Scissor Sisters "Magic Hour" Reviewed
Scissor Sisters have incorporated diverse and innovative styles in their music, but tend to sway towards pop rock, glam rock, nu-disco, and electroclash.
Scissor Sisters have incorporated diverse and innovative styles in their music, but tend to sway towards pop rock, glam rock, nu-disco, and electroclash.
His catalog of music both live and studio is staggering. Some of it sounds soft today but the music must viewed of its time because in its time it was revolutionary so much so that now it has been imitated ad infinitum.
Because some of the greatest music around you will never hear because of the market place, distribution or one’s own arrogance, narcissism, and or stupidity. It a world were most people are working so hard to out cool everyone else they miss the coolest things.
He plays old tunes with respect but he draws more from the original. In his hands the old becomes new again. Suddenly a song you heard a few times and have forgotten comes back to you as new and more amazing than the last time you heard
Slash is a limited rock guitarist with that said he is a ROCK guitar God for few have his skill at writing the perfect hook and groove. Myles Kennedy’s voice wails as much as Slash rips each song tearing your rock soul and ears to shreds.
“Driving Toward Daylight” is a return to his Blues Rock/Blues roots and it rocks. His song writing either sucks and he steals liberally from the great signature blues hooks of the past, but doesn’t everyone.
he starts softly making his guitar sound like a sarod slowly gliding seamlessly in to Duane Allman’s classic “Martha” and then it slips sweetly into sotto voce of his wife Susan Tedeschi
am a Catholic but non-practicing. I found the lashing of Jesus Christ disturbing. Again, I am a bad Catholic but I don’t see the crucifixion or torture of Jesus Christ as musical theatre. I felt the 39 lashes to a great rock hook is surreal. Not sure how I was supposed to react to it? And the finale with Christ on the glitzy cross almost brought the audience to its feet. It was a bit too surreal for me.