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  1. 25 de dic. de 2018 · Schooled by Hendrix, Hooker, and Gurdjieff, alt-rock avatar Richard Lloyd blends the spiritual and the visceral—from Television to his new solo album, The Countdown—and shares his philosophy of single-string-based mastery.

  2. 10 de sept. de 2019 · Lou Reed and Robert Quine performing at the Beacon Theatre in New York City, October 18, 1984. A huge fan of the Velvet Underground, Quine talked Reed into returning to the guitar—igniting a flame that Reed fanned for the remainder of his own life, even going on to record instrumental albums. Photo by Ebet Roberts.

  3. Richard Lloyd of Television. Image: Ebet Roberts / Redferns / Getty Images Life beyond Television. It would be a disservice to both Verlaine and Lloyd to suggest they ‘disappeared’ after Television. The mainstream may have forgotten them to a large degree, but guitar fans could still revel in a bright series of solo and collaborative projects.

  4. 7 de oct. de 2017 · This lesson aims to set the record straight: The first wave of punk started in the 1960s, evolved fruitfully during the 1970s, featured clever and inventive guitar playing throughout, and was more of an attitude aimed at originality, rather than stylistic conformity. The Velvet Underground’s “Ostrich” Tuning.

  5. Today, Richard Lloyd remains an active musician, often playing Television classics using his greenburst Sidejack DLX guitar, and also giving guitar lessons for aspiring guitarists - including well-known names such as Jeff Tweedy of Wilco! more. Unverified, Supported via Eastwood Guitars. Submitted over 4 years ago.

  6. To put it another way, they hated hippies, but liked guitar solos. “Television would be out of place anywhere,” co-guitarist Richard Lloyd said regarding the mid-’70s New York City punk/new wave scene the band grew from. His comment neatly sums up some fans’ fascination with Television. Here was a band tired of the fuzzed-up pentatonic ...

  7. 9 de ene. de 2021 · Robert Quine was the kind of guitarist whose playing has never been mistaken for that of anyone else. By the time he made his recording debut with Richard Hell and the Voidoids on the iconic punk masterwork Blank Generation, Quine was already in his mid-30s and had developed an unmistakable sound.In a 1997 interview with Jason Gross for Perfect Sound Forever, the guitarist explained, “By ...