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Friday, June 20, 2008

How Smart Is Your Right Foot..Try It ( I did..)
Thanks to Lina, for making my day..


Zella'sOwn.net

Yup this is very silly but fun to try!



How Smart Is Your Right Foot?

Just try this. It is from an orthopedic surgeon....... This will boggle your mind and you will keep trying over and over again to see if you can outsmart your right foot, but, you can't. It's preprogrammed in your brain!

1. WITHOUT anyone watching you (they will think you are GOOFY) and while sitting where you are at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off the floor and make Clockwise Circles.

2. Now......while doing this, draw the number '6' in the air with your Right Hand. Your foot will change direction.

I told you so!!! And there's nothing you can do about it!
You and I both know how stupid it is, but before the day is done,
you are going to try it again, if you've not already done so.

PS: Try the things above while sticking your tongue in and out. If you can do it, you guys are ALIEN - ly special!!


ORDINARY ANGELS....
FRENTE!

You get the world for your birthday baby
Open your eyes and say yes, no, maybe
The box ticks on, the core is a bomb
The world is silent
You listen like a lover to it

Sometimes a mirrors a miracle
Sometimes its nothing at all
In this reflection even angels fall
You could fly anytime

Ba-da-da-daa etc.

(even though you own your own comet)

Ordinary people
Its okay
You dont have to wear those wings
Theyre stupid things

I know some dizzy, easy heights
Dont stop your life at the lights
Dont be smart, be a beginner
Dont be wrong, even when its right

Ordinary people
Its okay
Were not watching anyway
Its okay

Ba-da-da-daa etc.


~ { 9:58 PM }
vintage.. classical beauty..;


Monday, June 16, 2008

100 Greatest Guitar Songs Of All Time (Part 1)

T
his is what makes a great rock & roll guitar sound: an irresistible riff; a solo or jam that takes you higher every time you hear it; the final power chord that pins you to the wall and makes you hit "play" again and again.

Every song here has those thrills. But these are rock's greatest guitar moments because of what's inside the notes: hunger, fury, despair and joy, often all at once. You hear the blues, gospel and rockabilly that came before, transformed by the need to say something new and loud, right away. Rock & roll has been the sound of independence for half a century. The guitar is still its essential, liberating voice. These are the 100 reasons why.




ZellAzalA

1
"Johnny B. Goode"
Chuck Berry (1958)


"If you want to play rock & roll," Joe Perry told Rolling Stone in 2004, "you have to start here." Recorded 50 years ago, on January 6th, 1958, at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was the first great record about the joys and rewards of playing rock & roll guitar. It also has the single greatest rock & roll intro: a thrilling blast of high twang driven by Berry's spearing notes, followed by a rhythm part that translates a boogie-woogie piano riff for the guitar. "He could play the guitar just like a-ringing a bell," Berry sings in the first verse — a perfect description of his sound and the reverberations still running through every style of rock guitar, from the Beatles and the Stones on down. "It was beautiful, effortless, and his timing was perfection," Keith Richards has said of Berry's playing. "He is rhythm man supreme." Berry wrote often about rock & roll and why it's good for you — "Roll Over Beethoven" in 1956, "Rock and Roll Music" in '57 — but never better than in "Johnny B. Goode," a true story about how playing music on a guitar can change your life forever.

"If you want to play rock & roll," Joe Perry told
Rolling Stone in 2004, "you have to start here." Recorded 50 years ago, on January 6th, 1958, at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was the first great record about the joys and rewards of playing rock & roll guitar. It also has the single greatest rock & roll intro: a thrilling blast of high twang driven by Berry's spearing notes, followed by a rhythm part that translates a boogie-woogie piano riff for the guitar. "He could play the guitar just like a-ringing a bell," Berry sings in the first verse — a perfect description of his sound and the reverberations still running through every style of rock guitar, from the Beatles and the Stones on down. "It was beautiful, effortless, and his timing was perfection," Keith Richards has said of Berry's playing. "He is rhythm man supreme." Berry wrote often about rock & roll and why it's good for you — "Roll Over Beethoven" in 1956, "Rock and Roll Music" in '57 — but never better than in "Johnny B. Goode," a true story about how playing music on a guitar can change your life forever.

2 "Purple Haze"
The Jimi Hendrix Experience
(1967)




The riff is pure blues — the same kind of guitar figure Hendrix played nightly back on the R&B-club grind, as a sideman for Little Richard and the Isley Brothers. But in "Purple Haze," Hendrix's second British single and the first track on the U.S. version of his debut album, he declared himself a free man — "'Scuse me while I kiss the sky" — and unveiled a new guitar language charged with spiritual hunger and the poetry possible in electricity and studio technology. "Guitar — you can play it or transcend it," said Neil Young when he inducted Hendrix into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. "Jimi showed me that. I heard it, felt it and wanted to do it." Hendrix wrote "Purple Haze" backstage at a London nightclub in December 1966 and recorded basic tracks with his band, the Experience, two weeks later. But the galactic travel came in overdubs recorded on February 3rd, 1967: Hendrix's solos, swimming in echo and sparkling with harmonics, were put through an octave-boosting effect and played back at twice the speed. In less than three minutes, Hendrix opened a new age of expression on his instrument.


