@@bramjanssens9996 Uh, no. Yes you are correct that both men moved up and down (almost choreographed) during certain parts of certain songs, but the last 5 or so years of touring with Dee Dee, he did not do that as much, if ever. Watch any show during the 85-88 years - very minimal, often times just standing idle. Whether it was boredom or exhaustion, we don't know... but obviously he eventually left the band. And yes, CJ and Johnny were also choreographed and did the same, but in these particular instances, CJ would point at various fans in the audience which at least gave the illusion he was interacting more with them.
Es gab mal eine deutsche Version von Rocking Roll Highschool der Ramones, ich leider verloren habe. Wenn einer noch eine Kopie übrig hätte, ich mache euvch besoffen
Does Johnny only play power chords? The Ramones have songs with arpeggiated riffs but I've yet to see Johnny play any of them, he just replaces it with power chords. Is it even him on the record playing the intro to I Want to Live? No butt-hurt intended just curious.
yeah i thought that myself like we want the airwaves guitar sounds not good live but on the album is does and on the album i wanna live its better but live its diffrent
He was actually known for playing barre chords, all down strummed, not power chords. Some of the arpeggiated riffs from the albums are overdubbed so with just one guitar in concert he stuck with the barre chords. For this song though, he could have played the intro then launched into the strumming, not sure why he didn't.
Johnny usually just played barre chords, with his strum patterns typically being based around eighth note downstrokes (he never used upstrokes or power chords). When he played lead guitar parts, he would usually continue strumming as if he were playing full, block barre chords, since he never really developed an effective picking technique (examples: th-cam.com/video/P1Svfh2_n9Q/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/XZCBKNscl9g/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/nbwTcEYUKCc/w-d-xo.html). He would make an effort to pick each string individually whenever they played California Sun in concerts (th-cam.com/video/1Z9iUdiS3hI/w-d-xo.html), but his lead work in live shows was usually limited to brief bends in between chord strumming, which he began doing a lot more of in the 80s and 90s. He played arpeggio-based lead parts on "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" and "I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You" for their debut album, and as for the arpeggiated riffs heard later on in the band's career (including I Wanna Live), they were played by uncredited session musicians. He was more capable of a guitar player than he usually made himself out to be, but his minimalistic style helped define the band's sound. Sorry for the long post.
yeah, look at the beginning of the vid. joey and marky even got into an argument about it on howard stern, i didnt really think so until i saw shows from around this time. his hair is just too straight and perfect. look up blitzkrieg bop from this same show
Too much frizz for a wig . He probably straightened it , then dyed it , which can cause frizz . The back hair is wavier than the front, varitaitons not normally found in wigs. The Howard Stern show took place after Joey was diagnosed with cancer (1995) , and most likely lost some hair from chemotherapy . Marky should not have went to the press about it.
The greatest band ever.
O Ramones tocando parece uma banda com 10000de musicos
Ramones pra sempre ❤️
This guy is good at the mic. I ve always admired him. Love Joey, Johnny and Dee dee Ramone forever
Halfway to Sanity is such an underappreciated Ramones album.
Eu quero viver,eu quero viver minha vida🎤
Ramones 4ever!!
Eu gosto da versão do vídeo oficial,,, mas ao vivo é outro nível,,, puro Punk Rock 😍
R.I.P jOEY, Eu Quero Viver
RAMONES FOREVER
goosebumps it's so good.
At 0:33 It’s Johnny and CJ (unofficially) walking closer to the edge of the stage to greet the fans🎸
Johnny and DeeDee (later CJ) always moved up and down..) don't make up stories..
@@bramjanssens9996 Uh, no. Yes you are correct that both men moved up and down (almost choreographed) during certain parts of certain songs, but the last 5 or so years of touring with Dee Dee, he did not do that as much, if ever. Watch any show during the 85-88 years - very minimal, often times just standing idle. Whether it was boredom or exhaustion, we don't know... but obviously he eventually left the band.
And yes, CJ and Johnny were also choreographed and did the same, but in these particular instances, CJ would point at various fans in the audience which at least gave the illusion he was interacting more with them.
Lo daba todo el flaco. Con su cáncer. Músicos así ya no existen. Te amo Joey
Das war vor dem Tod von Joey, ich konnte/durfze die Ramones erleben war 18 gewesen.
Die Ramones überhaupt geil.
Es gab mal eine deutsche Version von Rocking Roll Highschool der Ramones, ich leider verloren habe.
Wenn einer noch eine Kopie übrig hätte, ich mache euvch besoffen
Joey grande
❤
Johnny is the greatest rhythm guitarist ever.
True! 👍
Wow l wanna live good
🖤
RAW
punk rock ramones show
Foda
Es duro encontrar destruccion constructiva ...
Does Johnny only play power chords? The Ramones have songs with arpeggiated riffs but I've yet to see Johnny play any of them, he just replaces it with power chords. Is it even him on the record playing the intro to I Want to Live? No butt-hurt intended just curious.
yeah i thought that myself like we want the airwaves guitar sounds not good live but on the album is does and on the album i wanna live its better but live its diffrent
He was actually known for playing barre chords, all down strummed, not power chords. Some of the arpeggiated riffs from the albums are overdubbed so with just one guitar in concert he stuck with the barre chords. For this song though, he could have played the intro then launched into the strumming, not sure why he didn't.
like with the song bye bye baby i think he didnt record the single riff
i dont think they should of had them cause i believe that the guitar player should do it
Johnny usually just played barre chords, with his strum patterns typically being based around eighth note downstrokes (he never used upstrokes or power chords). When he played lead guitar parts, he would usually continue strumming as if he were playing full, block barre chords, since he never really developed an effective picking technique (examples: th-cam.com/video/P1Svfh2_n9Q/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/XZCBKNscl9g/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/nbwTcEYUKCc/w-d-xo.html). He would make an effort to pick each string individually whenever they played California Sun in concerts (th-cam.com/video/1Z9iUdiS3hI/w-d-xo.html), but his lead work in live shows was usually limited to brief bends in between chord strumming, which he began doing a lot more of in the 80s and 90s. He played arpeggio-based lead parts on "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" and "I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You" for their debut album, and as for the arpeggiated riffs heard later on in the band's career (including I Wanna Live), they were played by uncredited session musicians. He was more capable of a guitar player than he usually made himself out to be, but his minimalistic style helped define the band's sound. Sorry for the long post.
Fuck vinyl for some reason Ramones is better in VHS format or LIVE or something.
wow. you can clearly see joey wears a wig here
+Michael Gonzalez
joey never wore a wig
yeah, look at the beginning of the vid. joey and marky even got into an argument about it on howard stern, i didnt really think so until i saw shows from around this time. his hair is just too straight and perfect. look up blitzkrieg bop from this same show
my dick wears wig
Too much frizz for a wig . He probably straightened it , then dyed it , which can cause frizz . The back hair is wavier than the front, varitaitons not normally found in wigs. The Howard Stern show took place after Joey was diagnosed with cancer (1995) , and most likely lost some hair from chemotherapy . Marky should not have went to the press about it.
your eloquent response made me laugh my ass off!! thanks