its looks really good and the guy playing Brain May really sounds a lot like him, its a small detail but a good one.
Looking forward to it.
Gear Gibson les paul Traditional, les Paul signature T, U.S strat, Japanese Strat , 1970s Greco Tele, Charvel So-Cal Pro Mod style 1, Fernandes TEJ-85, 70's Greco tele. Marshall JVM 205c (Dan Gower modded), JCM900 SL-X, some pedals, Yamaha THR10
The first time I heard Night at the Opera, I was 15 and smoking the weedz with the guys who ran the Handicrafts Lodge, at Boys Scout Camp. Stunning album!
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
neilrocks25 wrote:its looks really good and the guy playing Brain May really sounds a lot like him, its a small detail but a good one.
Looking forward to it.
A very important detail, to some of us.
I'm … cautiously optimistic about the film. Def. gonna check it out.
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.
ajaxlepinski wrote:The first time I heard Night at the Opera, I was 15 and smoking the weedz with the guys who ran the Handicrafts Lodge, at Boys Scout Camp. Stunning album!
Will definitely see the movie.
"The Prophet's Song" … *head asplodes*
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.
ajaxlepinski wrote:The first time I heard Night at the Opera, I was 15 and smoking the weedz with the guys who ran the Handicrafts Lodge, at Boys Scout Camp. Stunning album!
Will definitely see the movie.
"The Prophet's Song" … *head asplodes*
OMG!!! What a truly incredible song. Never upgraded from vinyl, when Night at the Opera became available on CD so, I haven't listened to that song in at least 30 years!!! Going to order the CD right now. Found this really cool vid.... gave me flashbacks! [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzdjMLKKdgk[/video]
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
Freddy was God and the creativity in that band was absolutely stellar. Queen had stunning, mind boggling song arrangements. Gotsta find a good, Queen bio that describes the recording sessions on Night at the Opera.... must have taken months.
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
James Brown is great but Pavarotti makes him look almost silly by comparison but Mercury holds a close flame to the master. Mercury would be a close number 2 to the big man and James Brown a sort of distant 3rd... given a little leeway for the comparisons.
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
Guitars: '78 Les Paul Pro / '89 SG Special/ '04 Gibson Les Paul Classic 3 pickup / Jackson Star/ Endres Tele / Fernandes Rhoads/ ''74 Hohner MIJ strat/ 2 Partscasters
Amps: Depends on when you ask. I got tired of constantly updating this section lol
Cabs Marshall 1960A w V30s/ Seismic 2x12 w Redback and V30.
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As a kid, there was a lot of Queen stuff that sailed right over my head. They are a band I grew up with, knew all of their more mainstream stuff and a bit of lesser known stuff. It wasn't until a few years ago that I revisted them and crawled down the rabbit hole. That's when I realized that their influence over modern music is second only to The Beatles. I honestly had no idea how far their tentacles reached.
That said, bio-pics like this one are not my thing. I'd rather watch vids and interviews on youtube. Also, nobody can cop Freddy. The guy was singular.
Also, they own the greatest musical performence in human history with their 20 minute set at Live Aid. Watching the world eat out of the palm of Freddies hand still gives me chills. I challenge anybody to watch them do Radio-Ga-Ga at that show and not have the hair on the back of your neck stand up.
Last edited by TurboPablo on Fri Aug 03, 2018 6:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
ajaxlepinski wrote:James Brown was all about stage presence. Pavarotti was all about voice. Freddie was both. Wonder if anyone will ever top Freddie?
If this movie is good; if Rami Malek can actually pull off the fire; if the world actually takes notice...
I predict a massive Queen resurgence in pop culture
There's never been anybody that touches the magic that came from Freddie Mercury
And, Brian May was / is no slouch either. Even my biggest guitar hero (Iommi) has idolized him for years
Glad we're not glossing over this, here. And not taking *anything* away from Freddie, not at all! But the magick of Queen is IMO the combination of Freddie and Brian. Two powerhouses of cosmic magnitude in a single 4-pc. band? Game over, man. Game over.
