Monday, December 22, 2008

www.chopshopradio.com

"The Chop Shop's Top 100 Most Complete Guitar Players of All Time":

01. Jimmy Page 87.94
02. Jimi Hendrix 84.92
03. Eddie Van Halen 84.81
04. David Gilmour 82.72
05. Keith Richards 82.48
06. Pete Townshend 80.66
07. Steve Vai 79.74
08. Les Paul 78.61
09. Angus Young 78.56
10. Jeff Beck 77.77
11. Stevie Ray Vaughan 75.86
12. Tony Iommi (BLACK SABBATH) 74.67
13. Eric Clapton 74.62
14. James Hetfield (METALLICA) 73.62
15. Ritchie Blackmore (RAINBOW, DEEP PURPLE 72.61
16. Slash (GUNS N' ROSES, VELVET REVOLVER) 71.60
17. Frank Zappa 71.57
18. George Harrison 71.49
19. Randy Rhoads (OZZY OSBOURNE) 70.89
20. Ted Nugent 70.83
21. Dave Murray/Adrian Smith (IRON MAIDEN) 70.72
22. Carlos Santana 70.44
23. Steve Lukather (TOTO) 70.41
24. Joe Satriani 69.71
25. Chuck Berry 69.53
26. Kirk Hammett (METALLICA) 69.48
27. Zakk Wylde (OZZY OSBOURNE) 68.73
28. Brian May (QUEEN) 67.57
29. Alex Lifeson (RUSH) 67.51
30. Billy Gibbons (ZZ TOP) 67.45
31. Malcolm Young (AC/DC) 66.56
32. Joe Perry (AEROSMITH) 65.60
33. Joe Walsh (EAGLES, JAMES GANG) 63.44
34. B.B. King 63.30
35. Kurt Cobain (NIRVANA) 63.17
36. Dimebag Darrell Abbott (PANTERA) 62.55
37. Neal Schon (JOURNEY) 62.45
38. John Lennon 62.44
39. Mark Knopfler (DIRE STRAITS) 62.43
40. Dickey Betts (ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND) 60.47
41. Tom Scholz (BOSTON) 60.42
41. Robby Krieger (DOORS) 60.42
43. Buddy Guy 60.38
44. Tom Morello (RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE) 60.37
45. The Edge (U2) 60.34
46. Gary Rossington/Allen Collins (LYNYRD SKYNYRD) 59.49
47. Glenn Tipton/K.K. Downing (JUDAS PRIEST) 58.64
48. Peter Frampton 58.59
49. Mick Mars (MÖTLEY CRÜE) 58.34
50. Steve Howe (YES, ASIA) 57.36
51. John Frusciante (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS) 55.46
52. Brad Whitford (AEROSMITH) 55.45
53. Scotty Moore (ELVIS PRESLEY, RICK NELSON) 55.35
54. Rik Emmett (TRIUMPH) 54.58
55. Yngwie Malmsteen 54.56
56. Leslie West (MOUNTAIN) 54.50
57. Dean DeLeo (STONE TEMPLE PILOTS) 54.46
58. Ace Frehley (KISS) 54.38
59. Bo Diddley 54.37
60. Muddy Waters 54.36
61. John 5 (MARILYN MANSON, ROB ZOMBIE) 53.63
62. Gary Moore (THIN LIZZY) 53.55
63. Paul Gilbert (MR. BIG, RACER X) 53.51
64. George Lynch (DOKKEN, LYNCH MOB) 53.41
65. Adam Jones (TOOL) 53.20
66. Robin Trower 52.62
67. Michael Schenker (UFO, MSG) 52.52
67. Johnny Winter 52.52
69. Michael Hedges 52.40
70. Robert Johnson 52.36
71. Dave Mustaine (MEGADETH) 52.34
72. Warren DiMartini (RATT) 51.49
73. Dave Davies (THE KINKS) 51.36
74. Nuno Bettencourt (EXTREME) 50.52
75. Mark Tremonti (CREED, ALTER BRIDGE) 50.40
76. Dan Donegan (DISTURBED) 50.39
77. Warren Haynes (ALLMAN BROTHERS, GOVT. MULE) 50.36
77. Matthias Jabbs (SCORPIONS) 50.36
79. Freddie King 50.33
80. Chris DeGarmo/Michael Wilton (QUEENSRŸCHE) 50.28
81. Neil Young 50.23
81. Steve Cropper 50.23
83. Frank Marino (MAHOGANY RUSH) 49.51
84. Ty Tabor (KING'S X) 49.46
85. Eric Johnson 49.44
86. Mike McCready (PEARL JAM) 49.34
87. Steve Miller 49.33
88. John Fogerty 49.26
89. John Sykes (THIN LIZZY, WHITESNAKE) 49.20
90. Vivian Campbell (DEF LEPPARD) 48.41
91. Dick Wagner (ALICE COOPER) 48.40
91. Kim Thayil (SOUNDGARDEN) 48.40
93. Jerry Cantrell (ALICE IN CHAINS) 48.28
94. Glen Buxton (ALICE COOPER) 47.55
95. Rick Nielsen (CHEAP TRICK) 47.44
96. Rod Price (FOGHAT) 47.41
97. Frank Hannon (TESLA) 47.38
97. Buckethead (GUNS N' ROSES) 47.38
99. Steve Stevens (BILLY IDOL) 47.36
100. Trevor Rabin (YES) 47.36

