is there a rhino-type various artists box set for this stuff?
― brimstead, Friday, 14 May 2021 19:29 (five years ago)
probably lots of ghastly budget gas station ones out there lol
― brimstead, Friday, 14 May 2021 19:30 (five years ago)
Don't think Light In The Attic have got quite there yet
― remind me not to read the comments on that one (Matt #2), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:33 (five years ago)
I've been eyeing a Cinderella box set for a while.
Fenriz having a Hanoi Rocks tattoo probably increased their cult status.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 14 May 2021 19:34 (five years ago)
hair metal needs it's Nuggets.
― peace, man, Friday, 14 May 2021 19:35 (five years ago)
Hanoi Rocks were def keeping the New York Dolls dream alive by doing throwback music in a messy fun kinda way. It was. kind of funny to hear them for the first time; i always heard *about* them as a teen but never got my hands on any music until the early 90’s and i was like wait THIS is what they were all talking about? it was a way different vibe than i expected
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:35 (five years ago)
Yeah all of that sounds OTM about Hanoi Rocks. I do enjoy the songs I finally heard in my 20s, though. Sort of trashy glam rock/power pop, hit some of the same buttons for me that Cheap Trick and Redd Kross do, not that I was inspired to dig very deep.xps
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:38 (five years ago)
It was actually the exact vibe I was hoping for.
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:39 (five years ago)
Yeah, VG and Johnny Fever's experiences matched mine. We definitely all heard of and read namechecks of Hanoi Rocks well before any of us actually heard a note. In fact, I don't think I heard them until I found a cheap vinyl copy of Back to Mystery City in 2005 or 2006. It was not what I expected at all.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 14 May 2021 19:47 (five years ago)
Rhino have 4 compilations in the Youth Gone Wild series.
― Siegbran, Friday, 14 May 2021 20:39 (five years ago)
https://rateyourmusic.com/release/comp/various-artists/youth-gone-wild-heavy-metal-hits-of-the-80s-volume-2.p/
― Siegbran, Friday, 14 May 2021 20:40 (five years ago)
being talked about in the metal thread but Tracii Guns and Michael Sweet from Stryper have a new band together called Sunbomb and their new album is great. not glam though, like heavy traditional euro metal/doom/power metal stuff
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 14 May 2021 21:25 (five years ago)
How many Hanoi Rocks albums were even issued in the US back in the '80s? I think only the last one from before their breakup; the others were only available on import iirc. That partially explains their low profile (ofc I realize we're not all Americans here). The Sunset Strip crowd could just go to Tower or Amoeba and find them, but it'd be a different situation in suburbia.
― Josefa, Friday, 14 May 2021 22:08 (five years ago)
They were always more of a cult band in the UK as far as I recall it, Kerrang! were into them but the sleaze rock thing hadn't really kicked off yet. Probably helped that drummer Razzle had been in a band with Kerrang! cartoonist Ray Zell, hence the similarity in names!
― remind me not to read the comments on that one (Matt #2), Friday, 14 May 2021 22:23 (five years ago)
Malibu Beach and their Up Around the Bend cover got a bit of UK airplay but didn't make the top 40. Wikipedia says the Two Steps From the Move album squeezed into the top 30 here though.
― remind me not to read the comments on that one (Matt #2), Friday, 14 May 2021 22:25 (five years ago)
xxpost damn Michael Sweet sounds fucking great still. thx for the rec, ums, will def check this out
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 00:17 (five years ago)
Michael Sweet gets around! I just noticed by clicking on "fans also like" that he and George Lynch released a couple albums together as Sweet & Lynch. It's definitely in the more American vein of 80s metal than Sunbomb, but damn do I love hearing George Lynch do George Lynchy things (instead of whatever that dumb band was he had with Dug Pinnick).
― Johnny Fever, Saturday, 15 May 2021 03:18 (five years ago)
lmao
I want to do at least one SUNBOMB show just so I can hear @michaelhsweet say . How y’all doing tonight? We are GUNS N MOSES!!!— Tracii ⨁ 🇺🇸🇩🇰 (@TraciiGuns) May 8, 2021
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 03:32 (five years ago)
ha!