3 "Crossroads"
Cream
(1968)



Eric Clapton once described Cream's music as "blues ancient and modern." This track is what he meant. He was not yet 23 when he played this high-velocity version of the Robert Johnson song at San Francisco's Winterland on March 10th, 1968. Everything in Clapton's solos is grounded in the blues vocabulary but pointed to the future. "When Clapton soloed, he wrote wonderful symphonies from classic blues licks in that fantastic tone," Little Steven Van Zandt told
Rolling Stone in 2004. "You could sing his solos like songs in themselves."



4 "You Really Got Me" (SIRIH DAN GAMBIR..huhuhu..)
The Kinks
(1964)

It was, at first, "a jazz-type tune," said Kinks singer Ray Davies, and the two-chord figure driving it was a sax line. "That's what I liked at the time." Then his brother Dave played it on guitar through an amp speaker he had poked with needles and shredded with a razor blade. ("It was a Gillette single-sided blade," said Dave.) Dave's solo — a tangle of zigzags and viciously bent notes — heralded the birth of Sixties garage and punk-rock guitar in one fell swoop. "I said I'd never write another song like it," said Ray. "And I haven't."


5 "Brown Sugar"
The Rolling Stones
(1971)


"Satisfaction" may be the Rolling Stones' most recognizable riff, but this Sticky Fingers hit — based on a gutbucket guitar part devised by Mick Jagger — is the band's raunchy guitar pinnacle. Keith Richards' secret weapon: He's playing a guitar that's missing its lowest string.

6 "Eruption"
Van Halen
(1978)

Eddie Van Halen's 102-second mission statement was a piece he invented onstage: a solo showcase for his mastery of tone and technique, notably the rush of notes he produced with his fretboard tapping. An army of teens would try to duplicate it, emerging years later in every metal band of the Eighties.

7 "While My Guitar Gently
Weeps"

The Beatles
(1968)

This is a tale of two guitar giants at an empathic peak: George Harrison, who wrote this song on acoustic guitar in India, and Eric Clapton, who amplifies Harrison's vocal dismay with a waterfall of blues fills. It's the finest examaple of his jagged, late-Sixties tone.


8 "Stairway to Heaven"
Led Zeppelin
(1971)

"Stairway," Jimmy Page told
RS in 1975, "crystallized the essence of the band." It's a masterpiece of dramatic ascension: Page's acoustic picking rising into chiming chords, which introduce the solo, a brilliant succession of phrases that steadily move toward rock & roll ecstasy.


9 "Statesboro Blues"
The Allman Brothers Band
(1971)



In 1968, Gregg Allman went to visit his older brother, Duane, on his 22nd birthday. Duane was sick in bed, so Gregg brought along a bottle of Coricidin pills for his fever and the debut album by guitarist Taj Mahal as a gift. "About two hours after I left, my phone rang," Gregg remembers. " 'Baby brother, baby brother, get over here now!' " When Gregg got there, Duane had poured the pills out of the bottle, washed off the label and was using it as a slide to play "Statesboro Blues," the old Blind Willie McTell song that Taj Mahal covered. Duane had never played slide before, says Gregg, but "he just picked it up and started burnin'. He was a natural."

The song quickly became a part of the Allman Brothers Band's repertoire, and Duane's slide guitar became crucial to their sound. "Statesboro Blues" was the opening track on their legendary 1971 live double album, At Fillmore East, and ever since, the moaning and squealing opening licks have given fans chills at live shows. "It wasn't something that Duane would play the same way every night," says current Allmans guitarist Warren Haynes, one of many guitarists who have filled Duane's shoes since he died in late 1971. "But in all of our heads, that's the way it goes."

There's one thing the current band doesn't try to replicate from the Fillmore East performance: At the end of Duane's sublime "Statesboro" solo, the guitarist hits an off-key note that Gregg calls the "note from hell." "He left it in because he knew I hated it," says Gregg, claiming that the mistake only adds to the song's legend. "It was live. It was something that happened."

10 "Smells Like Teen Spirit"
Nirvana
(1991)



Most of "Teen Spirit" came easy — Nirvana nailed it in three takes — but that crucial Kurt Cobain guitar intro required an overdub ("That pissed him off," said producer Butch Vig). It was worth the effort: That riff, along with the band's loud-quiet-loud dynamics, defined Nineties rock.

11 "Whole Lotta Love"
Led Zeppelin
(1969)


This thundering rewrite of Muddy Waters' "You Need Love" showcased three of Jimmy Page's specialties: primal, monomaniacal riffs; innovative production; and solos with the savage mastery he'd developed as a top-flight session musician in the pre-Zep years.

12 "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)"
The Jimi Hendrix Experience
(1968)

This is Hendrix's magnum opus: one magisterial explosion after another, storming through a catalog of molten blues. Hendrix improvised the wah-wah riff while a TV crew filmed his band. "We weren't thinking of what we were playing," he said.