Apparently the judging was graded in nine areas including technical ability, influence on the music industry, songwriting, signature sound, longevity, and four other categories. The complete list with video and judging criteria is available now at www.chopshopradio.com.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

The New EVH Wolfgang Guitar





















From Guitarplayer.com
LOS ANGELES -- Eddie Van Halen launches the all-new EVH® Wolfgang® electric guitar, available worldwide beginning Jan. 2009. The EVH Wolfgang guitar represents Eddie’s 35 years of experimenting with guitars, over two years of intense research and development, and a full year of brutal road testing during the top-grossing Van Halen 2007-2008 tour.

It was during the massive 2007-2008 Van Halen tour that the all-new EVH Wolfgang guitar went through extensive live “road testing” performance trials. The tour kicked off in fall 2007, and Eddie punished early versions of the new Wolfgang each night; playing every updated prototype onstage under the full, unfiltered spotlight of his fans. The results are reflected in the EVH Wolfgang guitar; produced to Eddie’s exact specifications and with features identical to the Wolfgang guitars he records and performs with.

“A guitar is a very personal extension of the person playing it. You have to be emotionally and spiritually connected to your instrument. I could have just stayed at home and built this guitar for myself. I do this because a lot of people ask if they can get what I use. Well, yes you can and what you get is identical to what I use,” commented Eddie. “From the basics of the guitar to painstaking aspects like the binding and everything else—we re-did everything on this guitar.”

“Every aspect and component of this guitar has been examined and upgraded to the highest standards possible: stainless steel frets, double-potted custom-wound pickups, five-piece binding on the matching body and headstock, custom-made signature tuning machines and Floyd Rose® bridge, new low-friction pots, and the list keeps going … we left no stone unturned,” said Eddie. “Everything that I’ve built, destroyed, stumbled onto, learned and experienced is in this guitar.”

When Eddie Van Halen made his debut into the rock music scene in 1978, he did so with a homemade guitar (later known as “Frankenstein”). At a time when his monster technique and tone demanded a high-performance, indestructible guitar, he created his own to reach his own seemingly impossible standards. For over 35 years, he has continued to examine and improve every variable within the instrument, all culminating with the new EVH Wolfgang guitar.

In 2007, Eddie Van Halen and Fender® collaborated to launch the first EVH brand high-performance products, including the all-new EVH 5150III ™ amplifier, the limited run of Eddie Van Halen Frankenstein™ replica guitars and an array of high-quality EVH brand accessories.

Well kids, if I have the money for sure I will grab this one. But I have to say the man had it right the first time.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Friday, December 12, 2008

Rock Fujiyama



What a fun show!! Paul vs Marty Vs Rolly. Brilliant!

Gilbert composes music in a wide variety of styles including pop, rock, metal, blues, funk and classical, but is perhaps best known for his versatility and speed, which helped him be named as one of the "Top 10 Shredders Of All Time" by Guitar One Magazine.


Prior to joining Megadeth, Marty Fridman formed and played lead guitar in several other bands, including Deuce, Hawaii, Vixen (not the all-female band of the same name), and notably Cacophony. Cacophony featured neoclassical metal elements and synchronized twin guitar harmonies and counterpoints shared with guitarist Jason Becker on their two albums, Go Off! and Speed Metal Symphony.