― Johnny Fever, Saturday, 15 May 2021 03:42 (five years ago)
So are any of these yelpers and shriekers secretly good or clever lyricists?
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 15 May 2021 12:15 (five years ago)
Axl probably the best lyricist by far?
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Saturday, 15 May 2021 13:10 (five years ago)
For sure the most distinctive, in the pure Id sense, I guess.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 15 May 2021 13:44 (five years ago)
Axl is a great lyricist, great turns of phrase that are so distinctive
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 15 May 2021 13:55 (five years ago)
Strapped in the chair of the city's gas chamberWhy I'm here I can't quite rememberThe Surgeon General says it's hazardous to breatheI'd have another cigarette but I can't seeTell me who you're gonna believe
is a cut above
Ricky was a young boyHe had a heart of stoneLived 9 to 5 and he workedHis fingers to the bone
imo
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Saturday, 15 May 2021 14:06 (five years ago)
You got your bitches with the silicone injectionsCrystal meth and yeast infectionsBleached blond hair, collagen lip projectionsWho are you to criticize my intentions?Got your subtle manipulative devicesJust like you I got my vicesI got a thought that would be niceI'd like to crush your head tight in my vice...pain!!
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 15 May 2021 14:43 (five years ago)
That's actually pretty impressive in terms of rhyme and wordplay!
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Saturday, 15 May 2021 14:55 (five years ago)
I really like the lyrics to "Right Next Door to Hell"
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Saturday, 15 May 2021 15:51 (five years ago)
Blackie Lawless!Blind in Texas An El Paso hellhole, I couldn't get much higherWhite lightning moonshine, tastes like fireI drank for free till I couldn't seeI fell on the floor, what I said isI'm blind in Texas, the lone star is hot tonightI'm blind in Texas, the cowboys have taken my eyesI drank Dallas whiskey and lost my mindHad high-balls in Houston, three for a dimeEverything starts to spin, loaded on ginI fell out the door, what I said isI'm blind in Texas, the lone star is hot tonightI'm blind in Texas, the cowboys have taken my eyesSan Antonio and the West Texas town El PasoCorups Christi and Waco, the Yellow Rose is wildHey dude, let's partyRaisin hell in Austin just after sundownWhen the hoosegow police decided to come round- they said"Boy what's the matter with you, what you trying to do?"I looked at the man and I said'I think I'll have another one'-We ain't got no more-'What do ya mean you ain't got no more liqour'-We ain't got no more, go home-'What do ya mean go home, what am I supposed todo... get on a horse and ride back to LA?'They've got no horseWhat do you mean-they got no horse?There's no HORSE--'the hell you say... suffer!"I'm blind in Texas, the lone star is hot tonightI'm blind in Texas, I'm blind
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 16:00 (five years ago)
yeah Blackie was definitely from the old school, more Alice Cooper
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 15 May 2021 16:19 (five years ago)
he was def committed to the idea of the “show”
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 17:13 (five years ago)
i rate Tom Keifer/Cinderella for lyrics and Janey Lane/Warrant as well
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 17:15 (five years ago)
Blackie was even in NY Dolls for five minutes
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 15 May 2021 19:20 (five years ago)
He was! Also weren’t him & Nikki Sixx in London together for like a minute too
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 20:02 (five years ago)
Blackie's lyrics to Rebel in the F.D.G. are a nice hedonistic fantasy, exactly the type of song I'd love to play while driving 80 miles an hour on an empty highway and dream of the unattainable "glamorous" form of debauchery where there are no hangovers, any jail sentences are cushy, you don't wind up accidentally killing anybody, and then when your body is partied out, it just dies peacefully. also killer guitar riff.
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Saturday, 15 May 2021 20:25 (five years ago)
https://genius.com/Wasp-rebel-in-the-fdg-lyrics
xpost - I think everyone was in London for a minute, that band was like the glam metal farm team
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 15 May 2021 21:45 (five years ago)
right!? “if you wanna be in this scene you need your girlfriend’s makeup, a teasing comb & to be a former member of London”
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 21:53 (five years ago)
I’m still amused that there was both a UK band, London SS, in the original punk scene and the US glam metal London where both bands were starting points for a whole bunch of players. (As separate from the other UK punk band simply called London.)
