Here Today... Gone To Hell!

Guns N' Roses => Dead Horse => Topic started by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:20:01 AM



Title: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:20:01 AM
Well i just DL the 2002 VMA performance and some other videos from their live performances in 2002 and the GNR today is a complete diffrent band.  In the VMAs when jimmy fallon introduced them every1 went crazy and then they saw something that wasnt GNR and they were in shock.  In 2002 sure i was a huge Guns fan but i was disapointed bc it wasnt the Guns i expcted, we had a guy with a bucket on his head, a goth guitar player and a axl rose in sports jerseys who sounded like shit,  like cmon wtf happend 2 the band that would go out there and put on a show u would never 4get and a band that didnt need makeup or a gimic 2 make their point herd, well  I went to the may 17th show not knowing what to expect, sure i knew bucket was outta the band and i heard that axl sounded and looked great, then they hit the stage and i knew this wasnt the same band as they were in 2002, they were better, they lost the jerseys, the buckets and the goth.  NOw all of u reading this could bitch that its been posted b4 or that u dont care and quite honestly i dont care what u say its a discussion board and im discusing my opinon.



Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Steel_Angel on May 23, 2006, 12:21:38 AM
gnr is bigger and better indeedd  :beer:


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: jimb0 on May 23, 2006, 12:22:30 AM
I do miss the nunchuck dance


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: grog mug on May 23, 2006, 12:29:21 AM
Buckethead is BY FAR the best guitarist GN'R EVER had!!  So don't know him or Finck's old look...they both looked cool out there lookin crazy as hell.  Normally I'm not into that look at all...but I do miss Bucket's solos on the new songs.  No one can play like him so as u can tell with the new band the solos are MUCH slower without BUCKETHEAD!! COME BACK BUCKET!!


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:32:42 AM
Wow are u implying that buckethead is better then slash, if thats so then buckethead wouldnt have 2 join GNR in the 1st place and play slash songs.  IF he was so good he wouldnt need a bucket and a white mask 2 make his name know, whats his real name??? huh no1 knows  if u asked some1 if they knew him by his real name they would ahve no idea, but once u say the name slash ppl automaticaly know who he is, slash eaerned his name threw his guitar playin, buckhead earned his name threw a bucket


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Tomorrows on May 23, 2006, 12:34:06 AM
Finck's old look could be pretty cool at times. I think he looked awesome at RiR3. But he looked terrible in a lot of other concerts.

New look is much easier to stomach though.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Sukie on May 23, 2006, 12:34:25 AM
Stay on topic. ?Let's not turn this into a Slash is better thread. ?


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:35:41 AM
yea sorry lol my bad, anyway well stay on topic by im saying 2006 GNR is by far better then 2002 GNR


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: grog mug on May 23, 2006, 12:43:20 AM
2002 by far...2006 axl's vocals/performance MUCH better........I just miss Buckethead (yes better then Slash).  Go see his solo show and you'll understand.  The new band DOES rock though..12th show was great.  Anyway to get Rio on TV??!?!


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Evolution on May 23, 2006, 12:45:11 AM
The band just seems like more of a band, not that I rejected the 2002 line-up, but there is more banter onstage and whatnot.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:47:08 AM
ok ill give buckethead his respeat and yea if he wasnt a good guitarst axl wouldnt get him 4 GNR but watch the 2002 vmas for example of 2002, axl sounds like shit, he cant even hold a note and he sounds nothing like himself, atleast now he sounds just like he did when UYI came out, and he can run around w/ losing his breath, and buckethead and goth fink just arnt guns n' roses, in the late '80s and early '90s would u ever think a guy with a bucket on his head and a goth guitar player would be playing in guns n' roses, its just not what GNR is about


