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Quels sont les plus beaux solos de guitare éléctrique pour vous?

n°14541742
osannha
afrosamba
Posté le 07-04-2008 à 19:01:48  profilanswer
 

Reprise du message précédent :


ces mecs là sont carrément énorme...

 

a chaque fois que je les regarde, je me dis que c'est ça en fait, que j'ai envie de faire.
foux da fa fa...... :bounce:

 

edit : faut mettre la version live, c'est là que c'est drôle !!
http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=WGoi [...] re=related


Message édité par osannha le 07-04-2008 à 19:02:53
mood
Publicité
Posté le 07-04-2008 à 19:01:48  profilanswer
 

n°14640021
dark matte​r
Posté le 18-04-2008 à 22:09:55  profilanswer
 

Camel - Ice  :love:  


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Boom boom, bang bang lie down you're dead
n°14640785
LeroyBrown
Now I'm Here
Posté le 19-04-2008 à 00:11:32  profilanswer
 

Money de Pink Floyd !  
 
Bohemian Rhapsody de Queen !
 
One de Metallica !  
 
:jap:

n°14663280
preludes
Posté le 22-04-2008 à 01:02:51  profilanswer
 

Voodoo Child (Slight Return) forcément ;)

n°14669256
Black_Jack
Bo_Jack
Posté le 22-04-2008 à 17:25:03  profilanswer
 

Bon ben puisqu'y a pas mal de metal, je vais citer mon gratteux préféré du moment : Nick Holmes de Paradise Lost, et notamment les solos de fins de Forever Failure (cf clip sur youtube), et Over the madness.
Ce gars ne privilégie pas vraiment la technique, par contre, il a le doigté terriiiiblement mélodique.


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Horse_man
n°14669465
clown69
Posté le 22-04-2008 à 17:47:41  profilanswer
 

Biloute a écrit :


pareil Toto en 95 (apres Bercy) à l'olympia, Lukather à l'elysée montmartre et par contre Toto sur la tournée Mindfield : une horreur !!
Par contre... Lukather et Carlton au New morning... outch  :D une vraie claque !
PS : je suis guitariste depuis une vingtaine d'années !


 
J'ai acheté le DVD mais pas encore regardé et j'ai le CD de leur concert dans un club au Japon, d'il y a quelques années. J'ai vu aussi Lukather à l'Elysée Montmartre avec Simon Phillips à la batterie et John Pena à la basse (un monstre ce mec), un des meilleurs concerts de ma vie.

n°14695137
Picking
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 07:12:02  profilanswer
 

cytrouille a écrit :

La réputation d'Andy McKee n'est plus à faire, en duo c'est pas mal non plus :D
 
http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=ExgqnilG4pU


 
C'est trop heavy ...un morceau plus modéré serait mieux  :D

n°14696376
Dag elg
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 11:28:20  profilanswer
 
n°14697069
Biloute
HFR since 1998
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 12:57:46  profilanswer
 

clown69 a écrit :

J'ai vu aussi Lukather à l'Elysée Montmartre avec Simon Phillips à la batterie et John Pena à la basse


c'etait la tournée Candyman, avec Garfield aux claviers... enorme ce concert !!


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Fossile HFRien
n°14699437
clown69
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 16:57:11  profilanswer
 

Biloute a écrit :


c'etait la tournée Candyman, avec Garfield aux claviers... enorme ce concert !!


Exact. Tu y as assisté donc. :D

mood
Publicité
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 16:57:11  profilanswer
 

n°14699578
Biloute
HFR since 1998
Posté le 25-04-2008 à 17:16:11  profilanswer
 

oui ;) ... quelques heures avant ce concert Lukather etait chez California music.... bonjours le boxon !


