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"Bulls on Parade" is a song released by American rap metal band Rage Against the Machine in 1996, and can be found on their 2nd album, ''Evil Empire''. The song is widely known for its popular guitar solo containing a vinyl scratch effect used by Tom Morello, done by toggling between two pickups - one on and one off - while rubbing his hands on the strings over the pickups to create the effect that someone is scratching a vinyl disc. "Bulls on Parade" is also known for one of Tim Commerford's more famous bass solos, during the second wah-wah riff, and right before Morello's guitar solo. Morello has also stated that the sound he was going for was a "sort of 'ghetto boy' sound, menacing"〔http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyxKJLgfT7A〕 with E♭ tuning and a wah-wah pedal to create a Los Angeles gangland-style riff. ==Live performances== "Bulls on Parade" made its live debut on January 25, 1996 at the Big Day Out festival in Sydney, Australia. The track then made its international debut on ''Saturday Night Live'' in April 1996. RATM was going to play two songs, but as they hung inverted American flags from their amplifiers, they were expelled from the building after finishing the first song.〔Anon., (Saturday Night Live Incident ), Public release and distribution. Retrieved November 12, 2007.〕 At various shows, the band has dedicated the song to Tony Blair. After breaking up in late 2000, the three instrumentalists formed the band Audioslave with vocalist Chris Cornell. During their 2005 Out of Exile tour, the band played an instrumental version of "Bulls on Parade", followed immediately by "Sleep Now in the Fire" with Chris Cornell. The song was covered at the 2009 Electric Proms by UK Grime artist, Dizzee Rascal. When first recorded in the studio, the E string on the bass was originally tuned down a half step, but during live performances is played in standard tuning. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bulls on Parade」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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