STEVE VAI, BAD HORSIE. STEVE VAI, BAD HORSIE. STEVE VAI, BAD HORSIE. STEVE VAI, BAD HORSIE. It will Kick you HARD with it's Hind Legs. That man lost his mind...!
"walking the fine line between pagan and Christian" spoken at the end of For The Love Of God is by David Coverdale. It's Steve Vai who replaces Adrian Vandenberg in the hard rock band Whitesnake on the album Slip of the tongue (1989) and who liked the voice of David. You can hear it in the original edition (studio version) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-SBRoI0sG8Jg.html as here at 5'59"
Tina is absolutely amazing! Of course, the specially designed guitar with the extended neck and the locking nut makes it possible do some amazing things. The fret board extends clear to the pickups, making it possible to add really high notes. The locking nut allows her to bend the strings much further without the fear that they could slip out of the nut groove.
Thank you very much for your response! A new news about Tina on Facebook, in the "Tina Setkic Fans Group": "Our new single 'Tidal Wave' will be released on September 6!" (Spin Twice)
As a guitar player myself, I wondered how she managed to change from a warm tone to a treble tone at 2:20, until I realised that she is operating a wah-wah pedal.
Yes, Matteo is a fantastic guitar player, but his soloing gets boring after a while because it's not melodic enough. That's why I am not a lover of jazz. The music is endlessly boring except to those who understand the structure of music. Give me a Gary Moore solo, where the improvisation is centered around a melodic line that is recognizable, but still interesting!
looking the cam every 10 sec without pause It shows that you are more interested in your video than the one you are watching, you miss things and you don't care. Great t-shirt by the way
This is kinda of how I felt too. I just wrote a comment addressing this before I seen your comment. I think that a lot of people could feel the way you do because of his looks into the camera and It was the worst part of this video. I suggested that he should place the camera closer to his monitor so he doesn't have to move his head so damn far to look at the camera. I though he was going to miss key parts of the performance because he was looking at the camera instead of the video. This is a valid critique and he needs to address it to improve his reaction technique. Rule # 1 should be... Never take your eyes off the performance.