Message édité par Biloute le 25-04-2008 à 17:17:03

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Fossile HFRien
n°14790241
El tourist​o
Posté le 06-05-2008 à 16:40:45  profilanswer
 

Allez j'ajoute les miens :
 
Van Halen - Beat it
Deep Purple - Child in Time
Deep Purple - Lazy
Santana - Europa
Gary Moore - Parisienne Walway
Led Zeppelin - Starway to heaven

n°14792439
ericm40
eclectique
Posté le 06-05-2008 à 20:54:01  profilanswer
 

El touristo a écrit :

Allez j'ajoute les miens :
 
Van Halen - Beat it
Deep Purple - Child in Time
Deep Purple - Lazy
Santana - Europa
Gary Moore - Parisienne Walway
Led Zeppelin - Starway to heaven


 
 
 
mes préférés
born under a bad sign (reprise de jimi hendrix solo cool mais du feeling encore et encore)
johnny b goode (reprise de jimi encore avec pas moins de 6 solos de furieux)
soul sacrifice de santana (concert a woodstock du grand art)
child in time de deep purple, mais la version bonus sur l'album concerto for group and orchestra
et tant d'autres :bounce:

n°14806360
Picking
Posté le 08-05-2008 à 02:52:27  profilanswer
 

ericm40 a écrit :

johnny b goode (reprise de jimi encore avec pas moins de 6 solos de furieux)


 
Johnny B. Goode de Jimi ? C'est pas plutot Marino qui le joue ? (même si Jimi Hendrix à déjà pratiqué avec Frank, je me souviens pas qu'il l'ai joué)
 
version live Johnny B. Goode ( Frank Marino) :love:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZzhQXG7OfY

n°14807829
theredled
● REC
Posté le 08-05-2008 à 12:26:54  profilanswer
 

Hendrix a fait plein de fois Johnny B Goode en live, comme 12000 autres reprises

 

ps : comment ericm40 aurait-il pu confondre Jimi Hendrix et ce Frank Marino ? [:klemton]

Message cité 1 fois
Message édité par theredled le 08-05-2008 à 12:30:49

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Contes de fées en yaourt --- --- zed, souviens-toi de ma dernière lettre. --- Rate ta musique
n°14810918
Picking
Posté le 08-05-2008 à 20:09:12  profilanswer
 

theredled a écrit :

Hendrix a fait plein de fois Johnny B Goode en live, comme 12000 autres reprises
 
ps : comment ericm40 aurait-il pu confondre Jimi Hendrix et ce Frank Marino ? [:klemton]


12000 reprises, c'est très peu  :o sinon j'ai jamais entendu Jimi jouer le morceau Johnny B. Goode
 
En tout cas ce n'est ni Jimi et ni Frank l'auteur du morceau, c'est Chuck Berry, ça swinguait à l'époque  :D  
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0YUA3yTUss

n°14818721
theredled
● REC
Posté le 09-05-2008 à 19:07:01  profilanswer
 

Picking a écrit :


12000 reprises, c'est très peu  :o sinon j'ai jamais entendu Jimi jouer le morceau Johnny B. Goode


http://fr.youtube.com/results?sear [...] arch_type=


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Contes de fées en yaourt --- --- zed, souviens-toi de ma dernière lettre. --- Rate ta musique
n°14821429
Picking
Posté le 10-05-2008 à 00:00:37  profilanswer
 
n°14822205
theredled
● REC
Posté le 10-05-2008 à 00:56:29  profilanswer
 

Picking a écrit :

 

Marche pas ton lien


?
Ca marche chez moi (c'est une liste, pas une vidéo)

Message cité 1 fois
Message édité par theredled le 10-05-2008 à 00:56:35

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Contes de fées en yaourt --- --- zed, souviens-toi de ma dernière lettre. --- Rate ta musique
n°14822341
Picking
Posté le 10-05-2008 à 01:06:23  profilanswer
 

theredled a écrit :


?
Ca marche chez moi (c'est une liste, pas une vidéo)


ok,   :jap:  mais les versions live de Frank Marino sont meilleurs   :)

n°14840534
suprememax​payne
Testing spirit
Posté le 12-05-2008 à 15:14:39  profilanswer
 

le 1er solo de The Four Horsemen :love:


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Top Gear Topic, VO only§§ *** Im in ur sea, layin ur internetz!!1! *** SΩΩN *** Soyez plus Pacifiques :o *** a.k.a. WoBuLaToR
n°14842847
Splatsch
Benicio ..
Posté le 12-05-2008 à 20:35:21  profilanswer
 

R. L. Burnside n'est pas mauvais dans le genre


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-->  Cette semaine, en écoute : ♫♪ Saul Williams !  <--
n°14844762
ZeMrHyde
té !
Posté le 12-05-2008 à 23:01:57  profilanswer
 

