Well, it's actually four minutes, but you imagine an incessantly repeating little
guitar riff over a synthesised banjo and drum machines and you can easily see how time could seem to stand still.
Not exact matches
Fantastic
guitar riff driven psychedelia dominate the heavily layered productions; very experimentally produced music that doesn't go
over your head but feels like there is more than meets the ear on the first listen.
So potent was the presentation that the opening
guitar riffs alone
over the opening Columbia Pictures logo had my feline viewing companion looking around with great interest.
These little irritating things like the music score playing
over and
over (the same
guitar riffs on a loop will eventually drive you insane), characters repeating themselves, and saying things like: «My role is to see the hidden truth that lies beneath each battle» just seem a little bit silly to me and decrease the overall experience of the game, unless you turn the music off and skip most of the dialogue.
From the moment your hear that whistle
over the acoustic
guitar riff, you know you're in for something you won't soon forget.
Rattling along
over a spindly
guitar riff and with a buoyant bounce that recalls The Cribs, it's the also the soundtrack to a new film by the artist entitled Work No. 1701.