I came across a bargain… a black Ibanez RG550 but with a slightly damaged trem – £110.  The damage to the trem made no difference to the way the played, or even on the use of the trem itself, and it lasted for 3 years before giving up the ghost, at which time I replaced it with a brand new top-of-the-range Ibanez trem, and the has still cost me less than it should have.  This would be my weapon of choice for the heavier side of my playing for years to come.

    Working for the next three and a half years (for a pittance) as a Technician for Technology and Performing Arts at a College Of Further Education, I had some wonderful opportunities to learn from an endless supply of new and enthusiastic Tech students, practice my talents out-of-hours in the college recording , utilise a free practice room at the college, and also the chance to poach the best young local musicians for my own .

    The disco , like my previous “main” , ended somewhat explosively due to… artistic differences… and I found myself to be the oldest member in my new - that contained a young female uni-student vocalist who had “failed” an audition for my old disco , and two highly talented young (late-teens) students from the college, a drummer and a bassist, who had recently found themselves sans-.

    Alas, this was short-lived, relatively, but still managed a number of successful gigs and the beginnings of a fanbase, not to mention an emotionally-charged and exciting time for all involved.  The drummer was later to become my best friend, brother, hetero-lifemate, inspiration, housemate, party-partner-in-crime, and much, much more.  To date I’ve played in no less than six with him, and have just started a new project with him, from Christmas 08.

    After three and a half years working at the college, I made it.  I got a job in the “proper” industry.

    I would be working for one of the “big” major labels at one of the UK’s biggest, busiest, best-equipped professional recording studios as a Technical Engineer, which involved me moving to London, where I spent a lot of time writing and partying, and managed to not play a single gig for the duration.

    During this time, my view of the industry changed dramatically.

    Modern stars were now just people, not gods, and some of them weren’t even very nice people.   Many were down-to-earth, lovely people (often the ones I least expected) but others seemed so far into their own hype that they didn’t much have time for mere mortals.  Luckily for my sanity, it turned out that most of those who were “idiots” were the members of that were relatively new on the scene, had recorded one or two albums and were NME pin-up boys, playing pseudo- faux-alternative pop--with- while sporting Tony & Guy hairstyles and designer clothes.  I couldn’t help feeling they’d missed the point somewhat.

    On the other hand, the stars who had been in the game the longest, the likes of Eric Clapton, AC/DC, Tony Christie and Meatloaf, turned out to be some of the nicest, most down-to-earth people you could ever hope to meet. 

    That is not to say that this rule is universal.  Some “younger acts” were perfectly affable, while one or two of the older stars were conspicuously aloof or even downright rude and ignorant, but it is certainly enough of a trend to be an adequate generalisation for the moment.

    As time went on, leading up to my inevitable redundancy, the industry was falling apart at the seams. It had been a suspicion of mine for most of my post-pubescent life, but from viewing it first hand it had become unignorably obvious to me that something serious was missing from the majority of the in the mainstream.  The art

    Having also witnessed the artistic enthusiasm of the Performing Arts students at the college, and having heard the from their Tech students being heavily influenced by the true-art mindset of their Performing Arts neighbours, and I realised that most of those kids had more artistic integrity and talent in their pinky fingers than most of these “professional” musicians have in their entire bodies.

    From that moment, I have redoubled my efforts to find the worth listening to, sending my --seeking mental tentacles out in all directions, all genres, leaving no stone unturned in my quest.

    And that brings me to the present day.  Proud new owner of a (review to follow shortly), an Ibanez AFS-75T with Bigsby-style trem, Squier Vintage Modified bass, and Marshall ED-1 Compressor, Tech21 Sansamp VT Bass and Electro-Harmonix Double Muff stompbox pedals, that I procured all in one morning’s glorious shopping spree at GAK after being left some money in a will. (Thanks, Aunty Lily!  I know you would approve!)

    GAS indeed.

    So… today’s post hasn’t turned out exactly as planned.

    I started writing this with the intention of reviewing my new , but instead have rambled on for far too long about my musical background.

    Ah well, the story has been told now, so if I die tomorrow, at least my story will remain… at least until my hosting subscription runs out, anyway.

    If anyone has made it this far, then thanks for reading.  You now have a better idea of who I am and what I’m about.

    Unlike many such blogs, I haven’t created this site to make money, just to aid my quest to hear the best ever written or performed.

    I can be a bit melodramatic at times, but I’m a good guy, so please, join the (the link is at the top of the page) – and have your say on the matter.  Hopefully one day soon we’ll have a proper 24-7 community here of like-minded fans discussing their favourite .

    Best regards,

    Muso.

    P.S. review to follow.