Browsing Year 2011

Brad Richter’s “American Landscapes” Speaks To The Nature-Lover In Us All

Brad Richter’s “American Landscapes” Speaks To The Nature-Lover In Us All

Posted August 30, 2011 at 8:58 am | No comments

Arizona classical guitarist Brad Richter just released American Landscapes a week or two ago, and it is already one of my favorite collections of mood setting songs. These pieces, which are mostly meditations on outdoor landscapes that speak to Brad, are perfect for that; they are incredibly detailed and meticulous in their composition and adventurous in their use of new and interesting techniques, so seriously music-minded people have a lot to chew on and digest. If heard just in passing by the casual music fan, however, they just sound incredibly pleasing to the ear.

Posted in: Classical Reviews, Guitar News, Reviews

Nirvana Rape Me Guitar Tab

Nirvana Rape Me Guitar Tab

Posted August 30, 2011 at 8:04 am | No comments

Nirvana’s “Rape Me” is an odd duck. It’s a popular rock song where the most memorable and catchy line is “Rape me/Rape me, my friend/Rape me/Rape me again,” and it is still played on rock radio stations across the world. While the meaning of the song may be vague to many, including such disparate lines as “I’ll kiss your open sores” and “You’ll always stink and burn,” singer/guitarist/songwriter Kurt Cobain maintained that it is an anti-rape song. While talking to music magazine Spin, Cobain said, “It’s like she’s saying, ‘Rape me, go ahead, rape me, beat me. You’ll never kill me. I’ll survive this and I’m gonna fucking rape you one of these days and you won’t even know it.” “Rape Me” is a great song to learn how to sing and play, as the guitar part and vocal melody are relatively simple. Hell, it might even get you some action; just try and serenade a lady friend and see what happens. Ok, maybe that might be a bad idea.

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Nirvana In Bloom Guitar Tab

Nirvana In Bloom Guitar Tab

Posted August 29, 2011 at 8:04 am | No comments

“In Bloom” was released as the fourth single from Nirvana’s second album, the iconic Nevermind. The song conforms to Kurt Cobain’s oft-used “template” of soft verses with a simple, repeated melody and exceedingly heavy choruses featuring Cobain’s legendary gravelly rock voice. “In Bloom” also features one of Kurt’s best guitar solos, which finds him dive-bombing and wailing, but all to serve the melody. The song is a very thinly-veiled shot at Nirvana’s fans who didn’t get the message of the band. Since “In Bloom” came out, there have been millions of jocks unwittingly jamming to what is basically a diss track, singing “He’s the one who likes all our pretty songs/And he likes to sing along/And he likes to shoot his gun/But he knows not what it means.”

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Bo Diddley Interview: “I’m The Son-Of-A-Bitch That Did It!”

Posted August 29, 2011 at 8:00 am | One comment

In May 2001, I was deeply honored to interview the late, great, legendary Bo Diddley before he passed away. At the time, some 72 years young, he was still vibrant, regaling me with nostalgic creative stories and even scat singing to me. Bo was imbued with such a playful sense of humor, and a lifelong love for music and the guitar.

Posted in: Blues, Blues Interviews, Interviews

Nirvana Heart Shaped Box Guitar Tab

Nirvana Heart Shaped Box Guitar Tab

Posted August 28, 2011 at 8:04 am | No comments

Nirvana’s first single from their 1993 album, In Utero, “Heart-Shaped Box” is the quintessential Nirvana song. It begins with a low key riff that repeats throughout all verse parts as Kurt Cobain sings such seemingly disconnected yet amazing vagueries, like “I wish I could eat your cancer when you turn black” and “Throw down your umbilical noose so I can climb right back.” Although there have been many discussions about the song’s subject matter, Cobain has said that it was inspired by a documentary he saw about children with cancer, although it certainly seems like “Heart-Shaped Box” is about Courtney Love. Cobain has also said that the visceral chorus, which includes the line “Hey/Wait/I’ve got a new complaint” was an example of the media’s portrayal of him.