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: dave-gnfnr2k on May 23, 2006, 12:49:05 AM
Ron Thal might just be as good as BH, let give him a chance.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: TheRaven on May 23, 2006, 12:51:20 AM
Wow are u implying that buckethead is better then slash, if thats so then buckethead wouldnt have 2 join GNR in the 1st place and play slash songs.? IF he was so good he wouldnt need a bucket and a white mask 2 make his name know, whats his real name??? huh no1 knows? if u asked some1 if they knew him by his real name they would ahve no idea, but once u say the name slash ppl automaticaly know who he is, slash eaerned his name threw his guitar playin, buckhead earned his name threw a bucket
Umm, Slash's real name isn't Slash either. If you asked most people what Slash's real name is most people probably wouldn't know it's Saul Hudson. So the fact that most people wouldn't know Buckethead's real name is pointless. What next, The Edge with U2 isn't that good because people don't know his real name?

Raven


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 12:54:18 AM
ok point taken, but whos a more popular guitar player slash, or buckethead.  But again lets stay on topic


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: grog mug on May 23, 2006, 12:55:36 AM
good point Raven...I don't know how to play any instruments myself, but I KNOW how good Buckethead is. ?The new GN'R is just fine..but watching Bumblefoot's solo was just "ok" in my mind. ?Great guitar player...like November rain he DOESN"T hold a candle to Buckethead. ?Still love the new lineup and will support them til the end..which hopefully is NEVER.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: axlslash4eva on May 23, 2006, 01:00:16 AM
bumblefoot did a great job in my eyes, considering he was only in the band 4 a week and had 2 learn all the songs, granted i never saw buckethead play  the november rain solo but that solo was written by slash, so when buckethead does it he is doin what slash rote and mayb just changin it alittle, everybody has their opinions and my opinion is that slash has paid his dues and thats why he is considered one of the best of all time, and in my opinon buckethead was just covering the old songs such as november rain, and as for  the new songs he did a great job on those solos but if i were 2 make a all star band and had 2 pick from buckethead and slash i pick slash


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: BluesGNR on May 23, 2006, 01:14:32 AM
Wow are u implying that buckethead is better then slash, if thats so then buckethead wouldnt have 2 join GNR in the 1st place and play slash songs.? IF he was so good he wouldnt need a bucket and a white mask 2 make his name know, whats his real name??? huh no1 knows? if u asked some1 if they knew him by his real name they would ahve no idea, but once u say the name slash ppl automaticaly know who he is, slash eaerned his name threw his guitar playin, buckhead earned his name threw a bucket

Brian Carol.  Secondly, just as many people know Saul Hudson.  The die hard fans are the ones that know.  Who judges skill by popularity, anyway?


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: BluesGNR on May 23, 2006, 01:16:44 AM
Ron Thal might just be as good as BH, let give him a chance.

I'd take Thal over BH just because of his personality.  He cracks me up.  If you ever talk to him, you'll know exactly what I mean.  Skill wise, he kicks ass. He's been in the band for just about 2 weeks now.. lets cut him a break.  He's a cool guy.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Slipdisc on May 24, 2006, 07:43:05 AM
Wow are u implying that buckethead is better then slash, if thats so then buckethead wouldnt have 2 join GNR in the 1st place and play slash songs.? IF he was so good he wouldnt need a bucket and a white mask 2 make his name know, whats his real name??? huh no1 knows? if u asked some1 if they knew him by his real name they would ahve no idea, but once u say the name slash ppl automaticaly know who he is, slash eaerned his name threw his guitar playin, buckhead earned his name threw a bucket

That's the biggest pile of @#*% I've read in recent history....

So Slash is his real name?? :rofl:

You obviously know nothing about Buckethead so please refrain from the asstalk. I bet you never heard of Shawn Lane either, still he is regarded (by the biggest part of the guitar-community) as the best guitar player ever. Music is an artform, no freakin' popularity contest. By your standards Britney Spears must be the best thing since sliced bread. Buckethead's alter ego was mainly created to force people to only judge the music and not the personal life of the person behind the mask. To show you what inspires him in making music and to deal with shyness. He played like this throughout his whole career, from day one. Sure now it looks like some clever gimmick to draw attention, now he has proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that he's one of the best, but when he first came onto the scene it really didn't do too much for him in being taken serious. If anything he had a steeper hill to climb then most others.

