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salmacis
Forum Senior Member
Content Addition
Joined: April 10 2005
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Points: 3928
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Posted: April 22 2006 at 11:40 |
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Edited by salmacis - January 27 2009 at 12:48
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Zargus
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Joined: May 08 2005
Location: Sweden
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Points: 3491
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Posted: April 22 2006 at 19:43 |
Well i have to say if there is 1 music style i realy hate its Hair metal.
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valravennz
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Joined: March 20 2005
Location: New Zealand
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Posted: April 23 2006 at 08:40 |
Though not a huge fan I have been known to like Def Leppard; Guns n Roses; Skid Row; Extreme; Aerosmith; Motley Crue, Bon Jovi and Van Halen
Edited by valravennz - April 23 2006 at 08:41
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"Music is the Wine that fills the cup of Silence"
- Robert Fripp
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salmacis
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Posted: April 23 2006 at 11:39 |
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Edited by salmacis - January 27 2009 at 12:49
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Certif1ed
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Joined: April 08 2004
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Posted: April 25 2006 at 16:25 |
Skid Row were awesome.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: April 25 2006 at 17:00 |
Certif1ed wrote:
Skid Row were awesome.
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Time-Machinist
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Joined: April 03 2006
Location: Museum
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Points: 182
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Posted: April 25 2006 at 17:01 |
Yep, Skid Row is my favourite on this genre...
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jonathan_0311
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Joined: April 06 2006
Location: United States
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 19:34 |
I voted other for Scorpions
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Peter
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 21:40 |
All crapola, to me.
Cartoonish, WWF-type musick.
Sorry!
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Cygnus X-2
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 21:57 |
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Atkingani
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Joined: October 21 2005
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Posted: April 26 2006 at 22:01 |
Hey, Peter, and "Twisted Sister"? Dee Snider, band's singer/leader/whatever could be the symbol of the 80's Hair Metal.
BTW, Bon Jovi seems to be very popular... he appears twice in the poll!
Edited by Atkingani - April 26 2006 at 22:03
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Guigo
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TheProgtologist
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Joined: May 23 2005
Location: Baltimore,Md US
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 08:27 |
Certif1ed wrote:
Skid Row were awesome.
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I agree,their debut was good but Slave to the Grind was even better.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
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Points: 21151
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 08:37 |
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salmacis
Forum Senior Member
Content Addition
Joined: April 10 2005
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Points: 3928
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Posted: April 27 2006 at 15:20 |
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Edited by salmacis - January 27 2009 at 12:50
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Certif1ed
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 03:28 |
Slave to The Grind is a brilliant metal album - absolutely pure metal, kinda like the debut but turned up to 11 on all counts.
Their more recent stuff has been surprising me - it's not as immediate as the first two, but the quality is still there.
Just yesterday I bought "Thick Skin", and I'm surprised it didn't make more of a splash when it was released - it's a bit experimental in places, but I guess it still has too much of the "old" sound for modern metal fans, and their new tendency to head towards dischordant sounds is probably not to most people's tastes.
They also seem to have "absorbed" sound from other bands - I hear echoes of GunsNRoses, Creed and Foo Fighters that makes this album sound somewhat generic in places.
It's still a good album - but Slave... is their best.
I agree on the Scorpions - they went through so many changes that it's a bit unfair to label them a "hair metal" band - espeically as none of them ever looked particularly "glamourous".
From the beginning they mixed up hard rockin tracks with slower ballad-like numbers, so I see a kind of natural progression in their discography, unlike either Whitesnake or Def Leppard, who obviously made the move to ride the wave. I think Whitesnake were more excusable (apart from those perms) simply because of "Saints and Sinners" which is a classic album, and "1987" which has Steve Vai on and is therefore brilliant.
My favourite Scorps album is either "Love Drive" or "Animal Magnetism", neither of which have that "Hair Metal" sound at all. "Blackout" has a much better production - and it's a very, very close 3rd. Great album!
Yeah... I prefer the Scorps without Uli, even though he was amazingly inventive.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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salmacis
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 15:32 |
I found all the early Whitesnake albums, bar 'Saints And Sinners', funnily enough, to be very inconsistent. That album shone out as being by far the best of the early era to me, but I've heard it described by many as being their weakest...Whatever, I only own '1987', probably the best album they ever made, and a compilation of the early albums called 'The Early Years'. I thought it was John Sykes of Tygers of Pan Tang/Thin Lizzy (he is brilliant on the 'Thunder and Lightning' album songs I know), not Steve Vai on '1987' though.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Joined: April 22 2005
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 16:12 |
salmacis wrote:
I found all the early Whitesnake albums, bar 'Saints And Sinners', funnily enough, to be very inconsistent. That album shone out as being by far the best of the early era to me, but I've heard it described by many as being their weakest...Whatever, I only own '1987', probably the best album they ever made, and a compilation of the early albums called 'The Early Years'. I thought it was John Sykes of Tygers of Pan Tang/Thin Lizzy (he is brilliant on the 'Thunder and Lightning' album songs I know), not Steve Vai on '1987' though.
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Steve Vai has no real connection to Whitesnake - It was John Sykes on 1987 (absolutely great album BTW). Steve Vai played on the following album (Slip of the Tongue) but he wasn't really involved in the songwriting - he just stepped in for Adrian Vandenberg. But he surely played the tracks in his own, instantly recognizable way.
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Certif1ed
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Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
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Points: 7559
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Posted: May 02 2006 at 17:28 |
MikeEnRegalia wrote:
salmacis wrote:
I found all the early Whitesnake albums, bar 'Saints And Sinners', funnily enough, to be very inconsistent. That album shone out as being by far the best of the early era to me, but I've heard it described by many as being their weakest...Whatever, I only own '1987', probably the best album they ever made, and a compilation of the early albums called 'The Early Years'. I thought it was John Sykes of Tygers of Pan Tang/Thin Lizzy (he is brilliant on the 'Thunder and Lightning' album songs I know), not Steve Vai on '1987' though.
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Steve Vai has no real connection to Whitesnake - It was John Sykes on 1987 (absolutely great album BTW). Steve Vai played on the following album (Slip of the Tongue) but he wasn't really involved in the songwriting - he just stepped in for Adrian Vandenberg. But he surely played the tracks in his own, instantly recognizable way. |
Since Vai played on "Slip..." and gets equal credits with Vandenberg, I guess that makes it a pretty real connection, songwriting or not. Playing in "his own (...) way" would indicate that he wrote some of the music.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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MikeEnRegalia
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Joined: April 22 2005
Location: Sweden
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Posted: May 02 2006 at 17:43 |
^ actually it says in the liner notes that Vai played all the guitars on the album, but wrote nothing for it. That's also consistent with his comments on his own website:
Just like you once told me (if I remember correctly) that you recognized Vai's playing on Zappa's albums (where he didn't write any music either), I recognize his style on that album. It's the way he plays, the precise rhythm parts, use of vibrato bar etc.
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Abstrakt
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 18 2005
Location: Soundgarden
Status: Offline
Points: 18292
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Posted: May 03 2006 at 11:45 |
Whitesnake
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