Vivid is the debut studio album by American rock band Living Colour, released on May 2, 1988, by Epic Records. It was one of the most popular albums of 1988, peaking at number six on the US Billboard 200 chart and being certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
Musically, Vivid has been described as a hard rock, heavy metal, funk metal, alternative metal, and funk rock album, with elements of soul, jazz, pop, rap, arena rock, punk, and avant-garde jazz.
In The Philadelphia Inquirer, Ken Tucker commented that Living Colour “defies musical stereotypes by evincing influences that include Lynyrd Skynyrd, Jimi Hendrix, Roxy Music and Sly Stone to yield a fierce, funny album.”
Mark Sinker of NME likewise highlighted the band’s diversity of influences, including their embrace of older musical styles “that even metal heads haven’t taken seriously”, and concluded that Vivid “lives up, simultaneously, to the pinhead directness of Zeppelin and the total Texas-New Yorker strangeness of Ornette Coleman‘s Prime Time.”
“In its own way,” wrote Rolling Stone critic David Fricke, “Vivid is an open letter to rock & roll itself, a demand for equal time and respect from a music that is Living Colour’s birthright.” He added that the album “will not change the world single-handedly, but it’s a timely reminder of why it’s always worth trying.”
Robert Christgau was less enthusiastic in The Village Voice, finding that “while it’s momentarily exhilarating to hear this all-black band come power-chording out of the box, after a while the fancy arrangements and strained soul remind me of, I don’t know, Megadeth.” The album came in at #15 on the 1988 top-25 ‘albums of the year list’ in Kerrang!.
- Genre(s): Alternative Metal, Groove Metal, Jazz Funk, Metal
Disclaimer: All transcriptions are provided "as is" for purely EDUCATIONAL purposes. All other uses are prohibited. All copyrights in the original works remain the property of the owners.
Read here for details on how I make them and my committment to accuracy.
Tracklist
- 001 - cult of personality
- 002 - i want to know
- 003 - middle man
- 004 - desperate people
- 005 - open letter (to. a landlord)
- 006 - funny vibe
- 007 - memories can wait
- 008 - broken hearts
- 009 - glamour boys
- 010 - what's your favourite colour? (theme song)
- 011- which way to america?
001 - cult of personality bass tab
My tab for this might be a bit controversial as there are a good few out there but I think they're overcomplicating things.
Muzz Skillings is a shrewd player and like other smart bass players he understands the role and place of the bass, especially in a funk sense. As a result, after isolating the bass using some Ai stuff and cleaning it up I think what he's playing, while still difficult, is actually simpler than people think.
What's available here is a note for note of what I can hear on the isolated bass track from the 1988 studio recording. I hope you enjoy it. The 3/4 bits are fun but are like playing finger-twister!
- Instrument: 4 String Bass Guitar
- Page Count: 13
- Format: Interactive PDF
- difficulty Level: Intermediate/Advanced
- Tuning: E Standard (E-A-D-G)
- Key(s): G Dorian, F Major, C Mixolydian
- Download Size: 1.6MB
002 - i want to know bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
003 - middle man bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
004 - desperate people bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
005 - open letter (to a landlord) bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
006 - funny vibe bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
007 - memories can wait bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
008 - broken hearts bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
009 - glamour boys bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
010 - what's your favourite colour? (theme song) bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...
011 - which way to america? bass tab
Nothing here yet, my dude...