The change in writing styles to support the vocals has really been what won me over as a fan. I always thought what they were doing was interesting, but Juggernaut really made me a huge fan. Spencer's talent is really coming through too in a way deserves the attention the music is now giving him.
I have a heightened respect for The Captain as a result of this interview. His professionalism is flying high in this segment. He usually has his own vibe going on in gear demos, as a stark contrast to Robs aggressive style, but here he adapts well to Misha's modern style.
Never really gotten into Periphery, but all I can say is, damn, what a nice fella! I'm not convinced the music will be my cup of tea but hey ho, off for a listen! Really good interview guys. Thanks
+Steven G Misha has always stayed in touch with his fans and even comments on youtube, so this guy is clearly down to earth and has talent - All new materials got me started back in the bulb days.
+Herrdesrings The whole entire band promotes and participates in a group page for the band on Facebook made by a fan. They comment on covers, interact with us, make jokes, they're all amazing individuals, whether you like their music or not, they at least still stay in touch with their fans
Is it just me who felt like the more these two spoke, the stronger there was a connection between them? They're both very down to earth nice guys, it seems like they'd get on really well
+James Kerr Holy shit balls. In all my years of playing I never made that connection. Modes, fast scale runs, arpeggios. Tidy and under my belt. but... Damn you are so right How the fuck could I miss that?
i never even noticed that sounded like twinkle twinkle at the end and I've listened to that album dozens of times. Thanks, I was about to post a comment asking what that was about.
I tell you what, Lee. Your style of interviewing is really enjoyable. It's refreshing to see two people just sit and talk about guitar without having to push an agenda to plug X, Y and Z products. Really good video
one does not simply watch an hour video on youtube unless its Misha Mansoor ... this felt so good ... thank you to the guys at Aderton ( :p ) and the captain for this interview I learned a lot and it felt so good ... i almost wished it didn't end :) Its all about what you love doing, not only in music but that is how life should be lived ....
Marillion! Wow did not expect that, they're my favorite band! And yes Dream Theater were influenced by Marillion, I believe they even opened for them at one point. Great interview Lee
Great interview! I love the "where does IT come from ?" type of questions. You ask the same kind of questions that I would do, definitely not what you get from the typical jagoff guitar world magazine type interview. Great stuff. Hats off to Misha and Lee. Thanks alot! Keep 'em coming, I'm hooked.
You can tell that Misha is worn out yet he still come and do the interview. Misha is definitely one of my main inspiration's on the guitar and just as a human being.
Great show. I wish I had either of you guys as a friend. I smiled when Misha was talking about his Strat, and how he should hate that guitar, but instead, he loves it and can't put it down. He pointed out that there's a certain intangible thing, a feel that a guitar has, or a feeling that you get from certain guitars. I started playing a Squire Bullet Strat in a music store recently. It had this lovely gold finish, and was in mint condition. I loved the looks of it. They were asking $110 for the guitar. I was mesmerized. I couldn't put it down and I left the store with it that day. I took it right over to my tech, "Johnny Guitar" and he set it up beautifully. It's a guitar that "on paper" I should hate, but I absolutely love it -- as much, if not more, than my high end instruments. Even the tones coming out of those cheap pickups sound great to my ear. Even unamplified, it sounds wonderful. It's super light-weight and feels so good to play. It's a very strange thing. There's just something magical about THAT guitar. I know that I will have and play it for life.
I've been playing for 20+ years and have always held my pick this way (thumb, index, middle). It came naturally to reinforce fast rhythmic picking. Went to music school and they told me it was very wrong but I still do it.
No doubt. I just saw a video by a great guitarist "how to write heavy riffs". I heard nothing catchy, nothing groovy... People leaving comments like "this is garbage". I wanted to leave a comment like "how about first programming in a great drum groove, then write to that?", but didn't out of respect for that shred master.
Ah, best interview I've seen in a while, respect to the Captain for bringing in Misha and consequently with him one of the most modern metal rising scenes to question and analysis.
I'm a huge fan of both Misha and Periphery, it's great to see them here on my favorite music channel. I love this interview; it answered several questions I'd wanted to know the answer to. I've seen several interviews with him and this is the first one that's been "original". I wish I could try out the Juggernaut. It's such a gorgeous guitar. And misha has a massive and comprehensive guitar collection, so I'm really fascinated by the choices he made, and I'm dying to try out the pickups. One of the local guitar stores has a juggernaut, but they won't let me play it cuz it's "so nice". The employees haven't even played it. Speaking of, anyone know what kind of knobs those are? I can't seem to find the name of that style anywhere.
