Song picture
Automanic
Comment Share
Single   $0.75
A straight forward guitarcore song with cool harmonies and a kick ass groove from the originators of instrumental guitarcore!
mp3 joe satriani acoustic music instrumental instrumental rock hard rock metal metallica steve vai california ozzy san jose acdc van halen social distortion zakk wylde eddie van halen amazing grace peavey lonero bill lonero guitarcore instrumental guitarcore peavey wolfgang
LoNero are the originators of the Instrumental Guitarcore genre.
What is Guitarcore? The answer is simple......J.F.L.!! LoNero gave birth to Guitarcore with their first release “Relentless” in 2007. Fourteen tracks of punishing rhythms and strong melodic hooks. From the time “Relentless” was released, musical barriers were not only broken, but shattered! Fans of nearly every genre responded with more enthusiasm than the band could have ever imagined which gave even stronger resolve to LoNero's idea that the melody and song should be the most important aspect whether it's instrumental rock or not. Guitarcore is about the song, the band and the fans! No limits, no borders, no nonsense. Unlike most instrumental rock artists whose songs are a seemingly endless display of solos, LoNero chooses to focus on rhythm, groove, verse, chorus and melody. Their songs are constructed as if a vocalist is going to sing over them. As Guitar Player magazine stated “(LoNero) claims to have invented Guitarcore so you should really hate them! But you can’t because they’re just so damn good!”. LoNero's vision and drive is evident in their 2011 release “J.F.L”. This time with the talents of Grammy Award winning producer/engineer Michael Rosen (Metallica, Joe Satriani, Santana, Papa Roach, Rancid, Testament, Todd Rundgren and many many more). Recorded entirely at LoNero’s rehearsal/recording studio, J.F.L takes Guitarcore to an even more refined level. With such songs as “Little Bastard”, “Eden”, Downside” etc, LoNero proves groove and melody are still king. Not only has LoNero created Guitarcore, but with “J.F.L.” they introduce “Punkstramental”. With a nod and wink to bands such as The Ramones and Social Distortion, the punkstramental songs “Fat Tat” and “Good Luck” keep the punk vibe alive within an instrumental format. Something truly unique within the instrumental genre. With “J.F.L.”, LoNero continues to move forward and forge new ground while still retaining integrity and honesty in their music. Something that is tantamount to what Guitarcore stands for.
Song Info
Charts
Peak #8
Peak in subgenre #2
Author
Bill Lonero
Rights
2007 Cool Cherry Music
Uploaded
July 06, 2009
Track Files
MP3
MP3 3.1 MB 128 kbps 3:20
Song Likes
On Playlists
Comments
Please sign up or log in to post a comment.