What you need to learn is that Buckethead reached the status of the (almost) untouchable virtuoso by relying on nothing but his own goods. Slash never would have been this big without GNR. Afterall, time has shown what's left of him when it's (almost) just about him (real solo material is almost non existent, it always another band)..... it doesn't even come close to what he was doing a decade and a half ago. Buckethead doesn't need others to show how brilliant he is, people came to that conclusion years ago after the umpteenth brilliant groundbreaking soloalbum.

-PEACE-

Ps. Ron is of an equal greatness, people bashing him should think a minute about the short time he's actually in the band now. Buckethead probably wouldn't have done it any better or worse in the same situation.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: TheMole on May 24, 2006, 09:08:39 AM
What you need to learn is that Buckethead reached the status of the (almost) untouchable virtuoso by relying on nothing but his own goods. Slash never would have been this big without GNR. Afterall, time has shown what's left of him when it's (almost) just about him (real solo material is almost non existent, it always another band)..... it doesn't even come close to what he was doing a decade and a half ago. Buckethead doesn't need others to show how brilliant he is, people came to that conclusion years ago after the umpteenth brilliant groundbreaking soloalbum.

Your view is skewed. You obviously know your guitargods and I can see where you're comming from... pretty solid reasoning and all...
Although you're correct about bucket being highly regarded in guitarist circles (despite the bucket, not thanks to the bucket), the big difference is Slash touched a much broader audience with his playing, he inspired a whole new batch of young guitar players with his unique yet down-to-earth playingstyle. He broke with the 80's tapping, sweeping, arpeggiating virtuosos and re-introduced back to basics emotional guitar playing. Non guitar geeks liked him whilest it takes a connaiseur to like bucket. 95% of the rock-loving world (and I mean listeners, not musicians) never heard of buckethead before he joined Guns N' Roses.

Slash is on par with Hendrickx, thriving not on his technical proficiency (which is more than adequate) but on the ability to touch people with his playing.


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Slipdisc on May 24, 2006, 03:15:38 PM
Your view is skewed. You obviously know your guitargods and I can see where you're comming from... pretty solid reasoning and all...
Although you're correct about bucket being highly regarded in guitarist circles (despite the bucket, not thanks to the bucket), the big difference is Slash touched a much broader audience with his playing, he inspired a whole new batch of young guitar players with his unique yet down-to-earth playingstyle. He broke with the 80's tapping, sweeping, arpeggiating virtuosos and re-introduced back to basics emotional guitar playing. Non guitar geeks liked him whilest it takes a connaiseur to like bucket. 95% of the rock-loving world (and I mean listeners, not musicians) never heard of buckethead before he joined Guns N' Roses.

Slash is on par with Hendrickx, thriving not on his technical proficiency (which is more than adequate) but on the ability to touch people with his playing.

 ::) :no:

Show me some statistics which prove that 95% of the rock-minded people never heard of Buckethead before GNR, otherwise you appear the one having skewed views here. The truth is that Buckethead has been celebrated for years now, as one of the last few truly original exponents of the rock guitar within instrumental music. You can't take your ignorance as representative of other people's interests.

If you need to put Slash on the same level as Hendrix (which is wishful thinking of the highest order), make sure you actually know how to spell the latter's name right. HendriX revolutionized the guitar, he reinvented it. Hendrix achieved to make the instrument as much of an extension of himself only few matched, playing with total freedom. He was one of the first to experiment with stereophonic and phrasing effects. And his fusion approach to rock and jazz resulted in some of the most monumental guitar tunes, in the eyes of fans and fellow musicians.

