👉Download an enhanced and extended version of this track here: ttps://johansaega.bandcamp.com/track/early-80s-heavy-metal-guitar-backing-track-in-am-80-bpm
Yeah, I post WAY too much but maybe the "algorithm" counts word count as credits :) I've not yet made nor uploaded video material, but an overlay with chords would be great here because you do venture "outside the box" especially at the choruses. Seeing the chord names and hearing large intervals would benefit learners. Great composition and excellent mix too.
Your surname "Gallardo" is a name that's echoed for decades in my head....... at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. for heart surgery under a "study" program, led by a world-renowned Dr. Gallardo, I couldn't have been any luckier to even meet him. He'd read that I was a musician/bandleader with heavy Latin influences....... we "Latinized" many 70's cover songs, did the whole Santana medley of Black Magic Woman--->Gypsy Queen---->Oye Como Va. He was ultra-hip to salsa and Latin jazz, fusion, etc. Nurses and surgeons are trying to get his attention; he was running late to MY surgery because we're on a roll talking about obscure but phenomenal musicians from Africa to Cuba to Colombia..... :) Great stuff here, amigo, many thanks.
If that's you in the avatar, you might not recall the term "acid rock", which I'd say was the predecessor to "metal", which I've long thought was first applied to Black Sabbath. Acid rock was Blue Oyster Cult's early work such as "Tyranny and Mutation" LP. THIS is well-described as "Early 80s Heavy Metal" :) The guitar tone and sustained chords are, IMO, quite exemplary of "heavy metal". Funny it can be about such criteria....... how dark the chordal parts are, the closeness or small range of the melody notes that get the "metal" identity. Higher range of melody notes or "span" of note-to-note distances are more "acid rock". Then there's "symphonic rock" like Dream Theater. And to conclude this ramble, thanks for this quite tasteful track and excellent mix work.
👉Download an enhanced and extended version of this track here: ttps://johansaega.bandcamp.com/track/early-80s-heavy-metal-guitar-backing-track-in-am-80-bpm
Yeah, I post WAY too much but maybe the "algorithm" counts word count as credits :) I've not yet made nor uploaded video material, but an overlay with chords would be great here because you do venture "outside the box" especially at the choruses. Seeing the chord names and hearing large intervals would benefit learners. Great composition and excellent mix too.
That's right. I'll be implementing the chord names.
Your surname "Gallardo" is a name that's echoed for decades in my head....... at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. for heart surgery under a "study" program, led by a world-renowned Dr. Gallardo, I couldn't have been any luckier to even meet him. He'd read that I was a musician/bandleader with heavy Latin influences....... we "Latinized" many 70's cover songs, did the whole Santana medley of Black Magic Woman--->Gypsy Queen---->Oye Como Va. He was ultra-hip to salsa and Latin jazz, fusion, etc. Nurses and surgeons are trying to get his attention; he was running late to MY surgery because we're on a roll talking about obscure but phenomenal musicians from Africa to Cuba to Colombia..... :) Great stuff here, amigo, many thanks.
What a story! I quite like latin jazz. Here in Ecuador "Salsa" is one of the most popular genres.
yup good one
Thanks a lot!
If that's you in the avatar, you might not recall the term "acid rock", which I'd say was the predecessor to "metal", which I've long thought was first applied to Black Sabbath. Acid rock was Blue Oyster Cult's early work such as "Tyranny and Mutation" LP. THIS is well-described as "Early 80s Heavy Metal" :) The guitar tone and sustained chords are, IMO, quite exemplary of "heavy metal". Funny it can be about such criteria....... how dark the chordal parts are, the closeness or small range of the melody notes that get the "metal" identity. Higher range of melody notes or "span" of note-to-note distances are more "acid rock". Then there's "symphonic rock" like Dream Theater. And to conclude this ramble, thanks for this quite tasteful track and excellent mix work.
Thanks for sharing that data. I always like learning from other musicians that know the characteristics of rock subgenres.
Ich bin 100 te 👍👍👍🇩🇪🇵🇼🕊️oder Erste immer 😂😂😂Gezetz!
Thanks! 😎
Nice,,,
Thanks!
classic
Damn sounds very good
Thanks! 👍
@@JohanSaeterosGallardo you are welcome dude keep do backing tracks🤘🏻🖤
Show😮😮😮😮
😎👍