This is great. The Captain is a really great interviewer and seems just as knowledgable as Misha! Cant wait for the Nick Johnston one. Another one of my heroes ;P
I hope that you get to do this with Ola Englund because he is one of my most favourite guitarists of all time and a tone connoisseur too. This one with Misha was just absolutely awesome and so far the series has been probably one of my all time favourites that have ever come to TH-cam.
Thank you for an incredible interview! I'm currently doing my final year project at university based on prog metal and what 'djent' is and such and misha is such a huge part of the stylistic, I've taken so much from this. Cheers guys! This is going to be a brilliant series, so informative!
Love the interview Captain. Misha is a super nice, humble guy. I took a lot from it but I would like to comment on 'replying too much on guitar specs' when it comes to dismissing instruments. I would love to be able to walk into a bunch of music stores and try different guitars, however I live on a tropical Island with very few stores. There are definitely no Jackson Juggernaut HT’s to try out so I rely heavily on the 'specs' I know and like. Plus Channels like Andertons and others to make sense of everything out there. When I get it wrong it’s super expensive for me to reverse, shipping, re listing and the time. So specs help a lot. I still get it wrong...sometimes ;-) Great Interview.
Wow, never really heard misha mansoor, but I'm excited he actually shares my opinions on string gauge and coil splitting. The smallest gauge that can work for your tuning, and coil splits are great. Soooo many people think larger and larger strings are better, but they start sucking your tone down.
I could listen to those two for hours. Do you mind to do it again? With all the stuff Misha and his buddies did over the years there is a lot to talk about.
Captain Djenterton! What a top bloke - have had a similar experience of Periphery with a need for intermittent lie downs - but can definitely recognise the passion with which that band plays. Inspiring dude.
Yes, He nailed it about the Les Paul and using its neck pickup for clean when you also use a noise gate and a compressor. Thats exactly the problem I had when I switched to a pedalboard and switcher looper.
i can really relate to the drummer then guitarist thing, i started drums when i was 8, started playing in bands when i was 11, then at 15 i switched to guitar, and i am really glad i did that. it really does help when writing riffs, because i have a vision for the entire song, and also some riffs that i write are similar to a drum pattern with fills. i will have a basic rhythm, with little licks thrown in there like fills on the guitar. of course not all riffs i write are like that, but some of them are, and i like to think that is an original way of writing guitar parts. the main reason i am glad of being a drummer first is because like a said previously, i have a vision for the entire song, the guitar, bass, drums, and overall song structure and flow. that have proven to be very helpful when trying to put together a song with band mates.
"I have this like, sort of nervous tick where I'm always like, kind of making sure it's at full and it's not rolled off." Thanks God, I'm not the only one that does that. Fricking constantly.
Love how Misha and the Cap discussed how some things you think you'd hate from a certain type of guitar, that when you actually get a hold of one, you just can't put it down. Happened to me about 7 years back. Was picking out my second guitar, a step up from my practice ibanez gio I use to play (Still own for some reason) and was dead set on this shecter hellraiser. everything about it just worked. The fretwork was nice. The pups kicked butt and the thing produced a body feel I've never felt before. I unfortunately didn't have the dough that day and had to wait until my birthday to come back for it. Well, my birthday arrived and I woke up to a shiny, skywalker blue mexican strat just staring at me from the side of my bed. I was pissed. My folks went out and bought what they thought I was playing and wanted to surprise me. They told me to at least try it before returning it. As soon as I picked it up...I never put it down. That guitar kicked more ass than that shecter ever could and still kicking with a couple of modifications to it today. I will never forget the look of shock I had that day, and the number of times I apologized to my folks for acting like a spoiled dick. Really made me understand that no matter what you think about an instrument, try it before you knock it.
I have been waiting so long for Misha to explain his odd picking technique. He is the reason I picked like that for so long and it took me forever to fix it after so many years (but I'm glad I finally did). Love the guy though and respect that he's comfortable doing his own thing.
Hey Capt, do some Plini interview when he passes through the UK. He writes some prog. metal but with some more "melodic" stuff, and more "listenable" to non metal heads. You would like, I guess.
Right here with Bulb on this one. I LOVE Strats, love them, maybe 'feeling' wise in my hands my favorite guitar. But, I don't even own one and I never have!