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Nirvana All Apologies Guitar Tab

Nirvana All Apologies Guitar Tab

Posted August 27, 2011 at 8:04 am | No comments

Released as a double A-side with “Rape Me” in December of 1993, “All Apologies” was the second single from Nirvana’s third album, In Utero. The song showcases Kurt Cobain’s mastery of simplicity, with a verse of one chord, a prechorus of only one chord, and, you guessed it, a chorus that has only one chord. The song doesn’t have a bridge; it just goes back to the verse riff, which is one of the most sneakily catchy riffs in rock, while Cobain repeats “All in all is all we are.”

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Nirvana About a Girl Guitar Tab

Nirvana About a Girl Guitar Tab

Posted August 26, 2011 at 8:04 am | No comments

“About a Girl” is the third track on grunge legends Nirvana’s debut album, Bleach, although it didn’t become very popular until it was released as a single for the posthumous MTV Unplugged in New York. While most of that album is fairly bleak and sparse lyrically, as Kurt Cobain has said that he wrote most of the lyrics the day before recording and didn’t really like them, “About a Girl” has some depth to it. Cobain wrote the song after his girlfriend at the time asked him why he never wrote a song about her, and the ironic chorus sheds some light on their troubled relationship: “I’ll take advantage while/you hang me out to dry/But I can`t see you every night/Free.” The song is one of the most pop-influenced songs on the record, and Cobain was hesitant to even include it. Nirvana was experiencing pressure from their record label, Sub Pop, to conform the record to the “grunge” standards, and a song with the Beatles as such an obvious influence like this one might be out of place. Producer Jack Endino loved the song, however, and got it included.

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Metallica Welcome Home Sanitarium Guitar Tab

Metallica Welcome Home Sanitarium Guitar Tab

Posted August 25, 2011 at 3:12 pm | No comments

As the last single released before the death of bassist Cliff Burton, “Welcome Home (Sanitarium)” is fittingly dark and heavy. Beginning with a creepy reverb guitar intro, “Welcome Home,” from Metallica’s masterpiece, Master of Puppets, quickly gives way to ominous arpeggiated chords under James Hetfield’s powerful growl. In typical Metallica fashion, these layers build in energy into a heavy double time chorus of “Sanitarium! Leave me be!” Although the first chorus is short-lived, a heavy metal bridge has already been foreshadowed, and sure enough, after the second chorus, Metallica keep the energy at 11 for some palm-muted chugging and shred soloing that never relents, leaving those slow, scary chords from the verses in the dust in favor of pure brutality.

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Metallica Unforgiven II Guitar Tab

Metallica Unforgiven II Guitar Tab

Posted August 24, 2011 at 3:11 pm | No comments

“The Unforgiven II,” from Metallica’s 1997 album, ReLoad, is the band’s sequel to “The Unforgiven,” which was featured on The Black Album. It has some similar lyrical themes, but the most obvious similarity is that the verse chord progression in “The Unforgiven II” is very similar to the chorus chords from the original. This sequel shifts the “ballad paradigm” back to normal, taking the soft chorus of the original and making it a soft verse that leads up to a distorted chorus, which was the pattern they wanted to switch around with “The Unforgiven.” “The Unforgiven II” does exactly what a sequel should; it reminds the listener of the first installment, but is crafted as a completely stand-alone work as well.

Posted in: Guitar Tab

Metallica Turn the Page Guitar Tab

Metallica Turn the Page Guitar Tab

Posted August 23, 2011 at 3:11 pm | No comments

“Turn the Page” is a classic Bob Seger tune, released as a single for his 1973 album, entitled Back in ’72. It contains the classic line about being harassed on the road, “Oh, the same old cliches ‘Is that a woman or a man?” which references multiple incidents of truckers and the like giving Seger and his tourmates grief for having long hair (this was the early ’70’s, mind you). In 1998, Metallica released an album of mostly covers, entitled Garage, Inc., and their cover of “Turn the Page” was the monumental lead single, staying at No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Mainstream Rock chart for an impressive eleven weeks. In lieu of the soulful sax in the original, Kirk Hammett busts out his slide to play that heartfelt counter melody as Hetfield channels the hardships of the road, making their cover just as impactful as Seger’s original.

Posted in: Guitar Tab