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Post by BEng on May 30, 2011 15:36:34 GMT -5
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 30, 2011 17:02:03 GMT -5
Coldplay's Yellow is almost identical to All Around The World, and if i remember correctly they even admitted it in an old article somewhere.
Also, the Green Day rip-off is hardly a rip off, the chording structure is the most common used structure in all of music, so if they ripped Oasis then they ripped everyone else that preceded them too. It's the same reason as to why Wonderwall can be mashed-up with almost anything.
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11stayyoung
Madferrit Fan
I'm not blind and I don't mind cause I got time and I'm alive
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Post by 11stayyoung on May 30, 2011 17:06:01 GMT -5
I LOVE THIS POST
I can't think of any songs right now but I don't see how BOBD be green day is wonderwall I mean the melody not chords they are obviously different
anyway keep them coming
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Post by BEng on May 30, 2011 17:14:17 GMT -5
Yeah indeed maybe "Boulevard of broken dreams" isn't a real rip off. It just came to mind because Noel mentioned it once. You could also say that the beginning "wake me up when September ends" ripped off "rockin' chair" but the similarities aren't that spectacular either. And Are you sure about the "yellow" thing? Because bar the chord progression of the first 3 chords and the fact that they're both wonderful uplifting songs I don't see the similarities
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Post by liamisgod125 on May 30, 2011 17:47:19 GMT -5
I think you'll find Dont Go Away was taken from this from the Real People
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Post by BEng on May 30, 2011 18:08:59 GMT -5
Wow didn't know that!! But he stole the line, not the melody fortunately, since we're talking about the melody here...
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Post by BlueJay on May 31, 2011 2:24:09 GMT -5
The worst thing about Pure & Simple by Hearsay is that it sold more copies than Wonderwall & Don't Look Back In Anger in the UK. Are people on drugs?
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Post by Mad4it on May 31, 2011 2:26:50 GMT -5
good souls by starsailor... sounds like go let it out in parts.
pure and simple hear say is a complete copy of all around the world.
life got cold girls aloud the chorus is almost identical to Wonderwall
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Post by rcknrollstar on May 31, 2011 2:29:45 GMT -5
There's one Brother song that has a bit of Acquiesce. The bit that leads into the chorus.
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Post by sunshheeeyine on May 31, 2011 6:09:23 GMT -5
There's one Brother song that has a bit of Acquiesce. The bit that leads into the chorus. your on about Darling Buds of May
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Post by Bring It On Dan on May 31, 2011 10:33:31 GMT -5
i dont think us as oasis fans really have a leg to stand on tbh
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Post by Bring It On Dan on May 31, 2011 10:35:54 GMT -5
And by the way, jus youtubed that brother song, what a steaming pile of fucking wank.
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Post by Beady’s Here Now on May 31, 2011 11:36:27 GMT -5
There's one Brother song that has a bit of Acquiesce. The bit that leads into the chorus. your on about Darling Buds of May And people think Oasis have shit lyrics. What an annoying 'song'
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Post by Riverman on Jun 1, 2011 8:37:26 GMT -5
Also, the Green Day rip-off is hardly a rip off, the chording structure is the most common used structure in all of music, so if they ripped Oasis then they ripped everyone else that preceded them too. It's the same reason as to why Wonderwall can be mashed-up with almost anything. don't really agree... can you come up with other songs with same structure?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2011 10:25:47 GMT -5
Also, the Green Day rip-off is hardly a rip off, the chording structure is the most common used structure in all of music, so if they ripped Oasis then they ripped everyone else that preceded them too. It's the same reason as to why Wonderwall can be mashed-up with almost anything. don't really agree... can you come up with other songs with same structure? Everyone from Bryan Adams to Taylor Swift has used this same progression in popular songs. It is so common in fact that even Noel has used it multiple times (i.e. Wonderwall, D'You Know What I Mean?) Both of which were huge singles in their day. Just google (Em G D A) and you get 1.6 million hits, the vast majority are people posting how to play some song that follows this progression. I realize that this progression is not identical between these two songs based on the Capo, but they are essentially the same and can by placed side by side without any discernible difference to the common person.
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Post by Riverman on Jun 2, 2011 15:25:57 GMT -5
don't really agree... can you come up with other songs with same structure? Everyone from Bryan Adams to Taylor Swift has used this same progression in popular songs. It is so common in fact that even Noel has used it multiple times (i.e. Wonderwall, D'You Know What I Mean?) Both of which were huge singles in their day. Just google (Em G D A) and you get 1.6 million hits, the vast majority are people posting how to play some song that follows this progression. I realize that this progression is not identical between these two songs based on the Capo, but they are essentially the same and can by placed side by side without any discernible difference to the common person. sure it's a fairly simple chord progression, and it is probably used by others - but not very much I think.. don't look back in anger - now thats a structure almost everyone has used... when I first heard wonderwall.. I thought why didn't anyone think of that chord progression before? probably one of the reasons why it became such a big hit.... anyways just my opinion
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 2, 2011 16:40:48 GMT -5
DLBIA has 9 different chord changes in the versus' alone, it is not a very commonly used progression.
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Post by rcknrollstar on Jun 2, 2011 16:51:03 GMT -5
DLBIA has 9 different chord changes in the versus' alone, it is not a very commonly used progression. Do you have an example of someone ripping it off? Any artist using that same progression and claiming it's coincidence is probably full of sh*t.
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Post by GIMH on Jun 2, 2011 17:28:29 GMT -5
I believe Noel actually has a songwriting credit on Life Got Cold?
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Post by Velo on Jun 4, 2011 22:55:30 GMT -5
DLBIA has 9 different chord changes in the versus' alone, it is not a very commonly used progression. it's based on Canon in C...really well known progression. it's more apparent on the live versions as the studio recordings have the pitch altered slightly.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 4, 2011 23:31:28 GMT -5
DLBIA has 9 different chord changes in the versus' alone, it is not a very commonly used progression. it's based on Canon in C...really well known progression. it's more apparent on the live versions as the studio recordings have the pitch altered slightly. Are you claiming that Noel stole from Canon in C? He has probably never even heard it.
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Post by shoes222 on Jun 5, 2011 13:52:50 GMT -5
it's based on Canon in C...really well known progression. it's more apparent on the live versions as the studio recordings have the pitch altered slightly. Are you claiming that Noel stole from Canon in C? He has probably never even heard it. It's actually called Pachebel's Canon, and it is one of the most popular chord sequences of all time. Tons and tons of songs follow this progression and virtually everyone has heard it.
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Post by shoes222 on Jun 5, 2011 13:54:44 GMT -5
when I first heard wonderwall.. I thought why didn't anyone think of that chord progression before? probably one of the reasons why it became such a big hit.... anyways just my opinion It's not the chord progression of Wonderwall that made it a hit, the progression is fairly common. It's the rhythm of the song that makes it unique.
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Post by Beady’s Here Now on Jun 5, 2011 14:04:09 GMT -5
Are you claiming that Noel stole from Canon in C? He has probably never even heard it. It's actually called Pachebel's Canon, and it is one of the most popular chord sequences of all time. Tons and tons of songs follow this progression and virtually everyone has heard it.
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Post by Riverman on Jun 5, 2011 21:20:00 GMT -5
when I first heard wonderwall.. I thought why didn't anyone think of that chord progression before? probably one of the reasons why it became such a big hit.... anyways just my opinion It's not the chord progression of Wonderwall that made it a hit, the progression is fairly common. It's the rhythm of the song that makes it unique. * one of the reasons
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