"I don't care if it's original or not, I just want to write something that will make me happy" god that's so amazing
Thats whats always blow my mind about Peripherie. It always sounds familiar but nothing like something else at the same time.
Isn't this kinda funny? The captiain- not much a metal guy interviewing the Djentmotron 8000
+NeutralDepth Should've been Rabea or at least Rob :P
+NeutralDepth Cap Lee has never been so uncomfortable before.
Rob and Bea fangirled too much hahaha, but jokes aside, at the end of the day, they are both musicians, guitarists and gear nerds:)
NeutralDepth I'm stoned as shit and this comment damn near made me piss my pants ngl
it sucks
The change in writing styles to support the vocals has really been what won me over as a fan. I always thought what they were doing was interesting, but Juggernaut really made me a huge fan. Spencer's talent is really coming through too in a way deserves the attention the music is now giving him.
You either djent or you don't, there is no try.
- Djoda
Only a Sith deals in 1's and 0's !!
Djent you do or do not, exist not, does try. -Djoda
There us no dtry
If you Djent 'maybe' - squish just like a grape
dent or djon't
I have a heightened respect for The Captain as a result of this interview. His professionalism is flying high in this segment. He usually has his own vibe going on in gear demos, as a stark contrast to Robs aggressive style, but here he adapts well to Misha's modern style.
The world deserves Jake Bowen in this channel too.
I agree that
I love his Ibanez model, JBM 27 💖🤘
Never really gotten into Periphery, but all I can say is, damn, what a nice fella! I'm not convinced the music will be my cup of tea but hey ho, off for a listen! Really good interview guys. Thanks
+Steven G Misha has always stayed in touch with his fans and even comments on youtube, so this guy is clearly down to earth and has talent - All new materials got me started back in the bulb days.
+Herrdesrings The whole entire band promotes and participates in a group page for the band on Facebook made by a fan. They comment on covers, interact with us, make jokes, they're all amazing individuals, whether you like their music or not, they at least still stay in touch with their fans
+Augtivism They also post on gear forums and in facebook gear groups.
+Steven G Check out Breeze by Bulb, which is Mishas instrumental happy fun time band. Can;''t get enough of that song.
Travis Sexsmith Breeze is a track by Misha, Bulb is his artist name. Also, Bulb has never been a band, just Misha himself.
any way the cap can meet tosin abasi?
I think Tosin's guitar will take up the whole room!
SYNDRIC best comment 😂😂😂
@@sagooaudio1101 you mean Tosin Gains, you mirin?
Oh! Just noticed that bulb in the background, nice touch, Captain :D
17:30 So djent actually exists because a bunch of people gave money to a Jewish kid at a bar mitzvah.
pretty fucking much. :I
+Sam Victor Djewish
I'd say djent exists because a bunch of Swedes decided to get together and form a band in the late 80s/early 90s.
Arguably the reason it's not just Meshuggah being Meshuggah is because of a bunch of nutjobs from Watford forming a band called SikTh.
Is it just me who felt like the more these two spoke, the stronger there was a connection between them?
They're both very down to earth nice guys, it seems like they'd get on really well
Misha's and Mark's overdrive and Jake's cleans (almost synth-y at times) are some of my fav. guitar tones out there.
15:45
He's talking about the very last few seconds of the Periphery song "Hell Below" for anyone who didn't know and wants to check it out
+James Kerr I actually thought it was The Alphabet since that was the demo name for Omega, which is straight after...
Well the alphabet and Twinkle twinkle are technically the same song so idk lol
+James Kerr finally , i know why it is on the record ! :D
Thanks :D
+James Kerr
Holy shit balls.
In all my years of playing I never made that connection.
Modes, fast scale runs, arpeggios. Tidy and under my belt.
but... Damn you are so right
How the fuck could I miss that?
i never even noticed that sounded like twinkle twinkle at the end and I've listened to that album dozens of times. Thanks, I was about to post a comment asking what that was about.
Anderton getting the Andertones.
My fav thing about this is how much they warmed up to each other as the interview went on
Captain, you make a fantastic interviewer. #hiddentalents
I really like that light BULB over Lee's shoulder.
pretty sure they're called Edison bulbs, they have plenty on Amazon :)
+Toby Masters missed the pun
Yeah I understand it now haha
omg.
master of pun
I tell you what, Lee. Your style of interviewing is really enjoyable.