Slash only re-introduced a kind of playing that had been the soundtrack of the seventies, but almost was forgotten due to loads generic eighties shit. Virtuosos really aren't meant here by me, aswell as countless other virtuosos, but sure some vituosos were putting out absolute shit aswell, as exponents of other genres and styles. Slash never pioneered the guitar in any way. At best he embodied a very successful trip down memory lane, but nothing Page and Hendrix didn?t do before?and did better. Certainly nothing unique when put in proper historic perspective. Slash isn?t on the same level of recognition by fellow musicians as Hendrix is and was. It takes more to become rightfully compared to Hendrix than writing a few classic riffs in your prime, only to never achieve that level never again. Hendrix?s ability to improvise alone should tell you that something really isn?t right about that comparison of yours. Slash is known for many things, but certainly not for his improvisations. Which says a lot about the amount of raw musical talent.

Slash touched a broader audience alright, but you seem to ignore the fact that it happened in a time where the guitar had a way more prominent (but different) place in mainstream music. then it has since the mid-nineties and still has now. You also seem to ignore that when Hendrix exploded onto the scene, the people who would describe his music as ?emotional? (to be able to touch feelings like you put it) and "basic", were in an absolute minority. This should tell you how Slash?s radio-friendly- pentatonic-loved-by-all-tunes, are no base for a comparison. Certainly not a comparison in which you paint a picture like Hendrix was the guitar player of the so called 'emotion'-loving-masses. Buckethead?s approach is often compared to Hendrix and, apart from the technical aspect, is way more founded.

Even Hendrix?s bass player, Billy Cox, thought that Buckethead was one of the few who really took up the glove where Hendrix left it. Buckethead?s unique solo material with a very rich emotional and ambient quality and his pioneering with concepts like octave displacement, tri-tones, (complex, and simple but innovative) harmony and rhythmic ideas and ingenious interval selections make a way more realistic and founded comparison. Especially the ambient quality of Buckethead's offerings, which accomodates the listener with many different levels of listening attention (without letting one have the upperhand), is something Hendrix always strived for aswell.

You seem to imply that virtuoso (and the things that COULD characterize their playing) have lesser emotion in their playing. This says more about your ears then it actually says about the music on topic. Maybe it doesn?t appeal to your notebending- facepulling- definition of emotion, but that doesn?t mean it isn?t there. It's just music that in some cases isn?t as easy digestible, but therefore all the more fulfilling. To me (an absolute GNR fan) and many others (who aren?t necessarily GNR fans, but fans of guitar music in general) the music on albums like Colma and Population Override (by Buckethead) has way more emotional depth then anything Slash ever made. With both very complex multi-layered and very simple yet haunting and beautiful music.

I acknowledge Slash's importance in GNR and I really think he made some magic, but AGAIN, GNR was a band that simply was bigger the the sum of its parts. As seperate part Slash really isn't on Buckethead's level. And speculating on the importance of Buckethead in GNR without CD is clueless. At this point we can only compare common territory (solo stuff) and in that respect Slash has a lot of catching up to do.

-PEACE-



Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: TheMole on May 25, 2006, 06:38:11 AM
::) :no:
Don't do that... no need to patronize people...

Show me some statistics which prove that 95% of the rock-minded people never heard of Buckethead before GNR, otherwise you appear the one having skewed views here. The truth is that Buckethead has been celebrated for years now, as one of the last few truly original exponents of the rock guitar within instrumental music. You can't take your ignorance as representative of other people's interests.
I knew bucket behore he joined Guns... don't picture me as ignorant. Besides me knowing buckethead, I also know bucketloads (pun intended) of people who don't know buckethead but do know Slash (and Angus, Page, Hendrix (pardon me for the spelling mistake, sjeesj...), Van Halen, Richards, ...)

If you need to put Sla... <loads of stuff in between> ...s a lot of catching up to do.
Sorry, condensed this part a bit. Just wanted to point out that you are defending your view by quoting how fellow musicians agree, which is ofcourse totally besides the point and the main reason I called your view skewed. The guitarists mentioned above are sometimes far from what we would consider virtuoso or even groundbreaking (cfr Mr Angus Young). But we usually don't learn about the 'top' guitarists until we've picked up a guitar ourselves, you know the Stevie Ray Vaughan's, the Joe Satriani's, the John Petrucci's, Kenny Wayne Shepherd's, etc... I know I didn't...