Tommy Emmanuel, reprise d'un vieux truc ...  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-ylrDwCQj4
 
edit:
et pi 3 cordes, ça suffit :
Seasick Steve - dog house boogie
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNoPNC3ebYQ
Seasick Steve - cut my wings
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RlUwS1LKRs
 
 [:jeese75]


Message édité par ZeMrHyde le 12-05-2008 à 23:05:33
n°14853508
plastiseen
Posté le 13-05-2008 à 21:46:57  profilanswer
 

Le dernier solo de The Funeral Portait (Opeth) est grandiose :love: (7:30)
Le 1er n'est pas mal non plus, cela dit [:bank] (4:28)
http://youtube.com/watch?v=tQBrNsH4Cu8

n°14991856
preem
Light the sun.
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 10:36:10  profilanswer
 

En parlant de Comfortably Numb version Pulse, qui pour moi aussi est d'une perfection absolue à faire pleurer (en plus j'ai toujours l'impression qu'il me parle avec sa guitare ce type), j'ai que très récemment découvert que la version qu'on connait tous (celle du dvd pulse et de 99% des videos sur le net) est en fait une version tronquée.
Au montage ils ont dégagé plus d'une minute, apparemment parce que Gilmour n'était pas très content de lui...
 
J'ai pas le lien en tête mais tapez 'Comfortably numb live in london" sur youtube et vous tomberez dessus, elle fait plus de 10 minutes....
 
Voilà, ça a peut être déjà été évoqué mais dans tous les cas, enjoy !


Message édité par preem le 27-05-2008 à 10:37:23

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Flick r
n°14991946
Black_Jack
Bo_Jack
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 10:44:41  profilanswer
 

Il va falloir que je m'y mette au Floyd, j'écoute pleins de groupes qui s'en inspirent. Le problème c'est que le seul album que j'ai écouté d'eux, je l'ai trouvé ennuyeux, soporiphique et limite creux (The Wall)


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Horse_man
n°14991982
preem
Light the sun.
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 10:49:06  profilanswer
 

Black_Jack a écrit :

Il va falloir que je m'y mette au Floyd, j'écoute pleins de groupes qui s'en inspirent. Le problème c'est que le seul album que j'ai écouté d'eux, je l'ai trouvé ennuyeux, soporiphique et limite creux (The Wall)


 
The Wall tu l'aimes ou tu le detestes j'ai l'impression...Moi j'y reviens pas très souvent..
Le plus abordable ça reste Wish You Were Here selon moi. En plus il contient toutes les composantes de leur son (solos à pleurer, nappes envoutantes, longs morceaux...)


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Flick r
n°14992061
comment
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 10:56:30  profilanswer
 

joe satriani - flying in a blue dream
gilmour - confortably numb sur pulse  
maiden (dave murray) - fear of the dark
slash - november rain
hendrix - all along the watchover
 
maiden - afraid to shoot stranger c pas vraiment un solo mais tout ceux qui l'ont ecouté ont adoré
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-S2Drv9LsiI (a partir de 2:45)

n°14993168
pactole@
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 12:43:46  profilanswer
 

can jouwe a écrit :

bon evidemment les soli de J Page y a pas mieux  
 
mais y  a deux guitaristes que j'aime bien et qui n'ont pas été cités(je crois)  
 
Leslie West
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm11kFRz388
 
John Mac Laughlin plutot jazz d'ailleurs  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oGNg9u-mwV4
 
bon vous pouvez tirer à vue et puis les vidéos c'est vraiment pas ça :p


 
tirer à vu sur john mclaughlin et jimy page ?  :heink:

n°14993588
ngaha
Posté le 27-05-2008 à 13:30:19  profilanswer
 

- Waine Perkins - Concrete jungle - Bob Marley & The Wailers 1972
- Uli Jon Roth - Backstage Queen - Tokyo Tapes - Scorpions 1978
- Harvey Mandel - So Sad - Future Blues - Canned Heat 1970
 
Et puis tout Clapton, JJ Cale, Hendrix, Page, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Santana, Van Halen, Robin Trower, Neil Young, Pearl Jam


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¡ Forward in all directions !
n°15009141
crapo87
Posté le 28-05-2008 à 18:03:36  profilanswer
 

Moi j'aime bien les solos de Wolf Hoffman d'accept

n°15030230
F@bek
6 SEASONS AND A MOVIE §§§
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 15:47:21  profilanswer
 
n°15030341
Black_Jack
Bo_Jack
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 15:54:54  profilanswer
 

Ca passe pas au boulot :o
Tu peux copypaster ?