― Ned Raggett, Saturday, 15 May 2021 22:06 (five years ago)
Didn't London put in a brief appearance in The Decline of Western Civilization Pt. II, or am I thinking of Odin?
― remind me not to read the comments on that one (Matt #2), Saturday, 15 May 2021 23:00 (five years ago)
they featured quite a bit in Decline 2, on-camera interview clips & some stage stuff i think
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 23:16 (five years ago)
they even said themselves in the doc that they were like a gateway band or something
― terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 15 May 2021 23:17 (five years ago)
'Bankok Shocks Siagon Shakes Hanoi Rocks' is one of my all time favorites. It's a good and sleazy but has quite a bit of power pop. Their other albums have really good tracks and worth hearing too. I had heard of the band as a teenager but never got any of their music until Geffen put them out on CD in '89.
― earlnash, Sunday, 16 May 2021 00:02 (five years ago)
no.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 16 May 2021 02:53 (five years ago)
Man, Hanoi Rock is pretty good. All I knew was what they looked like and their connection to Motley Crue so I never bothered giving them a shot.
Here's a question for armchair historians of the era. The first Van Halen album came out in 1978. So what or when was the first album to feature a finger-tappy guitarist clearly trying to imitate EVH?
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 May 2021 22:41 (five years ago)
Nursery Cryme, 1971
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 22:49 (five years ago)
there were a couple Quiet Riot albums with Randy Rhoads that only came out overseas but I've never heard them
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 22:54 (five years ago)
It doesn't answer your question but I'm actually curious if Steve Hackett was the first guy to do it on electric guitar in a pop context.
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 22:58 (five years ago)
I'm not including Steve Hackett (who def. tapped) or that other guy people cite, I'm talking about the wheedle-wheedle folks clearly influenced by EVH.
Those Quiet Riot albums with Rhoads came out right after VH, right? Or more or less the same time? I wonder how much of a flashy Rhoads showcase they are. Anyway, I'm mostly wondering how long it took for guitar players to essentially figure out what EVH was up to. Because for sure by the early '80s there were a ton of imitators. But for example, Steve Vai didn't release any of that kind of stuff (afaik) until around 1983. Or Satriani, his first album didn't come out until 1986. Clearly he knew about tapping before that, but I have no idea what he had been up to before that. Just teaching?
Here's something I just dug up:
In a new interview with the "Behind The Vinyl" podcast, Joe Satriani was asked if he started using the technique of tapping notes on his guitar when he first heard Eddie Van Halen in 1978. He responded: "I'd been tapping before that. I think, just like Eddie, 'cause we were the same age and started playing pretty much at the same time, we saw other people on television doing it. So I saw the guitar players in WISHBONE ASH. There was a show in America called 'Don Kirshner's (Rock Concert)', and I think WISHBONE ASH was on one night. And I think my dad was watching it. And I just walked into the room for a second, and I looked and I see the guy playing with his fingers. And I'm, like, 'Oh my god!' I just went right up to my room, picked up my guitar and went, 'That's a great idea. I'm gonna do that all over the place.'"My group of friends, everyone was tapping, but the great brilliance of Eddie was what he did with it," Joe continued. "And that's what you can say about everything. We knew the same chords — there's a million guitar players that know exactly the same 12 notes, the same chords, we buy the same strings, we're using the same guitars, pretty much. So what makes Eddie so special? Why did that genius just say, 'Well, I'll take that and just do this with it.' But he did, and all of us responded like it was godsent."The first time I heard Eddie was when 'Eruption' came to the radio, and I was sitting there with my guitar just jamming along with the radio, and, yeah, my jaw dropped. And I put my hands down and I went, 'Oh my god. I'm in the presence of greatness. That guy knows how to use things that I know.' It's, like, I've got all the tools laid out on my table just like him, but wow, look what he's doing with them.' And it just made me smile. I was so happy."The other part that made me so happy was because he played so aggressively and so melodically — the whole song, like it was a whole Eddie Van Halen world that he would show