Photograph, All i've got is a photograph,Ģ. Discovered using Shazam, the music discovery app. Oh, Look what you've done to this rock n' roll clown, Def Leppard - Photograph by: Def Leppard Diagrams Overview Improve Problem with the chords 3, 2, 1. It kind of played itself,” Collen said.Words and Music by Steve Clark, Pete Willis, Def Leppard - Photograph Chords - Chordify Song Frequency This song has non-standard frequency tuning, you might enjoy jamming better if your instrument is tuned to 452Hz. Then the chorus is so melodic that it was so easy just to play all those licks. Play solos and licks and go around the vocal.’ Because it was such a melodic, amazing, beautiful melody it was so easy to weave in and out of Joe’s vocals at the end. When released as a single it reached 1 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart and 12 on the Pop Singles chart. It was written as a tribute to the late actress Marilyn Monroe, as singer Joe Elliott often stated before playing the song live onstage. “With that one, I actually worked out the melodic thing and right at the end Mutt Lange said, ‘Just vibe out on the end. 'Photograph' is a 1983 single by British hard rock band Def Leppard from their album Pyromania. Collen typically played fast and spontaneously, but Lange had him slow down for the track and properly place his solos and licks. The single reached 1 on Billboard Mainstream Rock chart in. It was released in February 1983 with 'Bringin' On The Heartbreak' on the B-side. 'Photograph' was released as the first single from the band's third studio album, 'Pyromania'. This was the last album that founding member and guitarist Pete Willis had contributions in, where he was replaced halfway in the recording process by Phil Collen, who filled in lead parts for the rest of the song. Official Music Video - The song was written by Def Leppard members, Steve Clark, Pete Willis, Rick Savage and Joe Elliott, along with Robert John 'Mutt' Lange. It was a gamble and a bit of a fight to get it through. Even the lyrics seem vague when looked closer, but the overall plan was to express extreme infatuation over a woman in the anthem rocker. A ballad is a ballad, whereas Rock On allowed us to be a bit more off-the-wall. While the band would sometimes dedicate the song to Marilyn Monroe (and even had a look-alike star in the music video), there was never really any substantial evidence pointing to such allusion and was only used to create a good story for the track.
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