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One can realize what a pioneer Hendrix was. Per replies he can’t say so, but he liked Jimi’s hit singles, e.g.
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Sven asks Per why he put this song so high on his list and if he was hooked on Jimi Hendrix. When in December 1966 Hendrix was in the studio in London with Chas Chandler and Chas heard the riff, he said it would be the next single. It was released as a single in spring of 1967. The intro of this song is so cool, one couldn’t hear anything like that before. The guys agree that the ’60s fuzzbox sounds were more authentic than the ’80s fuzzy sounds. Next on the list is Purple Haze from Jimi Hendrix. Sven mentions Moonage Daydream came out already before Ziggy Stardust, Bowie recorded it with his band Arnold Corns. On all the albums they worked together one can recognize it’s Mick Ronson playing the guitar. There is a fantastic distorted tone in his guitar. Per says here it’s more about Mick Ronson than David Bowie why he picked this song. 9 on the list is David Bowie’s Moonage Daydream from the Ziggy Stardust album (1972). The Spencer Davis Group – Keep On Running (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction – The Rolling Stonesġ. Nowadays it’s much easier to distort the sound.ħ. One was looking for some unique sound to make the soundscape more interesting. G says the fuzzy sound is only one of the many colors on the ’60s sound palette.
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Sven plays a bit of it and Per finds it wonderful. Soxx and the technician pressed the wrong button, so it became a different distorted sound. Sven mentions that in 1962 Phil Spector recorded the song Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah with Bob B. There is a fuzz effect in it which Per finds fantastic. Sven plays a short part of Marty Robbins’ song, Don’t Worry from 1961. Sven adds it sometimes sounds like a killer bee, bzzzz and sometimes it’s crunchier when there is an amplifier. He finds it interesting why one likes fuzzboxes and distorted sounds. He says the first albums he bought when he was a little boy, contained a lot of distorted guitar sounds. Per says he chose this topic, because he has always been thinking about why we like certain sounds in music and why we don’t like others. It’s a device which distorts the sound of an electric guitar or other electric instrument. First of all, the guys explain what fuzzbox is. George passed away in the home of longtime friend Gavin De Becker, with his wife Olivia, and son Dhani by his side.Last Saturday Per Gessle and Sven Lindström discussed fuzzbox songs in Gessles nio i topp on Swedish Radio. At the end, after both Paul and Ringo had left, (George) was fine and calm. "There were tears, but George remained very much the man of dignity. There were lots of laughs and lots of fun. It was a spirited affair, not a sombre one. George's doctor, Doctor Lederman, has also spoken about the final meeting with the band members: "There were some tears - but there was more laughter than anything else. "And I said: 'Well, you know, I've got to go, I've got to go to Boston.' It's the last words I heard him say, actually - and he said: 'Do you want me to come with you?'" "And while he was being ill and I'd come to see him, I was going to Boston, because my daughter had a brain tumour. Ringo Starr had gone to see George once more after this meeting and has since spoken about it: "The last weeks of George's life, he was in Switzerland, and I went to see him, and he was very ill, you know, he could only lay down.