Classic Rock appreciation thread

Kmack said:
I concur
bow.gif


"I've Just Seen A Face" is one of the best Beatles gems from their early days as well:up:

First song I learned on guitar that wasn't in the E-A-B7 blues progression!

But, if you haven't gotten it, get Revovler. Amazing, amazing album.
 
woosh...I was playing stuff backwards back in the mid-80's.
You don't know how easy you've got it.:(

We had to do it MANUALLY!
 
JLBats said:
Not Helter Skelter, but I've heard the part of Stairway to Heaven, Revolution 9, I'm So Tired, etc. backwards. There's a site that has them all.

I heard there's something in "Hotel California" and "Justify My Love" as well. Did you hear anything out of the ordinary?
 
Wilhelm-Scream said:
woosh...I was playing stuff backwards back in the mid-80's.
You don't know how easy you've got it.:(

We had to do it MANUALLY!

Satan has a toolshed:(
 
Dwarf lord said:
big-rj.jpg


For you, Anthony.

That's creepier than the "Paul Is Dead" thing. I'm going to be afraid of that now.

I'm very surprised Clapton's such a big Robert Johnson fan, since Clapton's become this born again Christian.
 
ANTHONYNASTI said:
I heard there's something in "Hotel California" and "Justify My Love" as well. Did you hear anything out of the ordinary?

Stairway says Satan a lot, and mentions a toolshed and 666, Revolution 9 is clearly saying "Turn Me on Dead Man", I'm So Tired says "Paul is a dead man, miss him, miss him, MISS HIM", Hotel California's is pretty lame.
 
JLBats said:
Well, that'll be troubling, since it will probably leave out some of the great early blues artists who started the whole rock and roll thing.
Muddy, Robert and Howlin' Yo!!!
 
ANTHONYNASTI said:
I heard there's something in "Hotel California" and "Justify My Love" as well. Did you hear anything out of the ordinary?
Well, I played "How Soon Is Now" (The Smiths) backwards and heard, "Abortions all around! Abortions all around!......Moses is my foot-stool. Sweet....Suh-WEET Moses is my dear Satan's garter."

:confused:
 
From Wikipedia:
"The most widely known legend surrounding Robert Johnson says that he sold his soul to the Devil at the crossroads of U.S. Highway 61 and U.S. Highway 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi in exchange for prowess in playing the guitar. Actually, the location Johnson made reference to is a short distance away from that intersection. The legend was told mainly by Son House, but finds no corroboration in any of Johnson's work, despite titles like "Me and the Devil Blues" and "Hellhound on My Trail". With this said, the song "Cross Road Blues" is both widely and loosely interpreted by many as a descriptive encounter of Johnson selling his soul. The older Tommy Johnson (no relation, although it is speculated that they were cousins) also claimed to have sold his soul to the Devil. The story goes that if one would go to the crossroads a little before midnight and begin to play the guitar, a large black man would come up to the aspiring guitarist, retune his guitar and then hand it back. At this point (so the legend goes) the guitarist had sold his soul to become a virtuoso (A similar legend even surrounded virtuoso violinist Niccolò Paganini a century before.)"

Yes, Highway 61 is more than just a song. There is meaning behind it.
 
Wilhelm-Scream said:
Well, I played "How Soon Is Now" (The Smiths) backwards and heard, "Abortions all around! Abortions all around!......Moses is my foot-stool. Sweet....Suh-WEET Moses is my dear Satan's garter."

:confused:

I actually think Imagine backwards sounds alot like Bob Dylan.

"Ooooh, people War... BESHIDE MEH!"
 
Wilhelm-Scream said:
Totally and I freaking love "Wake up slee-py Jean....oh what CAn it mean, to a-uh, Day-Dre

Hahahaha:drunk:
That's the Monkee's my friend. And wow, I can't believe this thread got resurrected in god knows how long!
 
JLBats said:
Stairway says Satan a lot, and mentions a toolshed and 666, Revolution 9 is clearly saying "Turn Me on Dead Man", I'm So Tired says "Paul is a dead man, miss him, miss him, MISS HIM", Hotel California's is pretty lame.
I think Hotel California is more chilling played forward.

"We haven't had that spirit here since, 1969"

(1969 - year the Satanic church was founded in California)


:eek:
 
Wilhelm-Scream said:
I think Hotel California is more chilling played forward.

"We haven't had that spirit here since, 1969"

(1969 - year the Satanic church was founded in California)


:eek:

I like the theory that Hotel California is about Hell rather than drug addictions. Both ways make sense, but the idea that it's hell just makes it so much cooler.
 
