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Hidden Agenda

Pitchshifter

Sobre:

Dificuldade: dificil | Estilo: industrial metal, rock eletrônico | Sentimento: agressiva, sombria, energética | Ocasião: show, ensaio, festival | Tags: industrial, metal, pesado, afinacao alternativa, dificil, Pitchshifter

"Hidden Agenda" é um dos singles mais marcantes da banda britânica de metal industrial Pitchshifter, lançado no ano de 2000 como parte do seu

quinto álbum de estúdio, intitulado Deviant. Abaixo, veja os principais detalhes sobre a sonoridade, o significado e o impacto desta faixa: Sonoridade e Estilo Fusão de Gêneros: A música mistura guitarras pesadas de metal industrial com batidas eletrônicas aceleradas de drum and bass e breakbeat. Energia Punk: Apresenta vocais agressivos e diretos, típicos do movimento punk e pós-punk britânico. Ritmo Intenso: Possui uma linha de baixo marcante e batidas eletrônicas ideais para trilhas sonoras de esportes radicais e jogos de videogame da época. Significado da Letra A letra de "Hidden Agenda" é minimalista, repetitiva e foca em uma crítica social e política. A frase central "Hidden agenda is bigger than you" ("A agenda oculta é maior do que você") sugere uma crítica à manipulação, ao controle corporativo e às forças políticas que operam nos bastidores da sociedade, movendo as pessoas como peças de um xadrez corporativo. Impacto e Videoclipe Clipe Oficial: A faixa ganhou um videoclipe promocional produzido pela DOSE Productions. Recepção: Embora o álbum Deviant tenha vendido menos que o seu antecessor de sucesso comercial (www.pitchshifter.com), "Hidden Agenda" permaneceu como uma das músicas favoritas dos fãs em apresentações ao vivo. Wikipedia +2 Ouça a faixa oficial de "Hidden Agenda" lançada pelo Pitchshifter: 4:16 Hidden Agenda Pitchshifter - Topic YouTube · 28 de jul. de 2018 Se você quiser, posso ajudar fornecendo mais informações: Ver a letra completa com a tradução em português Conhecer outras músicas recomendadas do Pitchshifter Entender a história do metal industrial dos anos 90 e 2000

Today, we learn how to become Jim Davies of Pitchshifter :) Tuning ====== Low -> High D G D G B E Note: This is the tuning that Jim uses on all the songs on Deviant Notes on Performance ==================== Jim uses many effects on this track so achieving his sound is very difficult. He uses all Ibanez guitars, RG550s and RG570s, but live he mainly an SCR Series Ibanez which is unmodified and exactly as it was in the factory. His live effects rig is: Digitech Whammy Pedal (ala Tom Morello) - Used all over the Deviant album, specifically the intro to 'Wafer Thin' and the middle of 'Dead Bettery' Wah-wah - Used all the time Envelope Filter - Essential for the excessive 'squelchy' sounds that Jim is known for but can be approximated with...creative...wah wah use :) (In case, like me, you had no idea what an envelope filer is it's like an auto-wah but with a much wider and more extreme range of sounds.) Flanger Six patches on a Rocktron Chameleon pre-amp controlled my a midi board Intro/Verse =========== E|------- B|------- G|------- D|-6~~~~~ G|------- D|------- (Rock wah wah back and forward to its extremes in a regular rhythm throughout the whole verse) Meanwhile this is played: E|------------------- B|------------------- G|------------------- D|---7--6------4--6-- G|------------------- D|------------------- (Wah closed) Pre-Chorus ========== E|------------------------------- B|------------------------------- G|------------------------------- D|------------------------------- G|-6-8---66-8--------6-88--66-8-- D|-4-6---44-6--------4-66--44-6-- .. .. .. (Heavy distortion, the dotted chords are palm muted.) After the chords above have been played twice, Jim plays this over the top of the rhythm guitar: E|------------------------------------------------------- B|------------------------------------------------------- G|------------------------------------------------------- D|------------------------------------------------------- G|-----------------------------------------------6-5-4~~~ D|-4-6--44-6-4-6-4-4-6-4-6---4-6--44-6-4-6-4-4-6--------- (Envelope filter on. Rock wah back and forward madly for that squelchy tone. Don't follow what I have tabbed too closely, listen to the track for the definitive way to play it.) Chorus ====== Rhythm: E|--------------------------- B|--------------------------- G|-4-6--xx--10-9----xxxxxxx-- D|-4-6--xx--10-9----xxxxxxx-- G|-6-8--xx--12-11---xxxxxxx-- D|-4-6--xx--10-9----xxxxxxx-- (Heavy distortion) Lead: E|----------------------------- B|-------------------------<9>- G|----------10-9-----------<9>- (Note: I've tabbed harmonics as they work on my setup but D|----------10-9-----------<9>- really, if you listen to the track you hear that Jim sets G|----------12-11-------------- his guitar into feedback at this point so do that however D|----------10-9--------------- you normally would.) (With wah and envelope filter) Second verse and pre-chorus =========================== Same as before Outro (the really really cool bit) :) ===================================== Rhythm plays these chords throughout the whole outro. P.S. I bet your lead player can't resist joining in at this point... ;) E|--------------------------------------------------------- B|--------------------------------------------------------- G|-----------------------------4--4-4--4-4--6-6-6-6-------- D|-6--4-6--4-6--4-6--4-6--4----4--4-4--4-4--6-6-6-6--7--7-- G|-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6----4--4-4--4-4--6-6-6-6--9--9-- D|-6--4-6--4-6--4-6--4-6--4--------------------------7--7-- (Distortion) Lead Line Right, very Jim Davies sounding bit this so use your envelope filter or work that wah wah loads in time with the music. I tend to rock up on the higher notes to make then jump out and then rock it back on the crunchy lower notes but as always, listen to the track. E|--------------------------------------------------------- B|--------------------------------------------------------- G|-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6\\--6--4-6--4-6--9-9-9-9--8--6-- D|--------------------------------------------------------- G|--------------------------------------------------------- D|--------------------------------------------------------- E|--------------------------------------------------------- B|--------------------------------------------------------- G|-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6-8--6\\--6--4-6--4-6--9-9-9-9--8--9-- D|--------------------------------------------------------- G|--------------------------------------------------------- D|--------------------------------------------------------- Repeat that quite a few times, remember that at the start of the outro it IS there but very quiet, then ramp the volume after the vocal cue. After a while it changes to: E|---------------------------------------------------- B|-8--8-8-8-9~--8--8-8-8-9~--8--8-8-8-9--11--9--8--9-- G|---------------------------------------------------- D|---------------------------------------------------- G|---------------------------------------------------- D|---------------------------------------------------- Again work that wah on the last 5 notes so that each note pops out of the mix of the band That repeats twice and then Jim adds another effect and plays the same riff twice again. I believe that he turns on the whammy pedal and by using mine I can get a similar sound by rocking it between the Octave Up and Octave Down settings whilst playing. Experiment yourself with whatever sounds good. And thats it :) I'm pretty sure about all of this because it is figured out from Jim's video
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