The Great Jason Becker



It is really sad what has happened to Jason. I can't imagine being in his shoes now.
What a brilliat guitarist. I salute you,man.
Paganini must be proud!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Gun's N Roses



GUNS N’ ROSES‘ new album, Chinese Democracy, sold just under 57,000 copies in the United States in its second week of release to land at position No. 18 on The Billboard 200 chart. This represents a whopping 78-percent drop from the CD’s opening-week tally of 261,000.

“Chinese Democracy” dropped out of the U.K. Top 10 this past Sunday (December 7), having landed at No. 11 in its second full week of release. The CD debuted at No. 2 in the U.K.
Well I am very sad that Chinese Democracy didn’t make an impact. Isn’t it funny that their peers from the glory days, Metallica, have proved that they
can still deliver.
To AXL, you better get Slash, Duff and especially Izzy man. You're nothing without them.

Keith Richards (the Man)



Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones comments on the bands songs

Satisfaction

When I wrote the song, I didn’t think of that particular riff as the big guitar riff. That all fell into place at RCA [recording studio in L.A.] when Gibson dumped on me one of those first Fuzz-Tone pedals. I actually thought of that guitar line as a horn riff. The way Otis Redding ended up doing it is probably closer to my original conception for the song. It’s an obvious horn riff. And when this new Fuzz Tone pedal arrived in the studio from the local dealership or something, I said, “Oh, this is good. It’s got a bit of sustain, so I can use it to sketch out the horn line.” So we left the track and went back out on the road. And two weeks later I hear it on the radio. I said, “No, that was just a demo!” They said, “No, it’s a hit.” At least Otis got it right. Our version was a demo for Otis.

Mother’s Little Helper

The main riff is a 12-string with a slide on it. It’s played slightly Orientalish. This was even before sitars were used in rock music. It just needed something to make it twang, ’cause otherwise the song was quite vaudeville in a way. And it was just one of those things where somebody walked in with it and we went, “Look, it’s an electric 12-string.” It was just some gashed-up job. God knows where it came from or where it went, but I put it together with a bottleneck and we had a riff that tied the whole song together. There’s probably some gypsy influence in there somewhere.

Paint it Black

Brian [Jones, Rolling Stones founder and Richards’ original coguitarist] got into the sitar and used it on a few things, like “Paint It Black.” I found it an interesting instrument, the idea of the sympathetic strings underneath that resonate to the strings on top. But as far as actually playing it—leave that to the Indians. There’s just something about the strings; they were too thin. But Brian loved to dodge around and play dulcimers, mandolins… things like that. [Former bassist] Bill Wyman was also instrumental to the sound of “Paint It Black” by adding the organ pedals. That song is another one of those semi-gypsy melodies we used to come up with back then. I don’t know where they come from. Must be in the blood.

Jumping Jack Flash

“Jumping Jack Flash” comes from this guy, Jack Dyer, who was my gardener—an old English yokel. Mick and I were in my house down in the south of England. We’d been up all night; the sky was just beginning to go gray. It was pissing down raining, if I remember rightly. Mick and I were sitting there, and suddenly Mick starts up. He hears these great footsteps, these great rubber boots—slosh, slosh, slosh—going by the window. He said. “What’s that?” And I said, “Oh, that’s Jack. That’s jumpin’ Jack.” We had my guitar in open tuning, and I started to fool around with that. [singing] “Jumpin’ Jack...” and Mick says, “Flash.” He’d just woken up. And suddenly we had this wonderful alliterative phrase. So he woke up and we knocked it together.

On the record, I played a Gibson Hummingbird [acoustic] tuned to either open E or open D with a capo. And then I added another [acoustic] guitar over the top, but tuned to Nashville tuning [tuned like a 12-string guitar without the lower octave strings]. I learned that from somebody in George Jones’ band, in San Antonio in ’63. We happened to be playing the World Teen Fair together. This guy in a Stetson and cowboy boots showed me how to do it, with the different strings, to get that high ring. I was picking up tips.

Sympanthy for the Devil

Mick brought that to the studio as a very Bob Dylanish kind of folk guitar song, and it ended up as a damned samba. I think that’s the strength of the Stones: give them a song half raw and they’ll cook it.