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Horse_man
n°15030400
F@bek
6 SEASONS AND A MOVIE §§§
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 15:57:43  profilanswer
 

Citation :

I'm told that the good folks over at Rolling Stone.com have launched a list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Songs as a feature at their site to coincide with their Guitar Gods Issue that--like most great things in this world--is FOR SALE.
 
As I write this, I haven't seen it, but I'm sure it's going to include a few listings that make me think "Oops, I left that one out." Because that's what this list business is all about. I write it up and then YOU remind me of the obvious ones I SHOULD'VE included. And I thank you for pointing out my stupid omissions. It won't improve my grade, but it makes me a better person and that's what this is all about.
 
According to the calendar hanging in my room, Keith Richards, the semi-living guitarist of Rolling Stones, Ltd., came up with the guitar riff for "Satisfaction" in a hotel room on May 6, 1965 and then fell back asleep. How Keith Richards could actually remember the exact date is a little suspect. If he hadn't played the riff into a tape recorder in the first place, it might've been lost forever.
 
But to celebrate, List of the Day undertook the task of picking out 25 infamous guitar riffs that depending on your era were among the ones you mangled when you joined your first band. I often got stuck on the organ, so I was always pushing for a little "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" action. Because, believe me, "Kick Out the Jams" sounds lame on the organ.
 
Some picks were for variety's sake. I could've picked 10 Hendrix tunes without pause. Or 10 Zeppelin. And the Ramones played mostly chords, so that sent them to the back of the line.  
 
I haven't yet seen what RS.com picked. And I'd really like to see what your lists would be like. So feel free to throw your faves in the comments!
 
25) "Enter Sandman"--Metallica: "Master Of Puppets" or "For Whom The Bells Tolls" or even "Fight Fire With Fire" might make for better overall riffs, but "Enter Sandman" has a presence that everyone in the room feels and I've seen some pretty bad bar bands tackle this one and still come out sounding as if they knew something about music.
 
24) "Sweet Child O' Mine"--Guns n' Roses: This is one of those Pavlovian riffs. You hear it start up and the entire song starts to play in your head. Whether you want it to or not. It's the equivalent of someone yelling the song's title and then 1-2-3-4, except it sounds better.
 
23) "Black Dog"--Led Zeppelin: Jimmy Page figured out the 1970s before anyone. As a guitar player he wasn't about to let a lead singer score all the girls, so he made sure that his band based their tunes not on quaint little pop hooks, but guitar riffs that would send every teenager in America back to their bedrooms to woodshed and to scrutinize how it was done. Then he gave the songs titles that no one could figure out.
 
22) "Freebird"--Lynyrd Skynyrd: There's a reason people still call out for this song and it goes beyond just because everyone always does. There was a time when this lonesome, whiny riff actually could make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. That year was sometime in the 1970s and ever since it's become a cliché, but there's a reason certain riffs become a cliché. They're as natural as breathing.
 
21) "Jumping Jack Flash"--The Rolling Stones: Less a riff than a conglomeration of chords, but the Stones mastered the art of the chunky riff. Some would take "Brown Sugar." I'd prefer "Gimme Shelter" by a hair. But of this old beast's catalog, this still sounds fresh to me, while many others have grown tired thanks to the conspiracy of classic rock radio.
 
20) "Roadhouse Blues"--The Doors: The Doors were never known for their guitar riffs. "Five To One" is a great two-note buzzsaw, the rewrite of the Kinks for "Hello, I Love You" was nice, but this is the one sliding riff that every bar band in America has done to death usually at the request of a very inebriated audience member who refuses to shut up until it is played.
 
19) "Johnny B. Goode"--Chuck Berry: Considering how many songs have been written based on the "Chuck Berry" school of guitar and considering how many songs Chuck himself wrote based on this riff, tells me this is one immortal, undying riff. I've played it wrong for years.
 