It's refreshing to see two people just sit and talk about guitar without having to push an agenda to plug X, Y and Z products. Really good video
Not really my style of music but Misha really is a top bloke!
It's funny how Lee, a blues guitarist, interviews one of the best guitarists in modern metal.
wow, the best metal guitarist? that’s a hell of statement.
@@8Junio76 he said one of the best, not the best. It's true though, this man is good as hell
crguti who would you say is the best then? 🤨
God bless Periphery! Love this band , I love when bands don’t cater to their fan’s ears and desires!
one does not simply watch an hour video on youtube unless its Misha Mansoor ... this felt so good ... thank you to the guys at Aderton ( :p ) and the captain for this interview I learned a lot and it felt so good ... i almost wished it didn't end :) Its all about what you love doing, not only in music but that is how life should be lived ....
Love Misha and love Periphery, so this is a great interview for me, very interesting.
Marillion! Wow did not expect that, they're my favorite band! And yes Dream Theater were influenced by Marillion, I believe they even opened for them at one point. Great interview Lee
Two worlds I never imagined colliding :)
Great interview! I love the "where does IT come from ?" type of questions. You ask the same kind of questions that I would do, definitely not what you get from the typical jagoff guitar world magazine type interview. Great stuff. Hats off to Misha and Lee. Thanks alot! Keep 'em coming, I'm hooked.
Misha is such a humble guy. It's great learning from him with these interviews. Thanks Cap!
15:54 he's talking about the end of hell below, into omega
i'm such a fanboy LOL
Wow very cool to see you here. I love your cover of Ji so much!
I heard that and I was like “HELL BELOW” lol
Me to
You can tell that Misha is worn out yet he still come and do the interview. Misha is definitely one of my main inspiration's on the guitar and just as a human being.
Great show. I wish I had either of you guys as a friend. I smiled when Misha was talking about his Strat, and how he should hate that guitar, but instead, he loves it and can't put it down. He pointed out that there's a certain intangible thing, a feel that a guitar has, or a feeling that you get from certain guitars. I started playing a Squire Bullet Strat in a music store recently. It had this lovely gold finish, and was in mint condition. I loved the looks of it. They were asking $110 for the guitar. I was mesmerized. I couldn't put it down and I left the store with it that day. I took it right over to my tech, "Johnny Guitar" and he set it up beautifully. It's a guitar that "on paper" I should hate, but I absolutely love it -- as much, if not more, than my high end instruments. Even the tones coming out of those cheap pickups sound great to my ear. Even unamplified, it sounds wonderful. It's super light-weight and feels so good to play. It's a very strange thing. There's just something magical about THAT guitar. I know that I will have and play it for life.
this is clearly the best misha interview I've ever seen great job it is very interesting. Can't wait to see them in a few weeks in France !
Can you interview Mike Akerfeldt from Opeth? Please Capn' Lee, it's what i wish for Christmas!
HOLY SHIT THIS IS GONNA BE THE BEST HOUR EVER
enjoying it thus far??
I've been playing for 20+ years and have always held my pick this way (thumb, index, middle). It came naturally to reinforce fast rhythmic picking. Went to music school and they told me it was very wrong but I still do it.
There is not a riff I write without thinking of how the drums interactions will go. Love this video.
No doubt.
I just saw a video by a great guitarist "how to write heavy riffs". I heard nothing catchy, nothing groovy...
People leaving comments like "this is garbage".
I wanted to leave a comment like "how about first programming in a great drum groove, then write to that?", but didn't out of respect for that shred master.
Ah, best interview I've seen in a while, respect to the Captain for bringing in Misha and consequently with him one of the most modern metal rising scenes to question and analysis.
This was the best thing I've watched on youtube in months, so good.
true!
I'm a huge fan of both Misha and Periphery, it's great to see them here on my favorite music channel. I love this interview; it answered several questions I'd wanted to know the answer to. I've seen several interviews with him and this is the first one that's been "original".
I wish I could try out the Juggernaut. It's such a gorgeous guitar. And misha has a massive and comprehensive guitar collection, so I'm really fascinated by the choices he made, and I'm dying to try out the pickups. One of the local guitar stores has a juggernaut, but they won't let me play it cuz it's "so nice". The employees haven't even played it.
Speaking of, anyone know what kind of knobs those are? I can't seem to find the name of that style anywhere.
this is freaking awesome. Hands down coolest segment of this channel! How do these people come up with such catchy chord progressions!?