Street Fighting Man

When we went in the studio, we just couldn’t reproduce the sound of the original demo I did on cassette. So we played the cassette through an extension speaker and I played along with it—we just shoved a microphone into an acoustic and overdubbed it onto the track from the cassette. Then we put it on a four-track, played it back, and at the same time the guitar was going on, I had [session keyboard great] Nicky Hopkins playing a bit of piano and Charlie [Watts, drums] just shuffling in the background. Then we put drums on it and added another guitar while he was doing that, and we just kept layering it.

At that time I was into really compressing the acoustic guitar by running it through the early Phillips and Norelco cassette recorders and really overloading them. They came with a little plastic mic and I’d slam that right down into the acoustic guitar. I did that on “Jumping Jack Flash,” too. With all of those songs, I wanted the drive and dryness of an acoustic guitar, but I still wanted to distort it.

On “Street Fighting Man,” there’s one six-string and one five-string acoustic. They’re both in open tunings, but then there’s a lot of capo work. There are lots of layers of guitars on “Street Fighting Man,” so it’s difficult to say what you’re hearing on there. ’Cause I tried eight different guitars, and which ones were used in the final version I couldn’t say.

Gimmie Shelter

That was done on some nameless Australian full-bodied acoustic [a Maton]. It looked like a copy of the Gibson model that Chuck Berry used. The thing had all been revarnished and painted out, but it just sounded great. Some guy crashed out at my pad for a couple of days, then suddenly split in a hurry and left that guitar behind, like, “take care of this for me.” I certainly did. At the very last note of the take, the whole neck fell off. You can hear it on the original track. That guitar had just that one little quality for that specific thing. In a way, it was quite poetic that it died at the end of the track.

Can't You Hear Me Knocking

On that song, my fingers just landed in the right place and I discovered a few things about that [five-string, open G] tuning that I’d never been aware of. I think I realized that even as I was cutting the track. And then that jam at the end—we didn’t even know they were still taping. We thought we’d finished. We were just rambling and they kept the tape rolling. It was only when we heard the playback we realized: “Oh they kept it going. Okay, fade it out there... no wait, a little bit more, a bit more...“ Basically, we realized we had two bits of music: there’s the song and there’s the jam.

Miss You

That was basically Mick’s song. He said, “Let’s try this disco shit out.” I think he’d been to too many nightclubs, actually. The guitar riff basically suggested itself from the melody Mick was singing. I just shadowed that and ran it behind the voice. It’s just a piece of fun, that song. It can get really funky if you get the right tempo and slam it in. Basically, you’re sitting on Charlie on that.

Start Me Up

I was convinced that was a reggae song. Everybody else was convinced of that. “It’s reggae, man.” We did 45 takes like that. But then on a break I just played that guitar riff, not even really thinking much about it; we did a take rocking away and then went back to work and did another 15 reggae takes. Five years later, Mick discovered that one rock take in the middle of the tape and realized how good it was. The fact that I missed “Start Me Up” for five years is one of my disappointments. It just went straight over my head. But you can’t catch everything.



from www.guitarworld.com

my fav site!

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

RUST IN PEACE



When I first bought the album it was because of the cool picture. When I first played it on the stereo, damn was it electrifying. I mean the riffs, the solos, the songs it was the first time anyone played guitar like that, I thought Marty's solo was like a cool keyboard sound. The line up is the best for Megadeth. Here is an interview about the album.Enjoy

nterview with Dave Mustaine


Question: Are you personally, Dave Mustaine, satisfied with the way Rust in Peace has turned out?

Dave Mustaine: I'm really happy with it. This is the first time where we've used the same producer from beginning to end and for me that's amazing. I think Mike Clink did a fabulous job although there was a lot of times he had other commitments - he was running in and out - he still showed a real genuine loyalty to this project. There were times when I thought things were good enough, and he pointed out that it wasn't, and what was wrong with it, and I beat it... and that's why this record is so good... because his forte for being critical with nuances in the studio that just embellish a record's final actual finished product. For me, this record's definitely satisfying, and I'm 100% happy with it.

Q: Did Mike Clink, sort of, push you further as a musician in the studio?

DM: Yeah, I think so. I think, ya know, I had my own drive, but um, when I would get frustrated, he would know how to deal with Dave the human, instead of Mustaine the artist.

