Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Uli Jon Roth

Uli Jon Roth   
Artist: Uli Jon Roth

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Hard-Rock
   



Discography:


Electric Sun - Earthquake   
 Electric Sun - Earthquake

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 8


From Here To Eternity ( CD3)   
 From Here To Eternity ( CD3)

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 23




Though he doesn't get intimately as much credit as Deep Purple's Ritchie Blackmore, Uli Jon Roth helped lay the base for neoclassic metallic element with his lead guitar work for German severe stone icons the Scorpions during the '70s. Roth's playing owed an obvious debt to Jimi Hendrix, simply the elegance of his lead lines, the fluidity of his wording, and his role of jump scales learned from hellenic grooming all helped advertise his body of work into some other kingdom all. Upon going away the Scorpions in 1978, Roth embarked on an wandering solo career that establish him exploring his psychedelic and neoclassical influences to a arcdegree that would let been impossible with his former band.


Uli Jon Roth was born Ulrich Roth in Dusseldorf, Germany, on December 18, 1954. He began playing guitar at historic period 13 and was acting just two years later. In the early '70s, he coupled a dance orchestra called Dawn Road, which likewise featured singer Klaus Meine. Members of the temporarily in-limbo Scorpions (their guitarist Michael Schenker had scarcely left hand to join UFO) became interested in Dawn Road's original material, which was largely composed by Roth, and a novel Scorpions lineup was formed in 1973 with Roth on lead guitar. 1974's Fly to the Rainbow was their first transcription together, only they real strike their stride on the follow-ups, 1975's In Trance and 1976's Virgin Killer, which made them external stars and drew particular spat for Roth's soloing abilities. However, musical tensions were discernible on 1977's Taken By Force; Roth's larger-than-life ambitions began to clash with the straight-up hard rock sensitivity of the reside of the band. After a tumultuous earth go, Roth left the group in 1978, following the going of the live forked record album Tokyo Tapes.


Prohibited on his own, Roth formed a mount dance orchestra called Electric Sun, which -- in safekeeping with the classic power-trio format -- featured him on lead vocals as well as guitar. Electric Sun made its debut with the Earthquake album in 1979, which was musically reasonably standardized to his work with the Scorpions, albeit with more Hendrix influence, generally yearner songs, and a slightly hippie-ish vibration. Those tendencies were explored in more detail on the 1981 follow-up, Fire Wind. For the side by side Electric Sun project, Roth took a left turn over into symphonic neoclassic rock, greatly expanding his compositional pallette while introducing his new invention, the six-octave Sky Guitar. The outcome, Beyond the Astral Skies, was released in 1984 and would prove to be the last Roth recording for quite some time; he elective to take a break from recording in order to work in an ambitious new counseling.


Lots of Roth's writing from the mid-'80s to the mid-'90s was in a classical stylus, departure rock & ramble behind altogether. For example, the 1991 objet d'art Aquila Suite (by and by issued as portion of the three-disc From Here to Eternity package) was a set of 12 etudes composed for solo piano, in the style of the Romantic era. Also in 1991, Roth was tapped by German television to calculate the tribute special "A Different Side of Jimi Hendrix," which likewise featured bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Simon Phillips, among many others. In 1993, Roth returned to German television with the "Symphonious Rock for Europe" special, in which he performed his first rock-and-roll philharmonic "Europa Ex Favilla" (summation several other pieces) backed by the Brussels Symphony Orchestra. Some of those compositions later turned up on Sky of Avalon: Prologue to the Symphonic Legends, Roth's 1996 return to recording, which featured his new backing band Sky of Avalon. Prologue was the low of a jutting four-spot related symphonic recordings spotlighting the sky guitar. In 1998, Roth played his first straight-ahead rock candy concerts in quite some time, connexion the European leg of the G3 guitar-virtuoso software system tour with Michael Schenker and Joe Satriani. In 2000, Roth released Transcendental Sky Guitar, a two-CD set of recent live and studio material (including selections from a special 1999 concert in Vienna) that was split into classical and rock-oriented halves.