Favourite albums that use chorus as a primary part of the sound

Favourite albums that use chorus as a primary part of the sound.

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=BBsazIACpYM
youtube.com/watch?v=J-fX0UbpZls
youtube.com/watch?v=_GnHkfGgEQM
youtube.com/watch?v=OtiAllw_Eiw
youtube.com/watch?v=csxBQLG4-3Q
youtube.com/watch?v=03cy86u6Wi4
m.youtube.com/watch?v=4SwxO3yA6A0
youtube.com/watch?v=oEp7NDzsLFw
youtube.com/watch?v=fnw9swEazeo
youtube.com/watch?v=8qWJQd3Ulno
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What do you mean by using the "chorus as a primary part of the sound," OP?

Before anyone posts the Cure, the "chorus" is actually a flanger.

chorus pedal, like op's pic related and the Cure

Power Corruption and Lies
Preocuppations s/t

... They used both pretty extensively I think.

Robert Smith used the chorus in the JC-120 for studio recordings

I only like I wanna be Adored.
the rest of the album is shit

It's nothing compared to Venom or Iron maiden

why are bongs so tripped out on it?

Then Golddust, but it's from another album

Nirvanas "come as you are" is the definition of a classic 90s style bass chorus.
If that helps

sorry, fools gold I meant

youtube.com/watch?v=BBsazIACpYM

I guess I get them, lsitening to I am the Ressurection currently.

they are like a 60s band.

It's happy go lucky, yet funky at parts

I get their 90s vibe, allright.

I guess if you like the Rolling Stones you can get into this band

I always considered schoolmates who were into britpop/ british 90s rock as elitists who thought I was an idiot metalhead

Stone Roses were pretty cool. I'm surprised that they didn't have more success than they did. I like Oasis better but they were leading the scene well before them

But I Am The Resurrection is the best song

>I'm surprised that they didn't have more success
Because they took 5 years to put second album and by that time no one cared, not to mention it was a total flop and britpop bands sto;le all the spotlight.

I am the same user asI like the songs, but at least heavy metal you don't have to be into drugs to listen

unfortunately my mind is unwelcoming to psychedelics

but I can dig the Roses

Even after the first album though it didn't give them a worldwide audience

I am more surprised other bands didn't come close to popularity, Happy Mondays were pretty big, but The Charlatans, James and Inspiral Carpets seem forgotten despite being still active

Which is harder?

getting a proper buckethat or learning to hit the cymbals underhanded&overhanded?

I haven't really explored the lesser known late 80s/early 90s Britpop bands. I've only heard of Inspiral Carpets because Noel Gallagher used to be the guitar tech. Are they worth checking out?

Based on how how well you type, your brain seems fried enough. Also, if you NEED drugs to enjoy any type of music, you are a brainlet

The Stone Roses were the jewel of that scene. James were always popular but more live and festival-orientated. The others are more ephemeral but the real forgotten stuff is shit like Northside and Flowered Up

Stone Roses where the only ones that got some "classic rock" cred, because they where good musicians and had enough guitar wankery to please Black Crowes/Lenny Kravitz fans.
Happy Mondays where too messy and Bez was hated by purists, Inspiral Carpets where slightly more respect, but the fact that their biggest hit was a complete ripoff of The Police "invisible sun" didn't help
The Charlatans where in a weird position, they where literally kids when they recorded "Some Friendly" and became a very respected band in the long run, they just didn't have more hit singles but don't need it either, they have a loyal fanbase

They have a few good singles, these are their most well known ones

youtube.com/watch?v=J-fX0UbpZls
youtube.com/watch?v=_GnHkfGgEQM
youtube.com/watch?v=OtiAllw_Eiw
youtube.com/watch?v=csxBQLG4-3Q
youtube.com/watch?v=03cy86u6Wi4

They really love using organ in their songs

James where more jangly pop than part of the madchester scene, and they struck gold in the US with "Laid"
Northside and Flowered Up where shit and deserve to be forgotten

Thanks user will give them a listen

>their biggest hit was a complete ripoff of The Police "invisible sun"
And the charlatans biggest hit is a rip off of Deep Purple's Hush (Which was covered by Kula Shaker)

Funnily though, their highest charting song is actually One to Another from Tellin Stories.

what do you have against my typing sperglord? Everything is perfectly expressed.

>if you NEED drugs to enjoy any type of music, you are a brainlet

apparently it's your reading comprehension that's lacking

m.youtube.com/watch?v=4SwxO3yA6A0

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Yeah, but they changed it enough to make it less obvious. The carpets "this is how it feels" is basically "invisible sun" with different lyrics.
The Charlatans got a pass since they where young and there was some serious potential in "Some friendly", the Carpets where around since the late 80s and "Life" is alright but far from perfect, then they tried to get all serious and lost their charm, I'm one of the few ppl that actually loves "Devil Hopping" because it's just dumb fun

...

Did you check their new albums with the original vocalist?

>it didn't give them a worldwide audience
They kind of had one. They had some modern rock radio hits in America, and there was a good deal of hype when the second album was announced. Love Spreads was huge on all rock formats in America and crossed over to pop radio as a minor hit.

nah, should I?

It's okay, nothing great

does mac demarco use a chorus pedal

also is this basically what all the 80s jangle pop/college rock type bands were using?

>jangle pop

what's that?

youtube.com/watch?v=oEp7NDzsLFw

youtube.com/watch?v=fnw9swEazeo

youtube.com/watch?v=8qWJQd3Ulno

wild nothing some real estate songs etc

oh I like that

why do brits have so many misleading names for their genres?

>jangle pop: has nothing to do with a jungle
>britpop: is rock
>madchester: is not rave

Shut up mong

if i had to choose one word to describe those songs it would be "jangley"

what does it mean?

what is the Adolescents-Kids of the Black Hole?

There's no chorus on the bass you dumbass

Is it just one mentally ill user running amok itt? This thread is a remarkable thing to behold.

Mac has said that he thought the setting he used was chorus but its actually a some sort of univibe effect. Similar modulation though.

Not the user you're replying to but that shure sounds like a clean bass with a Boss CH-1 or similar.
Did you ever play a bass with s chorus or are just basing your facts on stuff you read on the internet?

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It's the guitar run through a Small Clone you absolute goddamn retard

You know the Small Stone is a basically a vintage chorus/phaser pedal, right?
You're right about the guitar thou

>jangle pop: has nothing to do with a jungle

Are you disabled?

Mac is more high tremolo, but he uses chorus sometimes too

what does jangle mean?

WHAT THE FUCK DOES JANGLE MEAN?

The Small Stone is a phaser

Which is irrelevant

Because it was guitar going through a Small Clone, a chorus.

What the fuck is wrong with you

I don't even know what the word jangle means

he used ce1, ce2, dimension C, ce3 chorus pedals a lot, also used bf2 flanger a lot, he uses almost all boss stuff

this is mostly flanger not chorus

I like Ryan Adams recent stuff a lot, he has like 4-5 chorus pedals on his board

cant believe they didn't get sued for ripping off invisible sun