To be fair, Brian May is my spirit animal, so I'm a little biased...
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.
TurboPablo wrote:As a kid, there was a lot of Queen stuff that sailed right over my head. They are a band I grew up with, knew all of their more mainstream stuff and a bit of lesser known stuff. It wasn't until a few years ago that I revisted them and crawled down the rabbit hole. That's when I realized that their influence over modern music is second only to The Beatles. I honestly had no idea how far their tentacles reached.
That said, bio-pics like this one are not my thing. I'd rather watch vids and interviews on youtube. Also, nobody can cop Freddy. The guy was singular.
Also, they own the greatest musical performence in human history with their 20 minute set at Live Aid. Watching the world eat out of the palm of Freddies hand still gives me chills. I challenge anybody to watch them do Radio-Ga-Ga at that show and not have the hair on the back of your neck stand up.
The bolded part reminded me of how remarkable it was that performers at the Freddie tribute concert after his death ranged from Metallica to Liza Minelli. I still haven't quite wrapped my head around that...
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.
Queen are badasses. Aside from the incomparable Mercury they had two other singers that could carry lead duties in most any other band. Brian May multi tracks guitars like Les Paul and can flat out rip on a homemade guitar while picking with a six-pence - a coin the size of a dime.
ajaxlepinski wrote:James Brown was all about stage presence. Pavarotti was all about voice. Freddie was both. Wonder if anyone will ever top Freddie?
If this movie is good; if Rami Malek can actually pull off the fire; if the world actually takes notice...
I predict a massive Queen resurgence in pop culture
There's never been anybody that touches the magic that came from Freddie Mercury
And, Brian May was / is no slouch either. Even my biggest guitar hero (Iommi) has idolized him for years
Glad we're not glossing over this, here. And not taking *anything* away from Freddie, not at all! But the magick of Queen is IMO the combination of Freddie and Brian. Two powerhouses of cosmic magnitude in a single 4-pc. band? Game over, man. Game over.
To be fair, Brian May is my spirit animal, so I'm a little biased...
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and Sabotage would have been entirely different albums without the influence of Brian May, which carried well into the subsequent generations of material created with the various frontmen. I feel that this shift in focus by Iommi created some of the most amazing heavy music ever known.
ajaxlepinski wrote:James Brown was all about stage presence. Pavarotti was all about voice. Freddie was both. Wonder if anyone will ever top Freddie?
If this movie is good; if Rami Malek can actually pull off the fire; if the world actually takes notice...
I predict a massive Queen resurgence in pop culture
There's never been anybody that touches the magic that came from Freddie Mercury
And, Brian May was / is no slouch either. Even my biggest guitar hero (Iommi) has idolized him for years
Glad we're not glossing over this, here. And not taking *anything* away from Freddie, not at all! But the magick of Queen is IMO the combination of Freddie and Brian. Two powerhouses of cosmic magnitude in a single 4-pc. band? Game over, man. Game over.
To be fair, Brian May is my spirit animal, so I'm a little biased...
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath and Sabotage would have been entirely different albums without the influence of Brian May, which carried well into the subsequent generations of material created with the various frontmen. I feel that this shift in focus by Iommi created some of the most amazing heavy music ever known.
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.
I’ll admit that I had no idea how heavy Queen really was, backnin the day, till I discovered the album of their ‘74 concert at the Rainbow. Holy Gawd! “Son & Daughter”
ajaxlepinski wrote:Lack of personal style? Dude, you're the Sean Connery of GAB!
Dave wrote:Draelyc - can write a solid song, and play tasty leads despite his internal neurotic tendencies. Despite a million debates raging in his head over string guage, pickup height, Pete Townshend's sexual history, and pick material he makes his Shiva give up the goods. Plus his unplugged electric tone... well... it exists.