Q: Right. After hearing some of the tracks, and it's only been brief, but some of the stuff is quite strong... stuff like "Hangar 18" and "Take No Prisoners." What kind of pressure was on Dave Mustaine to write quality songs after having written songs like "Peace Sells," etc., etc. ... that are very strong?

DM: The only pressure that we had really was in our own heads. Career paranoia is something that everybody deals with if they don't have faith in themselves. So, worrying about having a product that's going to compete with your past is just your own lack of faith. Anybody who doesn't understand what their history is, is destined to repeat it.

Q: Cool. Tell me a little bit about the single, "Holy Wars." What was, you know, goin' through your head when you wrote that song?

DM: Well, I'd been misinformed by someone from, ah, Ireland who... when I was over there, asked him, "What is goin' on here," because somebody said there was someone with a box of T-shirts bootlegging Megadeth shirts. I would want to get them confiscated because that's basically the way the band stays alive out there is by selling merchandise and records. They said, "Well, you can't do that. Those guys are sellin' T-shirts for the cause." And I went, "What the hell's the cause?" And they go, "Well, it's the IRA." What's this all about? And the guy goes, "Well, Catholics are against the Protestants are against the Catholics, ya know." And to me, any religion that thinks it's better than another religion is, is, is... like, full of it, ya know? I can't really say how I really feel without getting vulgar and I would rather, you know, instead of having what I feel oppressed, I would rather watch what I say and just say that I think that a prejudice religion is a sin in itself, and they're trying to disguise their sins by saying one religion is better than the other and that's blaspheme, and they oughta talk to their god because I'm sure he would tell them what's happening.

Q: There are a lot of self-righteous organizations that often point fingers at Megadeth saying that you are... whatever category they want to crusade against. How does Dave Mustaine respond to allegations or accusations that Megadeth are bad, evil, whatever?

DM: I don't think that we're bad, evil, whatever. What I think that we are is concerned with people who listen to our music which, generally, are people generally in our age bracket, um, just um, average ya know, and people that come from our walks of life, average ya know. Ah, we're not like rocket scientists. We're not wino bums. We're not a bazillion years old, and we're not fetuses with headphones. We're everybody - all different walks of life. I think that when you start letting people know what's goin' on with modern society and the way that they're eliminating the gratuities we have as rights as human beings to education and to having... For example, social security for having welfare projects... All these things that they're taking away from us, you know. They're so worried about buying weapons and stuff... War is good for the economy and money sucks.

Q: Okay. Rust in Peace is your fourth record. First off, how did you get that title?

DM: I was driving home from Elsanon... um, Lake Elsanon. I was tailgating somebody, racing down the freeway, and I saw this bumper sticker on their car and it said... you know, this tongue in cheek stuff like, "One nuclear bomb could ruin your whole day," and then I looked on the other side and it said, "May all your nuclear weapons rust in peace," and I'm goin', "'Rust in Peace.' Damn, that's a good title." And I'm thinkin' like, "What do they mean, rust in peace?" I could just see it now - all these warheads sittin' there, stockpiled somewhere like seal beach, you know, all covered with rust 'n' stuff with kids out there spray-painting the stuff, you know. And um, I just felt that that was one of the most profound statements that we could make at this time because of "Holy Wars" being such a statement, "Rust in Peace..." is also a statement. It's like my ideal vision is for all nuclear weapons to be eliminated and have the actual warhead itself... to have someone deactivate it... cause ya know you're still going to have the Uranium and the Plutonium to deal with but, I mean, we have that already.

Guitar and much more

I love guitar a lot, if I was a really rich dude I propably started a huge guitar collection, you know collecting all those vintage stuff. I now have 4 guitars - a cheap epiphone (my first guitar),a Tele an explorer and an Ibanez. I have to say for me my first guitar still sounded great, although I had to replace some of the parts due to tear and wear but its great, I love the neck and the tone.
I am also a fan of effects, I've tried those multi effects but now I am more intrested in stompboxes. I have much than needed, although I only use 6 in my board now, I believe I'm going to aquire the whammy pedal soon, and another couple of pedals next year.
As for amplification I am still stuck with my practise amp. I really drool when I heard Kirk Hammett's new signature amp, but I just can't afford it for NOW! I really am contemplating a nice tube amp, will see how that goes.
I will be publishing my rig pictures in a few. see ya