But when it boils down to it, I'll always have the highest regards for the guys on the first list. If I have to cite influences, I'll cite Slash, Angus, Blackmore, ... That's why they rank above the guys in the second list (and the gazillions I haven't even mentioned (malmsteen, dimebag, wylde, ...)) in my book


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: Slipdisc on May 25, 2006, 12:20:35 PM
Don't do that... no need to patronize people...

Don?t do that, get a freakin? sense of humor, instead of getting all moralistic because of two emoticons?

I knew bucket behore he joined Guns... don't picture me as ignorant. Besides me knowing buckethead, I also know bucketloads (pun intended) of people who don't know buckethead but do know Slash (and Angus, Page, Hendrix (pardon me for the spelling mistake, sjeesj...), Van Halen, Richards, ...)

Yeah, and your point is? How about the statistics that prove me wrong? How about giving those baseless claims some backbone? In a minute you are going to attack me on the fact that I brought other people?s views into this discussion, where it?s you who (from the get go) is reasoning from what other people know and think? very hypocritical.

Sorry, condensed this part a bit.

Yeah condense as much as your lack of argumentation makes you feel like doing? It?s laughable?

Just wanted to point out that you are defending your view by quoting how fellow musicians agree, which is ofcourse totally besides the point and the main reason I called your view skewed.

Is your reasoning always this assbackwards? You called my views skewed based on my FIRST post in this thread. At that point I didn?t use any other musician to reinforce my argumentation, this occurred in the second post. It?s laughable to see how you are twisting and turning your way through this discussion.Furthermore, it isn?t besides the point to show you how respected musicians seem to agree with what I?ve got to add to this discussion.

The guitarists mentioned above are sometimes far from what we would consider virtuoso or even groundbreaking (cfr Mr Angus Young). But we usually don't learn about the 'top' guitarists until we've picked up a guitar ourselves, you know the Stevie Ray Vaughan's, the Joe Satriani's, the John Petrucci's, Kenny Wayne Shepherd's, etc... I know I didn't...

What the hell is your point man? How about replying with something that actually has relevance to my post? I immediately had a good picture of what was happening in the top of the instrumental genre. I really don?t see where you?re coming from and I don?t see how telling us your life story adds anything to this discussion, besides it giving your ignorance a little more depth.

But when it boils down to it, I'll always have the highest regards for the guys on the first list. If I have to cite influences, I'll cite Slash, Angus, Blackmore, ... That's why they rank above the guys in the second list (and the gazillions I haven't even mentioned (malmsteen, dimebag, wylde, ...)) in my book

Wow that?s great, now we all know who influenced you and all?

Yet it do one iota for you in the Hendrix vs Slash comparison or any other point I brought up in my post.

To sum it all up:

Start responding to my posts or find somebody else who likes the concept of people not putting any effort into their posts.

-PEACE-


Title: Re: Better then we thought
Post by: TheMole on May 26, 2006, 04:19:21 AM
I knew bucket behore he joined Guns... don't picture me as ignorant. Besides me knowing buckethead, I also know bucketloads (pun intended) of people who don't know buckethead but do know Slash (and Angus, Page, Hendrix (pardon me for the spelling mistake, sjeesj...), Van Halen, Richards, ...)
Yeah, and your point is? How about the statistics that prove me wrong? How about giving those baseless claims some backbone? In a minute you are going to attack me on the fact that I brought other people?s views into this discussion, where it?s you who (from the get go) is reasoning from what other people know and think? very hypocritical.
No I don't. I attack you (if you really like to call it that) on the fact that you base the relevance of your opinion on the views of 'respected musicians' like you call them, thus propagating a very specialist view as 'truth'. Indeed, we both build our argumentation around some almost mythical peer group, but my point was that your peer group is to specialised to be representative of 'rock culture' as a whole. Now, keep this in mind, it's gonna come back a wee bit later. Ow, by the way: don't ask for statistics when you know they don't exist, I'm pretty damn sure you know what "figure of speech" means so don't act all ignorant all of the sudden.

