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Post by Amadeus on Dec 16, 2014 23:30:50 GMT
There's something about a great chord progression that can lift you to another place, but how about those songs that do the same thing with just ONE chord?
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Post by Amadeus on Dec 17, 2014 11:42:53 GMT
Ok then. Another one perhaps?
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Post by Amadeus on Dec 17, 2014 11:48:56 GMT
Maybe one more?
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Post by Amadeus on Dec 17, 2014 11:57:46 GMT
And by far the best version of 'Bullet...' - Dublin '93
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Post by Mr Kite on Dec 17, 2014 20:01:29 GMT
I saw U2 on that Tour (Round Hay Park Leeds ). Bloody brilliant Erm ...
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Post by Amadeus on Dec 17, 2014 23:23:50 GMT
I arrived in Belfast the morning after the Dublin show and the people I stayed with THEN told me if I had arrived a day earlier, I could've gone to the show WITH them! Anyhow, someone stayed home and taped the simulcast on 1 FM so I have that to cherish. By far the most incendiary version of 'Bullet...'.
They must have agreed too seeing that they used it as a 'Stay (Faraway, So Close)' B-side.
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henryj
For A Number Of Things
Posts: 792
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Post by henryj on Jun 29, 2015 0:22:19 GMT
The first song I ever noticed with just one chord was "The Beat Goes On" by Sonny and Cher.
A couple of years later I was at the a rock festival in a south Louisiana car-race track. Canned Heat played the festival. They played the whole gig on one chord. They called it boogying.
Which reminds me of a song I first heard played by John Fred and the Playboys called "Boogie Children," from about 1963. I Louisiana they were not one hit wonders, just had one national hit. Haven't heard "Boogie Children" in a long time, but I don't remember any chord changes.
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Post by Bobber on Jun 29, 2015 15:10:50 GMT
Shake your body - Jacksons is only 1 chord.
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