I hope you had the time of your life. The singing part: The starting note is the second fret on the G string
Green Day, “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)” (1997) Speaking of graduation songs, this generation-defining song was played ad nauseam pretty much everywhere after it came out in 1997. It even featured prominently in the penultimate episode of Seinfeld in 1998. A stark sonic switch-up ...
Apparently, sometime Stones ivory tinkler Ian Stewart refused to record the piano part because of his dislike of minor chords. It's a good job he wasn't in The xx. 20. Foo Fighters - Everlong (acoustic) Although written on an acoustic, Everlong first appeared as a pummeling, unhinged f...
When compared with the Minor mode, wherein the tonic triad is constituted by a minor a 3rd and a perfect 5th (i.e., minor chord), the Locrian mode’s tonic is composed of minor 3rd and diminished 5th (i.e., diminished chord). Because of their composition, the diminished chords are ...
His 1996 acoustic ballad "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)" has become a standard and a pop cultural touchstone; the Who-scale ambition of 2004's American Idiot made for a rock-opera that remains a totemic response to the Bush era; and Green Day's recent three-album trilogy, Uno!, ...
One of the hottest solos ever to appear in a power-pop song, this is simply a blast with its opening hit of power chords and the string-bending at the peak. You can even hear singer Pat DiNizio yelling “Go!” to kick it off. ...
Springteen played as a solo acoustic tune; it evolved into his riotously hard-charging set closer throughout the Seventies, a story of underdog rock & roll romance that he said was ripped straight from his real life —“even the names, Big Bones Billy, Weak Kneed Willy, all of ’em.”...
- Acoustic Piano, Electric Piano, Acoustic Guitar, Electric Guitar, Trumpet and Violin - Drumkit - Full Keyboards of Piano - Chords - Multi Touch - One, two or mirror keyboard for two players at a time - Mode to display flying notes and sheet music - Lot of songs to learn and play ...
So goes the iconic scene in Wayne’s World but, realistically, how can we ever deny one of the greatest songs ever made? From the arpeggio opening, the impenetrable lyrics and the sudden shift from acoustic to full-frontal rock guitar is sublime. The is an epic rock song that demands to...
“You Really Got Me” had the black-and-white teenage girls screaming their faces off with the best of them. It was the band’s breakout song, and because it’s been covered so much over the years, it’s still one of the era’s most recognizable hits 50 years later. Simple chords,...