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-   -   Black Sabbath "War Pigs" (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1277975)

mikeet 08-31-2017 10:06 PM

Black Sabbath "War Pigs"
 
https://youtu.be/OFHUhbOyT94

Relic 08-31-2017 10:25 PM


mikeet 08-31-2017 10:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Relic (Post 21981019)

:thumbsup

adultchatpay 08-31-2017 11:46 PM

Never gets old!

MFCT 09-01-2017 02:24 AM

Love Sabbath. Always have, always will.

One of the weirdest vids I've seen was a time when a room full of teenyboppers on Top of the Pops were dancing to Paranoid. Headbanging and devil-horn rock-on hand signs hadn't been invented yet. So dancing to it as though it were a Tom Jones song was the only way they knew how to react to it. Needless to say, Sabbath couldn't not have been further from what they'd been accustomed to up to that point.

They look SO out of place on stage in that setting. Ozzy was scared shitless about being on TV. And he thought the dancing kids were a bunch of idiots, because it wasn't music meant to be danced to.

Its nice to see Tony smiling and enjoying himself. Top of the Pops was a big milestone for any band, and I'm sure he was tickled all to hell that the band had made it to that level.



https://youtu.be/Uq42HUUJFzU

Another vid, I thought I'd seen it all. But this new early Sabbath footage came out of nowhere. And I was just like, wow, time travel.

I guess this performance had been kept in the can because at the very end of this video, apparently one of Tony's prosthetics popped off a finger, suddenly he could no longer play, leaving him to flub the final guitar solo. Amazing footage, regardless.



https://youtu.be/v6l0Co3EE6k

Rock on, Sabbath, rock on.

druid66 09-01-2017 04:03 AM

300 is epic, drums gives a chill, starts in 1:15
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3Rzy7YqUVU
and here full version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YbvTiMMlkNg

lock 09-01-2017 04:08 AM

I love Faith no mores cover. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4oZXfrf18Y

oppoten 09-01-2017 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MFCT (Post 21981167)
Love Sabbath. Always have, always will.

One of the weirdest vids I've seen was a time when a room full of teenyboppers on Top of the Pops were dancing to Paranoid. Headbanging and devil-horn rock-on hand signs hadn't been invented yet. So dancing to it as though it were a Tom Jones song was the only way they knew how to react to it. Needless to say, Sabbath couldn't not have been further from what they'd been accustomed to up to that point.

They look SO out of place on stage in that setting. Ozzy was scared shitless about being on TV. And he thought the dancing kids were a bunch of idiots, because it wasn't music meant to be danced to.

Its nice to see Tony smiling and enjoying himself. Top of the Pops was a big milestone for any band, and I'm sure he was tickled all to hell that the band had made it to that level.



rayadp05 09-01-2017 06:14 PM


oppoten 09-01-2017 06:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lock (Post 21981247)
I love Faith no mores cover. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4oZXfrf18Y

yep, same here.

Great album, sorry if off-topic :thumbsup




bronco67 09-01-2017 07:55 PM

The sub genre of metal I listen to is filled with bands who have definitely listened to some Sabbath from time to time.










may as well add these guys...


OneHungLo 09-01-2017 08:09 PM


baddog 09-01-2017 08:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mchtye (Post 21980999)

I saw them perform it live, Ash Wednesday 1970.

They were the lead act for Grand Funk Railroad and they blew them out of the water. It could have been the Orange Sunshine though.

Spunky 09-01-2017 08:50 PM

Yea that brings back good memories with Warpigs,sweetleaf in the background way back when.

baddog 09-01-2017 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by baddog (Post 21982347)
I saw them perform it live, Ash Wednesday 1970.

They were the lead act for Grand Funk Railroad and they blew them out of the water. It could have been the Orange Sunshine though.

That was when they released the Paranoid album.

oppoten 09-01-2017 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bronco67 (Post 21982329)
The sub genre of metal I listen to is filled with bands who have definitely listened to some Sabbath from time to time.


great band :thumbsup


oppoten 09-01-2017 09:02 PM

Trouble sounded more Sabbath-y earlier in their career, but this song is awesome


MFCT 09-02-2017 03:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by oppoten (Post 21982275)

Hell yeah! Motorhead can do no wrong. And I see why you posted the vid. The band and crowd are very mis-matched. Love it, thanks for the post.

mikeet 09-02-2017 09:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by baddog (Post 21982357)
That was when they released the Paranoid album.

Bet it was a great concert.. one of your all time favs for sure :)

mikeet 09-02-2017 11:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rayadp05 (Post 21982279)

omfgporn this is def a fav

Dead 09-03-2017 02:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by baddog (Post 21982347)
I saw them perform it live, Ash Wednesday 1970.