Just wanted to point out that you are defending your view by quoting how fellow musicians agree, which is ofcourse totally besides the point and the main reason I called your view skewed.
Is your reasoning always this assbackwards? You called my views skewed based on my FIRST post in this thread. At that point I didn?t use any other musician to reinforce my argumentation, this occurred in the second post. It?s laughable to see how you are twisting and turning your way through this discussion.Furthermore, it isn?t besides the point to show you how respected musicians seem to agree with what I?ve got to add to this discussion.
See, there you go bashing me again... Listen, you might not have grasped what I was trying to say in my first post, but that doesn't mean you get to call people names. My appologies if I didn't make myself clear in the first post. Yeah, you didn't use other musicians in your first post, I know, I can read. I can also read between the lines where it's pretty obvious that you're opinion has been formed by hanging around with other musicians, that you have lost the ability to look at things from a different perspective. And you know what, in your follow-up, you proved me right, didn't you?

The guitarists mentioned above are sometimes far from what we would consider virtuoso or even groundbreaking (cfr Mr Angus Young). But we usually don't learn about the 'top' guitarists until we've picked up a guitar ourselves, you know the Stevie Ray Vaughan's, the Joe Satriani's, the John Petrucci's, Kenny Wayne Shepherd's, etc... I know I didn't...

What the hell is your point man? How about replying with something that actually has relevance to my post? I immediately had a good picture of what was happening in the top of the instrumental genre. I really don?t see where you?re coming from and I don?t see how telling us your life story adds anything to this discussion, besides it giving your ignorance a little more depth.

But when it boils down to it, I'll always have the highest regards for the guys on the first list. If I have to cite influences, I'll cite Slash, Angus, Blackmore, ... That's why they rank above the guys in the second list (and the gazillions I haven't even mentioned (malmsteen, dimebag, wylde, ...)) in my book

Wow that?s great, now we all know who influenced you and all?

Yet it do one iota for you in the Hendrix vs Slash comparison or any other point I brought up in my post.

To sum it all up:

Start responding to my posts or find somebody else who likes the concept of people not putting any effort into their posts.
Aww, come on, now you're just being silly... You know I wasn't trying to unfold my life story for you. It would take quite a lot more than 4 lines too, you know.

Listen, I'm just going to try and explain my point of view one more time and then I'm going to let it rest, a'ight... didn't mean to make a big fuss about this to begin with, so I'm kinda embarassed about how it turned out.
The initial reason why I felt the need to reply to your post was this (emphasis mine):
What you need to learn is that Buckethead reached the status of the (almost) untouchable virtuoso by relying on nothing but his own goods. Slash never would have been this big without GNR. Afterall, time has shown what's left of him when it's (almost) just about him (real solo material is almost non existent, it always another band)..... it doesn't even come close to what he was doing a decade and a half ago. Buckethead doesn't need others to show how brilliant he is, people came to that conclusion years ago after the umpteenth brilliant groundbreaking soloalbum.

You obviously know what you're talking about. The thing is, I don't see many 'people' (as you so eloquently put it) agreeing with you. Don't get me wrong, I adore bucket's solo work (well, some of it anyway), so in fact I agree: buckethead is brilliant. But I understand that what buckethead does is something like making indie films: not really meant for the general public, sometimes a little bit out there, not always very accesible, a bit too out of the ordinary for most people, artistic integrity, and so on... What Slash does, on the other hand, can be appreciated by a broader audience, is not very difficult to get at all. All that whilest still getting critical acclaim from people who know something about it (hey, you yourself said Slash did some magical things, right?). Your view is skewed because you look at it from your pedestal. See, I really think you don't honestly believe 'buckethead has reached the status of the (almost) untouchable virtuoso' in everyones book. Not even for the majority. For the select few who are in the know... yes... for the rest of the rock loving world: no. And that is why I called your view skewed.

And don't go giving me the 'Britney Spears' defence either. Slash has critical acclaim as well as commercial credibility, Spears lacks the former.