ps: does anyone knows how to upload sound files here.mp3 etc

From Guitar World March 2004 Issue

1. Tony Iommi
2.Kirk Hammett and James Hetfield
3.Angus And Malcolm Young
4.Randy Rhoads
5.Eddie Van Halen
6.Jimmy Page
7. Dimebag Darrell
8.Zakk Wylde
9.Adam Jones
10.Kerry King and Jeff Hanneman
11.Dave Murray and Adrian Smith
12. Jimi Hendrix
13. Glenn Tipton and K.K. Downing
14.Ace Frehley and Paul Stanley
15. Slash
16. Ritchie Blackmore
17.Yngwie Malmsteen
18.Joe Perry and Brad Whitford
19.Dave Mustaine and Marty Friedman
20.Chuck Schuldiner
21. Brian May
22.Micheal Schenker
23.Nigel Tufnel
24. Jeff Beck
25.Tom Morello
26.James"MUNKY"Shaffer and Brain"HEAD"Welch
27.John Petrucci
28. Kim Thayil
29. Vivian Campbell
30.Daron Malakian
31.Scott Ian
32. Tom G. Warrior
33.Chris DeGarmo and Micheal Wilton
34.C.C. Deville
35.Marten Hagstrom and Fredirk Thordendal
36.Alex Lifeson
37.Paul Gilbert
38.Jerry Cantrell
39.Mantas
40.Jason Becker
41. Phil Collens and Steve Clark
42. MIkael Akerfeldt and Peter Lindgren
43. "Fast" Eddie Clarke
44. Nuno Bettencourt
45. Warren DeMartini
46. Mick Mars
47. George Lynch
48.Ted Nugent
49.Jake E. Lee
50. Rudolf Schenker and Ulie John Roth
51. Oystein"Euronymous" Aaraseth
52. Scott Gorham and Brain Robertson
53.Steve Vai
54.Reb Beach
55.Trey Azagthoth
56.John Sykes
57.Hank Shermann and Micheal Denner
58.Richie Samboar
59.Jon Donais and Matt Bachand
60.Stephen Carpenter
61. Alex Skolnick and Eric Peterson
62.Brain Tatler
63.John Christ
64.Scot "Wino" Winrich
65.Pepper Kennan and Woody Weatherman
66. Tommy Victor
67.Leslie West
68. Vernon Reid
69. Clen Buxton and Micheal Bruce
70.Bjorn Gelotte adn Jesper Stromblad
71. Jim Matheos
72.Gary Holt and Rick Hunolt
73. Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser
74.Micheal Amott
75.Robert Fripp
76.Andre Olbrich
77.Joe Satriani
78.Frank Hannon and Tommy Skeens
79.Ty Tabor
80.Mark morton and Will Adler
81. Dino Carares
82.Pete Townshend
83.Jon Schaffer
84.Timo Tolkki
85.Neil Young
86.Abbath Doom Occulta
87.kai Hansen
88.Uffe Cederlund and Alex Hellid
89.Leigh Stephens
90.Jim Martin
91.Micheal Romeo
92.Bill Steer
93.Piggy
94.Tony Bourge
95.Sammy Hagar
96.Alexi "Wildcihld" Laiho
97.Akria Takasaki
98.Micheal Angelo
99.John Kay and Micheal Monarch
100.Nick Bowcott

Software Recording.

A few years ago I try dabbling in this computer recording. To my dismay I still cannot really figure this out. I try with a heavy guitar sound much to my dismay the track was clipping all the way. So I had to bow out and be pleased with low gain bluesier sounds.
This is a couple of first attempt I would like to share with you guys.
And please to anybody out there who actually knows how to do this,please leave a few pointers for me.
(i actually just plugged straight ahead to my computer with a cable and record using the nero bundle software)