13 "Layla"
(1970)

"I didn't do it — it was Duane," Eric Clapton said, laughing, in 1988. Guest guitarist Duane Allman created one of rock's most exciting and memorable licks, pinching the vocal line from Albert King's "As the Years Go Passing By" and speeding it up.

14 "Born to Run"
Bruce Springsteen
(1975)

All the sweeping romance of Springsteen's early work is summed up in his twanging main guitar riff (inspired by Duane Eddy). And that's just the most prominent of the song's layers of Fender work, from the wah-wah in the bridge to the rumbling solo.

15 "My Generation"
The Who
(1965)

Before smashing guitars was a cliché, it was a shock, and the Who's signature song was one shock after another, from Pete Townshend's pile-driving two-chord riff to his sudden disappearance while bassist John Entwistle solos to the glitchy feedback that ends the original recording.

16 "Cowgirl in the Sand"
Neil Young with Crazy Horse
(1969)

Young's extended solos on this 10-minute track are an arrhythmic, buzzing mess, and that's why they sound fantastic. Extra points to rhythm guitarist Danny Whitten, who creates a spectrum of textures and rhythms.

17 "Black Sabbath"
Black Sabbath
(1970)

Tony Iommi invented heavy-metal guitar out of necessity: He'd lost two fingertips on his fretting hand, and he used thimbles and dropped tunings to make playing easier. His crawling, dissonant riff (also called "the devil's chord") became the basis of thousands of metal songs.

18 "Blitzkrieg Bop"
Ramones
(1976)

There's no guitar solo, because guitarist Johnny Ramone hated solos. But his down-stroke barré chords were fat with Dick Dale's twang and Bo Diddley's strumming. Joey Ramone once said that in Johnny's guitar, he heard organ, piano and other instruments that weren't really there.

19 "Purple Rain"
Prince and the Revolution
(1984)



Prince hadn't shown much inclination toward gospel before this movie theme, but if this solo isn't a prayer, nothing is. Partly recorded live, the song ascends for eight minutes, and Prince's guitar is an extension of his voice; at 2007's Super Bowl, it made the actual rain seem miraculous.

20 "People Get Ready"
The Impressions
(1965)

Curtis Mayfield's deepest civil rights anthem is powered by his eloquent open-tuned guitar-playing: The backbeat echoed the new sounds coming out of Jamaica, and the subtle, fluid solo spirals are as expressive as his singing. Bob Marley later synthesized it with "One Love."

Article : http://www.rollingstone.com/

To Be Continued...


~ { 11:11 PM }
vintage.. classical beauty..;


Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Jangan Lepaskan...

Get your own playlist at snapdrive.net!



Don't Let Go
by En Vogue

What's it gonna be

Cuz i can't pretend

Don't you wanna be more than friends

Hold me tight and don't let go

Don't let go

Have the right to loose control

Don't let go
PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket


Verse 1:

I often tell myself

That we could be more than just friends

I know you think that if we move to soon

It would all end

I live in misery when you're not around

And i won't be satisfied 'till we're taking those vows




There'll be some lovemaking, heartbreaking, soul shaking
Oh, lovemaking, heartbreaking, soul shaking




What's it gonna be

Cuz i can't pretend

Don't you wanna be more than friends

Hold me tight and don't let go

Don't let go

Have the right to loose control

Don't let go




Verse 2:


I often fantasize

The stars above are watching you

They know my heart and speak to yours

Like only lovers do

If i could wear your clothes

I'd pretend i was you and lose control




There'll be some lovemaking, heartbreaking, soul shaking

Oh lovemaking, heartbreaking, soul shaking, oh yeah



What's it gonna be

Cuz i can't pretend

Don't you wanna be more than friends

Hold me tight and don't let go

Don't let go

Have the right to loose control

Don't let go





Bridge:

Running in and out my life has got me so confused

You gotta make the sacrifice

Somebody's got to choose

We can make it if we try for the sake of you and i

Together we can make it right




(chorus until fade)












~ { 11:47 PM }
vintage.. classical beauty..;


Tuesday, June 10, 2008

to all the abusive fathers..

ZELLAZALEA



It's funny that way, you can get used

To the tears and the pain

What a child will believe
You never loved me
You can't hurt me now
I got away from you, I never thought I would
You can't make me cry, you once had the power
I never felt so good about myself

Seems like yesterday
I lay down next to your boots and I prayed
For your anger to end
Oh Father I have sinned

You can't hurt me now
I got away from you, I never thought I would
You can't make me cry, you once had the power
I never felt so good about myself

Oh Father you never wanted to live that way
You never wanted to hurt me
Why am I running away

Oh Father you never wanted to live that way
You never wanted to hurt me
Why am I running away

Maybe someday
When I look back I'll be able to say

You didn't mean to be cruel
Somebody hurt you too



Its gonna be father's day isn't it?
Just to all the fathers out there who physically or emotionally abused their kids..., ITS YOUR DAY..


~ { 10:53 PM }
vintage.. classical beauty..;