Archive for the ‘Hard Rock’ Category

Considered to be both one of Kravitz’s greatest hits and a highlight of 90’s music overall, ‘Are You Gonna Go My Way’ achieved chart success around the world. The opening riff is followed by a hypnotic groove and some catchy stop-start riffing. Kravitz’s guitar playing is accompanied by Craig Ross who plays a higher-register version of the riff.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

With its two world class riffs, one of which is played on bass, ‘All Right Now’ has been drawing generations onto the dance floor for decades. The hit was reportedly written by Andy Fraser and Paul Rogers whilst they were hanging out in Durham University Student Union. Since its release, ‘All Right Now’ has been covered by a host of other musicians, and its legacy lives on.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

With Eagle fever at its height in 1970s America, The Eagles released the adrenaline-pumping ‘Life in the Fast Lane’. Fast, dynamic and exciting, the song (and the nifty riff by guitarist extraordinaire Joe Walsh that starts it) was a far cry from the nasal strumming which country listeners had come to expect.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

The opening tones of ‘All Day and All of the Night’ are instantly stirring. Dave Davies’ raw, overdriven guitar sound – the result of a deliberately mutilated speaker cone in his amplifier – was in place for the fantastic riff that opens and sustains the song, and over which his brother Ray’s vocal melody lies in unison.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

Blue Öyster Cult guitarist Donald ‘Buck Dharma’ Roeser’s drone riff in A minor, devolving into distinct sections, is as much part of the American landscape as the Hollywood sign or the four presdients on the face of Mount Rushmore.  ‘(Don’t Fear) The Reaper’ remains one of those great American rock tracks of the seventies – with a lengthy, rousing guitar solo, Roeser and members address the eternal themes of love and death.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

Ted Nugent introduces ‘Strangehold’ with a memorable riff, that is still known to rock fans today.  Nugent, a contradiction of sorts, was more likely to have been found enjoying outdoor pursuits during the seventies, than drinking and taking drugs (the perceived norm for this decade of music stars).  It is interesting that the song’s extended mid-section, in which Nugent solos, would be the perfect entertainment for hippies, in diametric opposition to its composer’s intentions.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

The single ‘Pinball Wizard’ rocketed onto the scene in 1969 and featured as part of The Who’s novel rock opera album Tommy. Beginning with that subtle, echoed buildup, the stabbing guitars and then the superb, ethereal chord sequence that leads into the vocal, it is one of the Sixties’ defining compositions.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

The irresistible opening riff to ‘Start Me Up’ sets up a track which can be heralded as a thumping rock anthem. Brash and unapologetic, the song made it clear that the 1980s would be the decade in which the Stones found their maximum audience – as indeed history proved!

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

By the 1980s Van Halen were recording hit after hit! The riff that opens ‘Panama’ is a delayed figure of sheer beauty, as is the entire midsection, over which Eddie Van Halen solos with his usual inventive brilliance and melodic awareness. A song about a car, Eddie’s Lamborghini can even be heard revving its engine halfway through – pure genius!

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.

In the whole of 1970s rock music, few songs have as much weight or as much continued relevance as ‘Kashmir’. The song is over eight minutes long and everything about it screams ‘epic’. Robert Plant called it ‘the pride of Led Zeppelin’ and there is something about the ambition of ‘Kashmir’ that makes it unique.

Buy this song at iTunes or Amazon. The official band site is here.