Then you should come back here too once a while ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-wam-oMub8EU.html this is a real virtuoso cover of canon rock. watch how clean and effortless he plays everything, the sound produced, and how his phrases including the speedy ones all have meaning and essence.
It's been 14 years since I watched this. This was my childhood, and now I'm 28, working as a music teacher in a private school. This man really inspired a lot of young guitarists back then.
@@lanadoesathingYou are right thats a vry good one as well! But I have to say I like this one a bit more and we are now up 2 more years... Someone needs to try to do something about it hehe ;)
@@hackologue Hey man! Thanks for this version 🤘🏻 Its been 15 years since i saw It for the first time and now i feel like im going back in time to those golden years. Thanks for your music!🔥 I hope you’re doing fine. Greetings from Peru!!
When I first started really getting into guitar, I watched this video along with Funtwo's and Matt Rach's version of Canon Rock. I'm not going to lie, I felt such a euphoric high just from watching this video. I experienced a wave of motivation to really practice every day in hopes of maybe someday being able to play Canon Rock. I never thought I'd be able to play it 8 years ago. I would have given anything to play this cover as a kid. After years of practice, I finally picked up an ear for music and figured out how to play most of Hackologue's cover (it all boils down to knowing the basics such as knowing the D major ionian scale and whatnot). I encourage anyone who is having their doubts about playing guitar to keep on playing. In all honesty, playing guitar at first is a bitch, but it WILL get easier, and after you've played for a good amount of time, you won't even know how you're playing a song, you just pick up a guitar and it happens.
I was 15 years old in school when I first saw this... now I'm 32! Amazing how time flies, so many memories from the Canon Rock era, RU-vid was so pure back then honestly lol
1/2/22 still under covid in my country but darn!!! I've listen to this since 2012! 10 years or more and it doens'nt or will never get old. Peace everyone
Lovely stillistening to this now and then during the years I have had this in my playlist One of the first good covers I heard back then and still today awesome 😎
i always thought this version was the best and i remember my cousin and my friend both gave me shit for liking but listening to it like 10+ years later i still stand by this
Remember watching this in the early days of RU-vid when I was still an aspiring guitar player. Man, this blew me away! Especially that run at 2:19... was such an inspiration to crack on learning!
This video make me back to 2008. the sweetest year in my teenage, when I don't had any trouble, just playing guitar hero hacks, discovering the internet, orkut (br?), and epic videos like this. I will never forget it. :,)
First heard this back in 2009ish, still here in 2023 arguably the best canon rock cover anyone find this dude on IG or anywhere? Would love to see if he’s still shredding
I hate it when people say something like this lacks passion. Passion means different things to different people first off, and second who the hells going to really say this guy isn't passionate about what hes playing? I guarantee you he wouldn't have done this video and worked out the improv to the melody if he wasn't passionate. Shredding is the emotion of passion for many people. Passion is an emotion not a "sound" and people are quick to say something isn't passionate because it doesn't sound stereotypical as hell like eric clapton playing lead.
spawn142001 Passion can be heard and shown through music. In music, you typically show passion by fudging note length, and sometimes swinging the rhythm a bit. Good vibrato, phrasing, and fluidity also all add to feeling the heart in music. This man does all of these things, as does Eric Clapton. I think the people claiming he lacks passion just don't understand the music he is playing, or know how to pick out where he places his heart. This has nothing to do with shred, because shred is very mechanical sounding by design. This man takes that precision, and still infuses heart into it. This is the same reason why I like Paul Gilbert, but not Yngwie Malmsteen. Paul infuses his shred with overt emotion and passion, Yngwie does not. I have no doubt that Yngwie is intensely passionate, but it is far more difficult to pull that from his music alone. In any case, you kind of poke a whole in your own argument. Passion means different things to different people. If someone cannot hear the passion in this music, then they are not wrong in saying so. They are wrong that there is no passion in it, but if they don't feel it, then that is their loss. As an aside, I don't know any serious guitarist who would call Clapton "stereotypical as hell". The man is a legend, and an amazing player. If his sound is stereotypical now, it is only because it has been copied so much.