you," Satriani added. "But it was fun. It was rock and roll. It wasn't perfect. It wasn't pretentious. It was still, like, 'Let's just have fun.' And I thought, 'I need to get everybody that I know in this town to like this, because this is gonna be good for all of us guitar players that really wanna play.' Cause it was that attitude at the time — I was feeling like people were telling us, 'Slow down. Don't play so many notes. No feedback. Try to make your guitar sound like clean guitars from the '60s or something like that.' We were waiting for somebody like Eddie to come along and just like reinvent it. And he did. And it was truly great."Eddie has said in the past that he was inspired to start doing the finger-tapping trick after watching LED ZEPPELIN at the Los Angeles Forum in the early 1970s. Jimmy Page played the solo from "Heartbreaker", using both hands to tap out notes on the neck of the guitar, which inspired Eddie to take the technique and refine it, enabling him to play a seemingly impossible flurry of notes and pinched harmonics."It's like having a sixth finger on your left hand," he explained in 1978, according to BBC. "Instead of picking, you're hitting a note on the fretboard."DEEP PURPLE's Ritchie Blackmore reportedly claimed that he had seen CANNED HEAT guitarist Harvey Mandel using tapping onstage as early as 1968. DOKKEN guitarist George Lynch corroborated this, mentioning that both he and Van Halen saw Mandel employ "a neo-classic tapping thing" at the Starwood in West Hollywood during the 1970s. Mandel used extensive two-handed tapping techniques on his 1973 album "Shangrenade".
"My group of friends, everyone was tapping, but the great brilliance of Eddie was what he did with it," Joe continued. "And that's what you can say about everything. We knew the same chords — there's a million guitar players that know exactly the same 12 notes, the same chords, we buy the same strings, we're using the same guitars, pretty much. So what makes Eddie so special? Why did that genius just say, 'Well, I'll take that and just do this with it.' But he did, and all of us responded like it was godsent.
"The first time I heard Eddie was when 'Eruption' came to the radio, and I was sitting there with my guitar just jamming along with the radio, and, yeah, my jaw dropped. And I put my hands down and I went, 'Oh my god. I'm in the presence of greatness. That guy knows how to use things that I know.' It's, like, I've got all the tools laid out on my table just like him, but wow, look what he's doing with them.' And it just made me smile. I was so happy.
"The other part that made me so happy was because he played so aggressively and so melodically — the whole song, like it was a whole Eddie Van Halen world that he would show you," Satriani added. "But it was fun. It was rock and roll. It wasn't perfect. It wasn't pretentious. It was still, like, 'Let's just have fun.' And I thought, 'I need to get everybody that I know in this town to like this, because this is gonna be good for all of us guitar players that really wanna play.' Cause it was that attitude at the time — I was feeling like people were telling us, 'Slow down. Don't play so many notes. No feedback. Try to make your guitar sound like clean guitars from the '60s or something like that.' We were waiting for somebody like Eddie to come along and just like reinvent it. And he did. And it was truly great."
Eddie has said in the past that he was inspired to start doing the finger-tapping trick after watching LED ZEPPELIN at the Los Angeles Forum in the early 1970s. Jimmy Page played the solo from "Heartbreaker", using both hands to tap out notes on the neck of the guitar, which inspired Eddie to take the technique and refine it, enabling him to play a seemingly impossible flurry of notes and pinched harmonics.
"It's like having a sixth finger on your left hand," he explained in 1978, according to BBC. "Instead of picking, you're hitting a note on the fretboard."
DEEP PURPLE's Ritchie Blackmore reportedly claimed that he had seen CANNED HEAT guitarist Harvey Mandel using tapping onstage as early as 1968. DOKKEN guitarist George Lynch corroborated this, mentioning that both he and Van Halen saw Mandel employ "a neo-classic tapping thing" at the Starwood in West Hollywood during the 1970s. Mandel used extensive two-handed tapping techniques on his 1973 album "Shangrenade".
No mention of Hackett, sad face.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 May 2021 23:06 (five years ago)
the secret tapping dude is Harvey Mandell
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 23:12 (five years ago)
Would love to tap Mandel
― Feta Van Cheese (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 19 May 2021 23:34 (five years ago)