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Atavachron View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:04
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ ok, Iron Maiden are impressive ... but IMO not primarily because of their technicality. As a matter of fact Steve Morse runs circles around them.Big%20smile


Steve Morse?  Steve Morse runs circles around almost everyone..


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:12
^Yeah, I've been a long time fan of Steve.

Edited by Slartibartfast - October 15 2007 at 05:12
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:14
Originally posted by Ghost Rider Ghost Rider wrote:

Terje Rypdal is on our addition list, and he will be added by Alucard ASAP. BTW, I'd be grateful if people could ask about such things without implying someone is keeping a given band or artist out of PA on purpose.

I wasn't trying to imply anything, I did a  search and it came up blank.  Maybe I didn't do it properly. Smile
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:18
Sorry for sounding confrontational, I had a bad nightSmile. Anyway, have you looked at the Master List? Rypdal should be there, marked in red.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:36
I don't think I am entitled to judge the technical abilities of all the great musicians you quoted. 
Do you really think you are ??? I can only tell you my personal preferences. Well, I guess in the end is what you are doing, too. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 05:43
Depend. More songs are very technically. In more genres, not only in Prog field. For example also "Black Sabbath" or "N.I.B." are very technical songs.
 
Rush's songs are very technical... East Of eden songs are technical songs... Also Judas Priest's "Painkiller" is a very Killer song... King Crimson songs are extreme technical...
 
So... I don't have a single very technical song but too long techinical songs list for this thread!
 
Ahhh... Because the Jeff Beck's version of "Love Is Blue" isn't extreme technical for 1968 and for today standards?


Edited by Mandrakeroot - October 15 2007 at 05:44
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 06:12
hmmm.... "Instrumedley" by DT...
{Flashlights shade shrunken views
Of a red demon’s foxtrot in brews
Guns & flowers crown morning news
Panic-stricken guilt now ensues}
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 07:32
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Terj Rypdal's Chaser - a guitar tour de force, ranging from Hendrix to Marvin, plus his own specilities.
Dave Fiuczinski and Wayne Krantz's separate  and startlingly dfferent interpretations of Tomorrow Never Knows which bookend the Beatles' tribute: Come Together Volume 2 (NYC Records)

By the way why the hell isn't Rypdal here anyway, yet?  I haven't even heard that one, but I have several of his albums:
Rypdal,  Terje    Waves    1977    Sep.    879        6/1/03
Rypdal,  Terje    Undisonus    1990        880        8/5/03
Rypdal,  Terje    Skywards    1997        881        6/1/03
Rypdal, Terje    Whenever I Seem To Be Far Away    1974                12/5/06
Rypdal, Terje    After the Rain    1976    Aug.    678        2/8/01
Rypdal, Terje    Descendre    1979    Mar.    981        1/5/04
Rypdal, Terje    If Mountains Could Sing    1995        679        1/8/01
Rypdal, Terje    Lux Aeterna    2000    Jul.    1189        12/23/05
Rypdal, Terje    Vossabrygg    2006                3/24/07
Rypday, Terje    Singles Collection, The    1988    Aug.    178   
Superb Jazz-Rock/Fusion  

 
The two Chasers albums (his band's name at the time), take off from The Singles Collection release, but are harder edge, and you'll find freer jazz on several of the tunes played -   the tune called Chaser  (from the first album) would be one of my all time top 20 jazz rock tunes.
 
The best eclectic music on the Web,8-11pm BST/GMT THURS.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 11:15
spiral architect - insect

cant beat it technically!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 12:33
We can't talk about technicality as just playing fast. A technically impressive song has to have a technically challenging song structure, based around a strange scale, if any scale, and should be a piece so abstract that any listener of the song will feel a strange emotion when listening to it. For me that's Fracture and FraKctured. They're not songs in 4/4 with fast guitar solos, and they're not even songs in 13/8 with fast guitar solos. They're pieces of music written in varying time signatures (including 5/4, 7/4, 13/8, and one part that's something like 4.5/4), including very fast and very syncopated instrumentality, and not to mention they're both roughly 12 minutes long, so you need stamina to play that.

There aren't many songs like that, period. Technical in composition as well as in execution.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 18:48
Originally posted by puma puma wrote:

We can't talk about technicality as just playing fast. A technically impressive song has to have a technically challenging song structure, based around a strange scale, if any scale, and should be a piece so abstract that any listener of the song will feel a strange emotion when listening to it. For me that's Fracture and FraKctured. They're not songs in 4/4 with fast guitar solos, and they're not even songs in 13/8 with fast guitar solos. They're pieces of music written in varying time signatures (including 5/4, 7/4, 13/8, and one part that's something like 4.5/4), including very fast and very syncopated instrumentality, and not to mention they're both roughly 12 minutes long, so you need stamina to play that.

There aren't many songs like that, period. Technical in composition as well as in execution.