Dwarf lord said:
From Wikipedia:
"The most widely known legend surrounding Robert Johnson says that he sold his soul to the Devil at the crossroads of U.S. Highway 61 and U.S. Highway 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi in exchange for prowess in playing the guitar. Actually, the location Johnson made reference to is a short distance away from that intersection. The legend was told mainly by Son House, but finds no corroboration in any of Johnson's work, despite titles like "Me and the Devil Blues" and "Hellhound on My Trail". With this said, the song "Cross Road Blues" is both widely and loosely interpreted by many as a descriptive encounter of Johnson selling his soul. The older Tommy Johnson (no relation, although it is speculated that they were cousins) also claimed to have sold his soul to the Devil. The story goes that if one would go to the crossroads a little before midnight and begin to play the guitar, a large black man would come up to the aspiring guitarist, retune his guitar and then hand it back. At this point (so the legend goes) the guitarist had sold his soul to become a virtuoso (A similar legend even surrounded virtuoso violinist Niccolò Paganini a century before.)"

Yes, Highway 61 is more than just a song. There is meaning behind it.

Do you think that Highway 61 Revisited means that Dylan...nah.
 
ThePenguin said:
That's the Monkee's my friend.
W0W!

You know your stuFF! :eek:
Now if you can just work on "Silly Sarcasm", you'll be an internet-MASTER!
 
JLBats said:
Meh. Some of it was pretty satanic, though. People used to say Robert Johnson sold his soul for his guitar talent.
Down at the crossroads :cool:

ANTHONYNASTI said:
That's creepier than the "Paul Is Dead" thing. I'm going to be afraid of that now.

I'm very surprised Clapton's such a big Robert Johnson fan, since Clapton's become this born again Christian.
Meh, just because the beliefs are different doesn't mean anyone should disregard the talent the man had. Clapton is awesome for bringing Johnson's music to the mainstream. Robert Johnson was an amazing musician.
 
ANTHONYNASTI said:
Do you think that Highway 61 Revisited means that Dylan...nah.

That would be interesting, since that song references the Bible at the beginning.
 
ANTHONYNASTI said:
Do you think that Highway 61 Revisited means that Dylan...nah.

No. That's not the only thing that happened on Highway 61.

From Wikipedia:
The road is also known as the Blues Highway, because it runs through the Mississippi Delta country which was an important source of blues music. Son Thomas ("Highway 61"), Mississippi Fred McDowell ("61 Highway") and Jay Farrar of Son Volt ("Afterglow 61") all wrote songs about it, and many Mississippians, such as Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley took the blues to Chicago along the route.
The junction of Highway 61 and Highway 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi is designated as the famous crossroads where — according to legend — Robert Johnson supposedly sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for mastery of the blues. However, there is no proof it is the site. Several miles north is another junction where the two highways diverge again; between the junctions the two Highways share the route. It has never been confirmed as the place Johnson meant. If the crossroads in the song was ever anything other than a metaphor, it could have been any intersection in that part of Mississippi, or the world.
Like Route 66 in the Western U.S., the iconic Highway 61 sign is so strongly identified with the Clarksdale area that it is used to market different products and services, including the locally based Covenant Bank.
Blues singer Bessie Smith died in an automobile accident on Highway 61. Ike Turner's "Delta Cats" drove up Highway 61 to Memphis to record "Rocket 88", one of the first rock and roll records. Elvis Presley grew up in housing projects along it and Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot in a motel on Highway 61. Bob Dylan was born along a stretch of Highway 61, in Duluth, Minnesota. Some of these connections led Bob Dylan to commemorate the highway in the title song of his album Highway 61 Revisited. More recently, in March of 2006 Hilary and Holly Williams - daughters of Hank Williams Jr. - were seriously injured in a one car accident on Highway 61 near Dundee, Mississippi.
 
JLBats said:
That would be interesting, since that song references the Bible at the beginning.

Thanks for clearing that up.

If there's a piece of music that will scare the crap out of you, listen to the first minute of Elton John's "Funeral For A Friend / Love Lies Bleeding". It's just freaky.
 
Ah yes, Wikipedia. Source of all knowledge.
 
JLBats said:
Ah yes, Wikipedia. Source of all knowledge.

I'd seriously die with out Wikipedia.

But yeah, I think it's really cool and weird that all that stuff happened along the same Highway
 
JLBatan said:
People used to say Robert Johnson sold his soul for his guitar talent.

Those people obviously never heard him play. He sucked. Sloppy as f***.
Paganini, much better candidate.

I guess he reincarnated as Jimmy Page. *shryg*
 

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