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Song: Voices Inside My Head
Band: The Police
Album: Zenyatta Mondatta
Bassist: Sting
Riff A
G*----------------*
D*----------------*
A*2202-----------0*
E*----------------*
Riff B
G*----------------*
D*----------------*
A*2202-----40----0*
E*-----------20---*
Riff C
G*----------------*
D*----------------*
A*2202---2440-----*
E*-----------20-2-*
Riff D
G*----------------*
D*----------2-4-2-*
A*2202---24-------*
E*----------------*
Riff E
G*----------------*
D*----------------*
A*2202---2440-----*
E*-----------20-2-*
Taken from The BassMasta -- http://www.bassmasta.net
|
No Picture
tommy Average |
#1 by tommy h at Feb 20, 1990 at 2:52 AM EST |
| Anyway, back to the album in question. It is dang near perfect. The main distinction from the past is in that the band has included quite a few instrumentals this time - perhaps it was due to the record being 'rushed', as they said, but then again, it seems like every early Police album was 'rushed', so I wouldn't know. These four instrumentals get bashed a lot, but personally, I consider them unique, idiosyncratic, innovative and atmospheric. At least the first three. 'Voices Inside My Head' is based upon a classic echoey Summers riff, while Sting counterpoints it with an equally impressive bassline and Mr Copeland is there as usual with all his tremendous fills. The song matches its title perfectly, particularly when Sting begins chanting the title somewhere from up above, and the band's dreadful 'CHA! CHA! CHA!' used to scare the shit out of me when I was a kid. [George Starostin] | |
|
No Picture
Erik Lead Player |
#2 by Erik StJimmy at Jul 23, 1999 at 12:34 PM EST |
| Ferlinghetti Constantly risking whenever she performs Above the heads of her audience The poet, like an acrobat, Climbs on rhyme to a high wire and balancing On light beams above a sea of faces Paces her way to the other side of day Performing entrechats and sleight of foot tricks And other high theatrics I? Forget love? Not a chance. | |