
mctallica1
Well-known member
I still rock out Slave to the Grind pretty regularly.
Great song
Great song
ChadVanHalen":7wcetvdm said:The Skids got me into the whole "pop/hair/melodic/glam" thing. Was a big thrash fan and hated everything else, until I saw videos of my idols Pantera play a KISS song with Skid Row (My little 14 year old opinionated brain couldn't deal with it)
Then I actually listen to Youth Gone Wild (catchy as all hell, eh?) and since then, well, here I am in a glam metal cover band building a Mick Mars guitar...
I liked Skid Row because they didn't just chug power chords, they had very different rock chords then anyone else at the time, very unique... Wish I could listen to anything after Subhuman Race
glpg80":2vn416lb said:Cool background info
A tour long education in tone![]()
What was Dave Sabo using back then before wolfgang's?
crankyrayhanky":27vreaz9 said:^depends on how you define "great players"
All those grunge guys you mentioned can certainly craft a decent tune as a songwriter, but for pure technical shredding power over the neck they were less than mediocre. Tough to get the whole package as a player
rlord1974":1z386as9 said:threadkiller":1z386as9 said:I understand music needed something else at the time and the music was overproduced, solos were wank fests, songs were predictable, etc. I appreciate the songs and listened to and enjoyed all the [grunge] bands I just bashed on. I just wish they had maybe kept the chops and technical skills and been more selective about when and how to use it, instead of throwing the technique out the window in the name of playing with energy/emotion/whatever.
I think you're trying to have your proverbial cake and eat it too.
The whole reason the grunge movement turned rock back in the right direction, away from all of the needless wankery and shredding, was because these guys were not technical "virtuosos". They were meat and potatoes players. This allowed them to focus on writing good songs, as opposed to good solos. The reality is, for the majority of players, the more technically proficient you become, the more that proficiency will show up in your writing. I have not known many guys over the years that were killer shredders that were able to truly park their egos and play what the song needed, as opposed to showing the world what finger acrobatics they were capable of. This, of course, is my experience and YMMV. And, to be clear, I am speaking in reference to songs based around a vocal, not instrumental guitar music.
Wait a minute! This thread is about Skid Row!![]()
![]()
![]()