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dallasb
New member
Demographics mostly. I'm a big 80's fan but also huge into 90's bands and modern rock or bands like todays Opeth. Tool is amazing, Muse is a synthy version of Dream Theater.
To say that stuff is easy to play is lol
When I joined a modern rock band the timing sort of messed with me. Not the standard straight up 4/4 stuff that was most of the 80's. Rythym's for most modern rock song is far more impressive. It's usually more dynamic too. Not the same 80's palm mutes and open it up at the chorus. Not the same predictable style as intro verse verse chorus 30 sec lead solo, chorus and fade I was used to. 90's changed it all. Not just the emo part. Look beyond that lyrical style and explore the crafting of the music itself.
Both eras were cool. Most of my influences were Zep. Not quite the VH godlike status some like to promote. Just to me each era needs its own thing.
80's guys are doing what their parents were by saying the only good music was from my (50's) days.
80's you had standard tunings and shredders mostly. 90's ushered in many many alternate tunings, more back beats, 7 string guitars, baritone guitars, baritone tunings, and then bands like Goo Goo Dolls that really took tuning to the extreme and made it sound bad ass. Not since the Rain Song had a I heard a detuned song so cool and tough to pick up on. Then I heard Name, Iris, and so many others. Until the tuning was given so many people played that song so wrong.
Like the Rain Song, it made me appreciate the minds of the creators. Here tune to DADAEE, DDDDDE, BDDDDD, DADDAD, and write songs as profound and see how easy it really is. If it was so easy, how come the 80's shredders never attempted it?
80's shred and glam metal was done for at the right moment. 50's music died, 60's music went away when new innovators changed the game in the 70's. I appreciate all those eras. I only wish there was more of a new shift in this new era. My kids listening to my music from HS years just feels weird.
To say that stuff is easy to play is lol
When I joined a modern rock band the timing sort of messed with me. Not the standard straight up 4/4 stuff that was most of the 80's. Rythym's for most modern rock song is far more impressive. It's usually more dynamic too. Not the same 80's palm mutes and open it up at the chorus. Not the same predictable style as intro verse verse chorus 30 sec lead solo, chorus and fade I was used to. 90's changed it all. Not just the emo part. Look beyond that lyrical style and explore the crafting of the music itself.
Both eras were cool. Most of my influences were Zep. Not quite the VH godlike status some like to promote. Just to me each era needs its own thing.
80's guys are doing what their parents were by saying the only good music was from my (50's) days.
80's you had standard tunings and shredders mostly. 90's ushered in many many alternate tunings, more back beats, 7 string guitars, baritone guitars, baritone tunings, and then bands like Goo Goo Dolls that really took tuning to the extreme and made it sound bad ass. Not since the Rain Song had a I heard a detuned song so cool and tough to pick up on. Then I heard Name, Iris, and so many others. Until the tuning was given so many people played that song so wrong.
Like the Rain Song, it made me appreciate the minds of the creators. Here tune to DADAEE, DDDDDE, BDDDDD, DADDAD, and write songs as profound and see how easy it really is. If it was so easy, how come the 80's shredders never attempted it?
80's shred and glam metal was done for at the right moment. 50's music died, 60's music went away when new innovators changed the game in the 70's. I appreciate all those eras. I only wish there was more of a new shift in this new era. My kids listening to my music from HS years just feels weird.