18) "Kick Out The Jams"--MC5: Whether or not these revolutionaries actually had the catalog to be the great American wunderkinds of the ‘70s is debatable. Album productions, flawed concepts, inter-band squabbles, politics all rendered them a mess. But their signature tune and its signature riff never lost an ounce of momentum.
 
17) "Pipeline"--The Chantays: Surf Rock goes in and out of style, depending on the whims of fate. But this tune has been covered by enough punk bands and people of taste to ensure that even if you've never heard the Chantays version, you've heard someone do a good approximation.
 
16) "I Feel Fine"--The Beatles: All said, I'd take "She Said, She Said" or "And Your Bird Can Sing," but we'll stick with the tunes that the band and their record company pushed on the public as hit singles. This one with its use of (gasp) feedback (were people conservative and corny back then or what?) and its string mangling complexity make you wonder why they bothered. I guess they wanted a challenge. This could've been a hit even without the difficult riff.
 
15) "Walk This Way"--Aerosmith: That this riff worked so well in a hip-hop context just goes to show you don't know what you have even when you have it. I'm sure Joe Perry and Brad Whitford knew they had a decent riff to work off of when they played it back in the mid-'70s, but I'm also pretty sure that they didn't hear it as being revolutionary or probably that much better than many of their other riffs. At this point, you wonder if they ever want to play it again. That is, until the money rolls in and then it probably seems like a good idea.
 
14) "Day Tripper"--The Beatles: Another one from the Fab Four where the riff is more important than the rest of the tune. And it's a nice tune. But everyone tries to play this for the joy of the riff and who gets around to the rest of the song? Nobody.
 
13) "Heartbreaker"--Led Zeppelin: Just another great Jimmy Page riff. The only problem with listing any Led Zep riff is you're immediately reminded of all the ones you're leaving behind...so, yes, "The Ocean," "The Immigrant Song," "Living Loving Maid," "In the Evening," "Kashmir," the list goes on...
 
12) "Smells Like Teen Spirit"--Nirvana: I don't know whether I'm voting for the four chords that run throughout the song or the two notes that ring out when the chords fall away. Either way, it's impossible to explain how weird, unusual and right this sounded the very first time I heard it. And how everyone argued over whether it was too easy to be for real. As a simpleton, I like simple.
 
11) "Crazy Train"--Ozzy Osbourne: This almost sounds like an Indian music scale if you play it a certain way. Ozzy says Randy saved his career and remembers the man with great reverence and if I met someone who gave me a riff that delivered a career comeback like "Crazy Train" did for Ozzy, well, yeah, I'd be pretty thankful as well. And name a couple of kids after him.
 
10) "Voodoo Child"--Jimi Hendrix: Another great riff remembered as much for how many other people screw it up. Stevie Ray Vaughan could pull it off note for note, but the guys who show up to woodshed at the local open mics need to stop murdering this legendary lick. It's like a game of "Are You Serious?"
 
9) "Another One Bites The Dust"--Queen: I didn't include any bass guitar riffs because I didn't want to make things more confusing but I had to include this one. It gave bass players a reason to live. And as readers of this fine column know, I'm well aware that bass players frequently suffer from low self-esteem and feelings that the other people in the band don't think very highly of them. This isn't paranoia. This is usually dead on.
 
8) "Born To Run"--Bruce Springsteen: I don't usually associate Bruce Springsteen with great guitar licks. He has a few decent ones here and there, but for a guy with a band that now features FOUR guitar players, it's a wonder why. Then again, he also carries two keyboardists (RIP Danny Federici) and sticks Clarence with a tambourine when he doesn't have a sax solo lined up. In all that racket, can anyone actually hear the tambourine?
 
7) "Back In Black"--AC/DC: It's a tad sad and ironic that AC/DC are considered to be a legendary band with their singer Bon Scott. Yet, the album for which they are most noted is the one made in tribute to him after he died. So, in a sense, most people are more familiar with the less legendary edition of the group, the one that went on to become massively more successful and has lasted many times longer than the original incarnation. Me? I like Brian Johnson as a singer just fine. He sounds like my cat when you step on his tail. What's not to like?
 