Tone Quest: The RPG game that you will never finish
that game comes with nothing except high expectations
lalakuma9 you chase the dragon through the woods, but you never catch the dragon
Destiny should have that quest in it.
and then you quit and play sense of time quest.
This is great. The Captain is a really great interviewer and seems just as knowledgable as Misha! Cant wait for the Nick Johnston one. Another one of my heroes ;P
Love Misha!! Great video, Lee! Saw Periphery in Oslo a week ago, best consert ever!
Not my cup of tea, music-wise, but this guy is really into what he does and has some really good insight, and I quite enjoy this.
Is there any metal that a 5150 cant play?
The kind that requires a shitty guitar tone :D
+Jaakko Ihanamäki so black metal?
Exactly
+Hank Hill Well... If you record a 5150 with a potato, you might actually get a black metal tone.
+Jaakko Ihanamäki or put an HM-2 in front of clean 5150. But potato works too.
I hope that you get to do this with Ola Englund because he is one of my most favourite guitarists of all time and a tone connoisseur too. This one with Misha was just absolutely awesome and so far the series has been probably one of my all time favourites that have ever come to TH-cam.
Lee sir, you have gone above and beyond as always. Love this series! This should be your full-time job!
Jetlag was yes
That was fantastic. Love seeing his take on guitar playing, such an inspiration
Loved this interview! Misha is such a cool dude. Very informative, thanks Cap.
That amazing moment when you realize that Misha holds a pick the same way you hold a pick
And JB from ABR
Not any more :D
The cameltoe grip
Fabio Pires I hold my pick that way too ayyy.
Fabio Pires I also hold the pick the same way.
I 'v watched a few other videos with Misha in and he seem's like a really nice dude. good video
I wish they would interview Fredrick or Marten from Meshuggah.
AraneaNuntius yahyahyah
This was really interesting watching two guys from totally opposite genres chatting. More of this!
Crossroads... metalman djent meets blues player getting better and better with his licks, every year, while owning a music shop.
Thank you for an incredible interview! I'm currently doing my final year project at university based on prog metal and what 'djent' is and such and misha is such a huge part of the stylistic, I've taken so much from this. Cheers guys! This is going to be a brilliant series, so informative!
Not a Periphery fan, but Misha is so cool and looks so down to Earth. It's really interesting for a musician to got to know his tone journey.
Omg, it makes sense that the first album was supposed to be instrumental only. I still love the first album the most (instrumental and with vocals).
Love the interview Captain. Misha is a super nice, humble guy. I took a lot from it but I would like to comment on 'replying too much on guitar specs' when it comes to dismissing instruments. I would love to be able to walk into a bunch of music stores and try different guitars, however I live on a tropical Island with very few stores. There are definitely no Jackson Juggernaut HT’s to try out so I rely heavily on the 'specs' I know and like. Plus Channels like Andertons and others to make sense of everything out there. When I get it wrong it’s super expensive for me to reverse, shipping, re listing and the time. So specs help a lot. I still get it wrong...sometimes ;-) Great Interview.
ive never listened to periphery but this was a great listen. i hope to see more of these "the Captain meets"
Wow, never really heard misha mansoor, but I'm excited he actually shares my opinions on string gauge and coil splitting.
The smallest gauge that can work for your tuning, and coil splits are great.
Soooo many people think larger and larger strings are better, but they start sucking your tone down.
love periphery and cap you are a fantastic interviewer. As you cats say cheers mate! :)
Superb interview! Articulates exactly how i feel about Music. Thoroughly enjoyed this. Thank you!
First :)
+Andertons Music Co Get a life!!
+Andertons Music Co Loved this, Love Periphery and Misha. Seen them in Manchester 2 weeks ago, absolutely incredible music!
+Andertons Music Co I had a blast at the clinic, and it was so awesome hanging out and chatting, thanks for everything!
+Misha Mansoor It was awesome meeting you too. Look forward to hanging out in the future. Take it easy & good luck with everything. Cheers!!
+Andertons Music Co hell yeah!
Best ever Anderson's video.!
This is a great interview. Thanks!
Hey these interviews are really good! Actually interesting questions and interesting answers. Thank you Captain
I could listen to those two for hours. Do you mind to do it again? With all the stuff Misha and his buddies did over the years there is a lot to talk about.
Captain Djenterton! What a top bloke - have had a similar experience of Periphery with a need for intermittent lie downs - but can definitely recognise the passion with which that band plays. Inspiring dude.
