question

ugur90

New member
2 actually...i have 2 questions about M2M..

1)So which part of M2M was the 'Accident'. I heard it was Brad's riff in Bleed It Out but it didnt sound like there was much of a riff in that song

2)I read somewhere that they were using a banjo in one of the songs, I wanna know which one..in TLTGYA they use an acoustic guitar. does it refer to that?

 

L-Redshift-L

New member
^ Yup, I think it was from an interview, and they were say how they experimented with different instruments on a particular song (Cant remember which one)
 

tsinoitcelfer

New member
Bleed It Out = Accident

And the banjo was one of the instruments tentatively used in the intro of Shadow of the Day, with the reversed sample...

Although, they changed it back at the last minute.

 

ugur90

New member
so which part of BIO was the accident..doesnt sound like there's anything accidental there coz the notes are pretty structured and there's no riff
 

Cyro

New member
so which part of BIO was the accident..doesnt sound like there's anything accidental there coz the notes are pretty structured and there's no riff
According to Brad, the Guitar in Bleed It Out was conceived by accident... what he really meant by that is unknown... hahaha.

 

ugur90

New member
my theory: one night chester and brad got really drunk and wasted..they came home and were looking at each other in very weird ways..they then started holding hands..one thing led to another..and then the accident that created this song happened :p
 
my theory: one night chester and brad got really drunk and wasted..they came home and were looking at each other in very weird ways..they then started holding hands..one thing led to another..and then the accident that created this song happened :p
lol, that's pretty funny haha :lol:
 

tsinoitcelfer

New member
so which part of BIO was the accident..doesnt sound like there's anything accidental there coz the notes are pretty structured and there's no riff
not accident like 'oops' accident....

Accident as in Accidentals, in music theory, on a piano, the black keys, sharps and flats.

 
Top Bottom