6) "Layla"--Derek and the Dominoes: Eric Clapton has made many regrettable albums and it's easy to forget that he was once a fiery player who could reach true dynamic heights. Duane Allman, on the other hand, died before he could do any damage to his legacy. For practical reasons, I'll always choose living over dying, but immortality is better than anything Clapton's done in years.
 
5) "Iron Man"--Black Sabbath: Black Sabbath are another band chock full of great riffs for aspiring guitar players. Guys who can't sing love to play Sabbath tunes because they know as the guitar player they get to be the real focal point of the band. So whether it's "War Pigs," "Paranoid," "Sweet Leaf," "Children Of The Grave," "Hole In The Sky" or "Iron Man," the guy holding the guitar controls the destiny of the band. Such power!
 
4) "Whole Lotta Love"--Led Zeppelin: Just had to sneak one last Jimmy Page riff in here. His tone alone is shivering. The tension of the little snap-back you hear weirds me out. How many notes are actually happening here? It counts out as two, but feels like five.
 
3) "Purple Haze"--Jimi Hendrix: I've heard hundreds of people play this lick. No one sounds like Hendrix. And it isn't just a matter of tone. It's a matter of feel. The word genius gets thrown around pretty carelessly. "Oh, look, Jim parallel parked the car today. He's a genius." No, that's luck. This is genius.
 
2) "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"--The Rolling Stones: Here's the proof that sometimes what is simplest is best. Occam's Razor as it applies to music. The extra fuzztone helped, but really writing this lick must now feel like discovering water or having written "Happy Birthday." It's that obvious.
 
1) "Smoke On The Water"--Deep Purple: I was never in a band that actually played this song. I've never known anyone who's been in a band that's played this song. But I've never met a guitar player who didn't play the opening lick for hours upon receiving their first electric guitar. It's so prevalent, it's more like a catchphrase than a riff.


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n°15030437
Black_Jack
Bo_Jack
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 16:00:04  profilanswer
 

Bah faut prendre ça au second degré j'imagine :D


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Horse_man
n°15030472
F@bek
6 SEASONS AND A MOVIE §§§
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 16:02:36  profilanswer
 

Black_Jack a écrit :

Bah faut prendre ça au second degré j'imagine :D


peut importe le classement , mais ne pas y mettre "All along the watch tower"  :sweat:


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n°15031707
djdeedoo
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 17:22:38  profilanswer
 

F@bek a écrit :


peut importe le classement , mais ne pas y mettre "All along the watch tower"  :sweat:


 
Bah y'a pas vraiment de riff hein.

n°15031810
Knox Overs​treet
The Dead Poets' Society
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 17:32:04  profilanswer
 

Rapidos pour moi et dans un ordre quelconque:
 
- N'importe quoi de Randy Rhoads (spécialement Crazy train et Mr Crawly live)
- Les solos classiques de Malmsteen (ah zut on a dit élec?) + sa reprise de l'adagio d'Albinoni
- Orion et Welcome home de Metallica (3 solos chacune)
- Child in Time de Deep Purple (une tuerie ce truc)
- Boyazont d'Europe
- Tender Surrender de Vai
- Pink Floyd - Atom Heart Mother, Mother, Comfortably Numb

n°15031834
Black_Jack
Bo_Jack
Posté le 30-05-2008 à 17:34:56  profilanswer
 

Mr Crawly [:kend]


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Horse_man
n°15038786
preem
Light the sun.
Posté le 31-05-2008 à 11:50:51  profilanswer
 

Voici le lien de la vidéo dont je parle un peu plus haut, Comfortably Numb en 1994 en version intégrale.
 
http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=6Yb-vURVRKw


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Flick r
n°15042434
pactole@
Posté le 31-05-2008 à 20:46:54  profilanswer
 

nyrk a écrit :

Regardez par là :
 
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=mattrach
 
Ce gus a 15 ans, il joue du Steve Vai comme pas deux et compose déjà des trucs plus que corrects. Impressionnant. [:wam]


 
il reste une place sur le guitar idol 2008 http://www.guitar-idol.co.uk/entries/finalists
 
à mon avis elle est pour lui  [:petrus75]
enfin ça serait cool

mood
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