Yes, He nailed it about the Les Paul and using its neck pickup for clean when you also use a noise gate and a compressor. Thats exactly the problem I had when I switched to a pedalboard and switcher looper.
i can really relate to the drummer then guitarist thing, i started drums when i was 8, started playing in bands when i was 11, then at 15 i switched to guitar, and i am really glad i did that. it really does help when writing riffs, because i have a vision for the entire song, and also some riffs that i write are similar to a drum pattern with fills. i will have a basic rhythm, with little licks thrown in there like fills on the guitar. of course not all riffs i write are like that, but some of them are, and i like to think that is an original way of writing guitar parts. the main reason i am glad of being a drummer first is because like a said previously, i have a vision for the entire song, the guitar, bass, drums, and overall song structure and flow. that have proven to be very helpful when trying to put together a song with band mates.
I am so freaking happy you did this!!!
Awesome interview--I should really just call it a filmed conversation. Didn't even realize an hour passed. Cheers to you both!
Great series! I really like the depth of these interviews.
"I have this like, sort of nervous tick where I'm always like, kind of making sure it's at full and it's not rolled off."
Thanks God, I'm not the only one that does that. Fricking constantly.
Comes from playing a Strat?
coolest guys ever - very insightful
Love how Misha and the Cap discussed how some things you think you'd hate from a certain type of guitar, that when you actually get a hold of one, you just can't put it down. Happened to me about 7 years back. Was picking out my second guitar, a step up from my practice ibanez gio I use to play (Still own for some reason) and was dead set on this shecter hellraiser. everything about it just worked. The fretwork was nice. The pups kicked butt and the thing produced a body feel I've never felt before. I unfortunately didn't have the dough that day and had to wait until my birthday to come back for it. Well, my birthday arrived and I woke up to a shiny, skywalker blue mexican strat just staring at me from the side of my bed. I was pissed. My folks went out and bought what they thought I was playing and wanted to surprise me. They told me to at least try it before returning it. As soon as I picked it up...I never put it down. That guitar kicked more ass than that shecter ever could and still kicking with a couple of modifications to it today. I will never forget the look of shock I had that day, and the number of times I apologized to my folks for acting like a spoiled dick. Really made me understand that no matter what you think about an instrument, try it before you knock it.
I got a 2 minute ad with Misha in it before this video, I'm still watching it.
Says that guitars are just a peice of wood* owns $9000 true temperament mayones*
But plays the Jackson
Connor Bonnell after they sponsored him ;)
That was an awesome interview! Great job Capt!
absolutely fantastic! thank you Misha and Cap!
Absolutely loved this, really interesting guy. Great interview. We need more Captain meets interviews.
It's cool to see people coming from wildly different schools of thought click and find out they've been on the same page.
Hell yeah! It's what life is all about... Your own Tone Quest!
Great interview Lee, you have some great unique questions!
I want to be friends with Misha...
Cool interview! Misha is such a nice mellow humble and talented guy. He put Djent on the map!
if I was the captain I would just be sitting there requesting songs
Can we please have Rob/Rabea demo the JAckson Juggernauts on their channeL?
+ApolloSol Ah yes, I'd love to hear that !
+ApolloSol I wanna see them review more Bare Knuckle Pickup products in general.
Really cool of him the way he accepted that criticism about the first two albums and talked about them so honestly, seem like a cool guy
I have been waiting so long for Misha to explain his odd picking technique. He is the reason I picked like that for so long and it took me forever to fix it after so many years (but I'm glad I finally did). Love the guy though and respect that he's comfortable doing his own thing.
Lee this is amazing! What a video!
Is that bulb a coincidence?
Damnnnn I’m a drummer but huge fan of Periphery and animals and that guitar tone sounds like heaven.
Hey Capt, do some Plini interview when he passes through the UK. He writes some prog. metal but with some more "melodic" stuff, and more "listenable" to non metal heads.
You would like, I guess.
This. Plini is my favorite guitar player. Absolutely next level guitar work.
Pedro Henrique Brandão agreed
Right here with Bulb on this one. I LOVE Strats, love them, maybe 'feeling' wise in my hands my favorite guitar. But, I don't even own one and I never have!
Loving this interview series. Great work Lee :)
I think Lee should join Periphery
Harry Alderman peripherlee
Best thing ever upladed on this channel :3
Oh and Misha is a top bloke. What a great interview.
Awesome interview! Good job guys
Fantastic interview