I haven't heard FraKctured, but I have to agree about Fractured. That song is more impressive knowing that it was recorded live,and they just cut out the applause and put it on the album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 23:18
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ ok, Iron Maiden are impressive ... but IMO not primarily because of their technicality. As a matter of fact Steve Morse runs circles around them.Big%20smile
 
Well, perhaps...I don't have too many recent Deep Purple records, so I can't really comment...but the true strength of the Maiden is another Steve (Harris), who is really one of the greatest metallic bassists I've ever heard. I'll be willing to take a hit right here and say he's actually quite as good as Squire.
 
Well, maybe ALMOST as good, but still really, really, really, really good. Not Jeffrey though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 15 2007 at 23:23
Just take a listen to the counterpoint on Starcastle's Fountains of Light or their first album  ...  takes some beating  Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 02:42
Originally posted by The Whistler The Whistler wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ ok, Iron Maiden are impressive ... but IMO not primarily because of their technicality. As a matter of fact Steve Morse runs circles around them.Big%20smile
 
Well, perhaps...I don't have too many recent Deep Purple records, so I can't really comment...but the true strength of the Maiden is another Steve (Harris), who is really one of the greatest metallic bassists I've ever heard. I'll be willing to take a hit right here and say he's actually quite as good as Squire.
 
Well, maybe ALMOST as good, but still really, really, really, really good. Not Jeffrey though.


Do yourself a favor and listen to Purpendicular ... or Rapture of the Deep. Big%20smile

You don't have to convince me that Iron Maiden are a good band ... they're easily in my top 10 list of all 80s metal bands. I just don't think that they specialize in technicality.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 02:47
Originally posted by puma puma wrote:

We can't talk about technicality as just playing fast. A technically impressive song has to have a technically challenging song structure, based around a strange scale, if any scale, and should be a piece so abstract that any listener of the song will feel a strange emotion when listening to it. For me that's Fracture and FraKctured. They're not songs in 4/4 with fast guitar solos, and they're not even songs in 13/8 with fast guitar solos. They're pieces of music written in varying time signatures (including 5/4, 7/4, 13/8, and one part that's something like 4.5/4), including very fast and very syncopated instrumentality, and not to mention they're both roughly 12 minutes long, so you need stamina to play that.

There aren't many songs like that, period. Technical in composition as well as in execution.


Sometimes even an odd time signature like 15/16 can sound quite natural and not very complex ... I already mentioned that Ivanhoe track. Sometimes the complexity comes from some instruments playing different rhythms/signatures than others simultaneously (polyrhythms) ... Meshuggah are a good example of that. Many of their songs are in standard 4/4 ... but if you're not used to polyrhythms you'll have a hard time figuring that out.

BTW: 4.5/4 is probably better noted as 9/8.Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 03:12
Oh and I forgot about behold ...the arctopus, their new album is killer tech, was released today I think.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 03:18
FruMp; make sure to check out Blotted Science with Zelany and Jarzombek..  album Machinations of Dimentia

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 03:37
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by The Whistler The Whistler wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ ok, Iron Maiden are impressive ... but IMO not primarily because of their technicality. As a matter of fact Steve Morse runs circles around them.Big%20smile
 
Well, perhaps...I don't have too many recent Deep Purple records, so I can't really comment...but the true strength of the Maiden is another Steve (Harris), who is really one of the greatest metallic bassists I've ever heard. I'll be willing to take a hit right here and say he's actually quite as good as Squire.
 
Well, maybe ALMOST as good, but still really, really, really, really good. Not Jeffrey though.


Do yourself a favor and listen to Purpendicular ... or Rapture of the Deep. Big%20smile

You don't have to convince me that Iron Maiden are a good band ... they're easily in my top 10 list of all 80s metal bands. I just don't think that they specialize in technicality.
 
Thems new Deep Procol albums? I can see myself doing that.
 
But surely the man ain't Ritchie...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 04:47
^ Fortunately he knows that and doesn't try to imitate Ritchie.Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 16 2007 at 09:37
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by puma puma wrote:

We can't talk about technicality as just playing fast. A technically impressive song has to have a technically challenging song structure, based around a strange scale, if any scale, and should be a piece so abstract that any listener of the song will feel a strange emotion when listening to it. For me that's Fracture and FraKctured. They're not songs in 4/4 with fast guitar solos, and they're not even songs in 13/8 with fast guitar solos. They're pieces of music written in varying time signatures (including 5/4, 7/4, 13/8, and one part that's something like 4.5/4), including very fast and very syncopated instrumentality, and not to mention they're both roughly 12 minutes long, so you need stamina to play that.

There aren't many songs like that, period. Technical in composition as well as in execution.


Sometimes even an odd time signature like 15/16 can sound quite natural and not very complex ... I already mentioned that Ivanhoe track. Sometimes the complexity comes from some instruments playing different rhythms/signatures than others simultaneously (polyrhythms) ... Meshuggah are a good example of that. Many of their songs are in standard 4/4 ... but if you're not used to polyrhythms you'll have a hard time figuring that out.

BTW: 4.5/4 is probably better noted as 9/8.Wink


Meshuggah is a very good example. In many of their songs, the drummer plays in 4/4 with his hands,  but does something completely different with his feet, which makes the song sound odd, but it still has a natural feel to it.
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