Favourite Metal Album












I started listening to metal during primary school, i believe at 13-14 years old. I was at a boarding school and was not allowed to bring any cassettes (during the late 80's early 90's) or radio, and was not even allowed TV. Well of course we rebel and bought the most heavy stuff to school.On the trip for our weekly Jumaat prayers we will slip cassettes to the bus driver and headbang all the way to the mosque. I must say a lot of new bands I discover from those bus rides and I myself introduce bands to my fellow students this way. The first piece metal music I heard, and the main favourite of ours Metallica's Master of Puppets!! We really dug the music and sing a long during the chorus, my favourite part was the clean appregiated part and James's solo (I learn this later on). This experience on the bus trips,started my Thrash madness. I use a lot of my allowance to buy new cassettes among others ..... and justice for all, rust in peace, keepers of the seven keys,better of dead etc.
I was a true metalhead all the way until now, though I am guilty of buying an album with a certain naked baby in the pool early '92, when nobody even heard it, and introducing to friends. I think after 2 years especially during college the Nirvana and Grunge crazed started. Everyone was wearing those Kurt Cobain T shirts.Me included, and i learn guitar to the unplugged album.
Well I wanna share my favourite metal album and these are some.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

I learned the guitar when i was around 20 years old, partially due to a girl and mostly due to Nirvana. I learned some chords from a friend ,ice ( tan ee keat) of icemusic paradise. Than i went from there, learning by ear as most of us, mainly to grunge and alternative bands (this was mid 90's). I am lucky as we have quite a number of musician at USM K.krian,especially the Sabahans. I will jam with my pals, and that made me quite good in a short time. After mastering the open chords, we perform at the expo, class functions or dinners. Then we started writing simple 3 chords songs and it when from there. Later on i dable in playing bass and drums and was in a hardcore band DT with two senior pharmacy students. I played bass on 3 gigs at kelantan, one of them raided by the ITM management. I then started reading guitar world and guitar magazines up until now.
Playing music is fun, and i believe everybody should at least learn an instrument.
And to all my jam partners mat rai,geoffrey,ice,norbert,prop and all of you please contact me at ilhamcp@yahoo.com.
Rock on, brothers

Lessons from master guitarist joe satriani



A brilliant guitarist.

Dimebag

Mr.Darell is a total kick ass guitarist, and no guitars squell or cries like his. Believe you me.


..... and my favourite of all




Mr. Kirk Hammett, i just love his playing. He plays for the song, and is very selfless. I can't imagine Metallica without him .... or James either. Best all time band for me.
... and i think death magnetic kicks ass, especially the new AXL's album.

My Favourite Guitarist





I have a few , this among them. I am more of a rhythm guitarist, but i do enjoy virtuoso players.

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/photos/profile/jimi-hendrix.jpg

Tom Morello's Pedal Board


I've always admire the guy, but i have to say i am very amazed he could achieve his sounds just by this simple pedal board! The most thing i dug about his playing is the stuttering sound achieve by the on/off switch. I am now waiting for my guitar to be ready as i have already send it for the mod.

Pedalboard:



  • DigiTech Whammy WH-1: The original red harmonizer/octave pedal for making noises in which the guitar goes up or down octaves Most Famously heard on the songs "Killing in the Name", "Like a Stone", and "Renegades of Funk".[26]
  • DOD FX40b Equalizer: Set flat, only used as a boost for solos, such as in "Bulls on Parade" and "Sleep now in the Fire".
  • Jim Dunlop Crybaby Wah: Morello owns several of these but claims only one gives him the right midrange sound he wants.
  • Boss DD-2 Digital Delay: A discontinued Digital Delay pedal that can still be found in the form of the DD-7. Used in "Cochise" to create the helicopter and siren effects.[27]
  • Boss TR-2 Tremolo: Used in the songs "Guerilla Radio" , "Gasoline", and "Like a Stone".
  • MXR Block Phase 90 Phaser: Replaced the Ibanez DFL after Audioslave's inception. Heard on "The Worm, "Somedays", "Cochise", and "Show Me How To Live".
  • Ibanez DFL Flanger: A rare digital flanger from the 80's, which has been replaced with an MXR Phase 90 since Audioslave.[

Amplifiers & effects

Tom's amplifier and effects setup has been practically the same throughout his career in Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave. Here are some effects and amps which he has used during his career in music.

  • Marshall JCM800 2205 (50-watt) I am hoping Nik at Ceriatone can help me with this
  • Peavey 4x12 Cabinet


Please share your own mod or your own pedal board with me.
Send photo to ilhamcp@yahoo.com
























I will be posting mine in a few, still in the making.

The Guitar I Need Most