At one point, you literally go to Hell, and the entire experience is accompanied
by guitar chords that Tenacious D would love.
Not exact matches
On those black Gibson ES - 355
guitars, both acoustic and electric, King amazed audiences with his signature style - «single - string runs punctuated
by loud
chords, subtle vibratos, and bent notes, building on the standard 12 - bar blues and improvising like a jazz master,» as the AP describes it.
In the pre-historic days of yore, the only way I might accomplish this was
by screeching out Iron Maiden tunes (air
guitar optional) through the power of my own vocal
chords.
And
by developing the Loog Academy app to teach traditional
chord work on the
guitar's non-traditional 3 - string design, it made learning to play easier than ever.
, each introduced
by an eight - bar
guitar break from 1975's most popular three -
chord, who - left - the - doob» - in - my - dad's - Buick?
Chords, lyrics, and
guitar tabs all crafted with care
by Songnotes.
Not only is it laced with hip, mellow, contemporary songs a la «Felicity,» it also has
guitar chords reminiscent of the James Bond 007 theme, and a musical segment inspired
by the theme to «Shaft.»
Running approximately two - and - a-half minutes, the single's ominous
guitar riffs have been widely cited as early examples of the power
chord technique, a rock»n' roll staple beloved
by musicians as diverse as The Who's Pete Townsend and punk pioneers The Ramones.
Performed
by Billy Kinsley in a spare, understated arrangement, it comes up, on little cat feet, so to speak (the acoustic
guitar chords fade in oh so subtly), during a largely wordless scene in Nicolas Roeg's intense, disturbing 1980 erotic thriller Bad Timing.
«Falling Slowly» is the first song they sing together in the film; he's on
guitar, she's on piano, and he's just taught it to her
chord by chord.
The singing of «Long Road to Freedom» accompanied
by Ted Demille's woody
chords strummed on an acoustic
guitar.
The melody is given to a solitary clarinet, accompanied
by sparse plucked
guitar chords at a much slower pace.
Logue explained that it is the repeated
guitar chords in the song Roadrunner
by the seminal 1970s no - wave / proto - punk band The Modern Lovers.
The performances, usually involving a mic - and - electric -
guitar setup, are weird and beguiling amalgamations of technical competence and noise; prolonged pauses are interrupted
by power
chords, as Pulfer yelps and writhes about the microphone.