They were the lead act for Grand Funk Railroad and they blew them out of the water. It could have been the Orange Sunshine though.

All kinds of badass in this post! :thumbsup

Dreamteam 09-04-2017 03:11 AM

Haa the seventies :)

rayadp05 09-04-2017 11:32 AM


MFCT 09-16-2017 05:41 AM

Power chord music, and why Led Zeppelin hated to be compared to Black Sabbath.

If I may give y'all a bit of a history lesson. Nowadays, we see power chords as just a heavier, alternative way of making music. A fairly typical and expected standard playing style of heavy metal. But we have no idea how that style of playing was viewed by other musicians back in the day, say the mid-60s to early 70s.

A power chord is where a guitarist makes only one chord. And to change the note of the chord, he simply moves the same chord up and down the neck of the guitar as needed, to play along with a given song. Power chords have never been anything new, and all guitarists use them in their repertoire. But to play an entire song with just a power chord, that was seen as an incorrect, very cheap, cop-out way to make music.

But to many less-skilled guitarists, using power chords to play songs was just about all they were capable of doing. They didn't really care how this playing style was regarded, they just wanted to rock. Had they been guitar-virtuosos, like the much sought-after 60s session musician Jimmy Page, they would have certainly played their songs properly using more conventional chords. For songs to be played using mainly power chords, it was something frowned upon and eyeroll-inducing to more skilled guitarists. And what's more, the impact of power chord music was too blunt and in-your-face. It wasn't the style that bands wanted to portray in the mid-60s. Nobody wanted to make music like that. And, it was presumed, certainly nobody wanted to pay money to hear music like that.

However, many musicians had the fire in them and just wanted to rock. They wanted to rock right now, without needing to practice for years first, hoping to someday develop virtuoso guitar skills. All this is the essence and basis of what would later be called punk rock.

Dave Davies of the Kinks was one such less-than-virtuoso guitarist. He just wanted to rock, and by golly he did. The Kinks were the first power chord music band to make it big.

Again, had Dave been more skilled at playing, he would have played these songs using more standard chords. But it wouldn't have worked. These songs wouldn't have had the impact that they did, they wouldn't have rocked like they did, and they wouldn't have stood out against bands like the Beatles and the Stones like they did. Without power chords, the Kinks and their music would have probably been mostly forgotten songs by a nondescript band that had hardly made any impact at all.



https://youtu.be/F4DV-5d6a5g



https://youtu.be/Eq_KQYVPadQ

Soon after, along comes the Who. Being impressed and influenced by what the Kinks were doing, they went that route also, doing their own thing with it. They turned up the power of power chords by turning up the volume. Of course, having an insane lightning-fast drummer certainly helped. Again, Pete Townshend, a bit more accomplished on the guitar but never a virtuoso. He just wanted to rock. And rock he did.



https://youtu.be/TFWxqKYvy-c

Eventually, along comes Sabbath. They took power chord music to a level never even imagined before. Yet, it wasn't due to lack of skills by guitarist Tony Iommi. In fact, he was quite the virtuoso. But what he was able to do musically had been greatly hindered by the loss of the tips of two of his fretting fingers. This led to power chords being more of a necessity to his guitar playing than anything else, due to his condition. Combined with crushing volume, detuned strings (again, a necessity), and usually slow-tempo music, Sabbath's power chord music was in a class by itself. Paul McCartney saw Sabbath's music as being really "off-the-wall," even compared to the Beatles.

And from that point onwards, power chord music became a "thing" unto itself. Blue Oyster Cult was probably the first band to pick up on this "thing," and to try to pattern themselves after Sabbath, notably their song "Cities on Flame with Rock and Roll." But for Buck Dharma, a guitar virtuoso in his own right, strictly power chord-driven music was simply too limiting. BOC branched out into their own style.

Then there were songs like Free "All Right Now", Rush "Working Man", and even Pink Floyd dabbled with power chord music with "The Nile Song." Need i say that David Gilmore is a guitar virtuoso?

So, back to Led Zeppelin. Jimmy Page was a true guitar virtuoso. And as such, felt ashamed that his music would be compared to power chord music like Black Sabbath. Zeppelin liked to rock, and they liked to rock kinda hard. They did dabble with power chord music in some songs, such as "No Quarter". But they dabbled in lots of different styles and approaches to music. And that's the way they wanted to be seen. A band not tied down or limited to any certain style or approach. A band whose songs can stand on their own and soar, no matter which style the band chose to present them to us with.

Thanks for reading. :thumbsup


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