Note the sound/harmony of the strings, horns, and woodwinds....
[youtube]Lum4usLXMO4[/youtube]
Note the sound/harmony of the strings, horns, and woodwinds....
[youtube]Lum4usLXMO4[/youtube]
I agree. I love it when good rock bands use huge (real) orchestras. It makes for a rich and deep and complete sound. Good stuff.
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Panther, you come up with some good videos.
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If there is one sound that makes the hair on the back of my neck stand on end it's the sound of an orchestra tuning up just before a performance.
There is a real palpable sense of excitement, a feeling that something spectacular is about to occur.
It is something of a quiet cacophony, with moments of absolute lucidity when you catch the odd strain or melody of something you recognise amidst the commotion.
Wonderful.
Swa se ðeodkyning þeawum lyfde
i like when orchestras play classical music. i hate it when rock bands use them in an effort to appear more artsy.
case in point, mettalica. as for elton john, he's not on my radar
Kansas was just here a couple of weeks back and played with the Green Bay Symphony.
Too bad I was out of town. Heard it was great!
Meatloaf with the Melbourne Symphony is awesome. I have the DVD but I could only find this audio only vid on youtube
[YOUTUBE]ZfMubD4kJTk[/YOUTUBE]
Brian
You can't take the sky from me...
Never quite got the grip of the concept of "famous dude/gal/band forms up with big orchestra from xyz and plays their music the classic way".
It's either entirely classical or entirely modern for me. But something in between? No, thanks.
Wow! A rather surprising personal decision to limit the scope of one's musical sources!
In truth, this combination is entirely natural and has been a hallmark of rock and roll since the start. Buddy Holly was doing this -- putting full orchestration together with his music on stage. It was awesome!
The thing I don't often see is bands putting a large group of guitars together as happens routinely with violins. Take 20 acoustic guitars playing together. That would be a rich and powerful as any symphony string section working together!
Ken
in your mind (mine as well) it sounds like a great idea. but in reality, it's VERY difficult to pull off. the "sound" becomes too "fat" and it just doesn't work out most of the time. i briefly experimented with this idea many years ago with a project called "the mountain band". we had 5 guitarists, 2 bass players, 2 drummers, and 5 singers. it was a nightmare for the sound guy, let alone everyone else. it has been done effectively but it's really tough to pull off.
speaking of strings, one of the reasons i love the twelve girl band so much is because they play a blend of folk, modern, and classical, and chinese, but with traditional chinese instruments that go back more than a thousand years. so it's classical, but yet it's not. it's rock, (some of it) but it's not. it's "ethnic", but in more than one way. that, and the skill involved is monumental. i would love to try this piece with all guitars:
[YOUTUBE]qEuMcHh1KhQ&[/YOUTUBE]
Sometimes orchestra can be integrated successfully, as a rule I don;t care for the mix. Deep Purple's actual first album with Glover and Gillain was the one they did with the London crew.It rocked. The Moodys and Yes are favorites of mine, Led Zeppelin had a string and brass set for the song Kashmir, it really worked. The Beatles did some great work too with orchestras. Black sabbath integrated Tibetan monks into Sabotage in 1975 and was great. In 1966 The Outsiders had a spiffy little brass section in their one hit, Time Won't Let Me.
The king of them all was Mason Williams and Classical Gas from 1968.
There is next to no, what was once called, progressive rock left, but I think orchestras worked with the right groups, I just would not base a band on it.
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He was sucked into a jet engine...
Different strokes for different folks. Ya post your video, some folks like it and some don't. I'm no musician but I'll betcha if Charlie Daniels got together with that 12 Girl Band they could come up with a very unique version of "The Devil Went Down to Georgia". :d
thanks P
very powerful
beats synthesizers any day
speaking of the moody blues
they used to use a melotron
basically a keyboard with tapes of a particular instrument
nothing beats a human musician
as far as a bunch of guitars goes
here in shreveport lives a guy called James Burton
some of you may know who he is
last year he went for the record of i believe 2000 guitars
playing at the same time
he came up short but a fine musican
and a great guy to help others
H
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I remember when Emerson, Lake, & Palmer came to the forefront in the 70's using a lot of synth in their music. Let's see, 70's was how many decades back...Ack, I can't be that old!
"Hornets by mandate, Tomcats by choice!"
AC/DC eh?
Try this ...
[YOUTUBE]RVMuhUBvpbk[/YOUTUBE]
"Trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty!" John Adams 1772
Snuffy / Ted
And Ed, the video you posted was awesome!
Ken
well, you'd need an electric with a good slide player to do the violin-ish parts
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