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Buckethead performs wearing a KFC bucket on his head, sometimes emblazoned with an orange bumper sticker reading FUNERAL in block letters. This is accompanied by an expressionless plain white mask inspired by the 1988 slasher film Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers. [5] He also incorporates nunchaku and robot dancing into his stage ...
Buckethead While no one is sure of the identity of the enigmatic guitarist Buckethead, it's difficult to argue against his virtuosity on guitar. While Buckethead's brand of shred has much in common with Paul Gilbert, the eccentric KFC-wearing guitarist also implements robot sounds and other unorthodox effects to create a subgenre of "avant-shred."
Buckethead was also guitarist for Guns N' Roses then. Their first feature length album Dawn of the Deli Creeps was released in late 2005. Dan Monti (a technician for Metallica , Guns N' Roses and Serj Tankian ), longtime Buckethead collaborator, performed on bass, alongside several tracks performed by Tony Black.
Enter the Chicken is the fourteenth studio album by musician Buckethead.The album was released on October 25, 2005 by Serj Tankian's label Serjical Strike. [1] It has eleven songs, two of which are less than twenty seconds long.
Buckethead's extensive solo discography currently includes 31 studio albums, one live album, two extended plays, five special releases, six demo tapes, & four DVD releases. Since 2011, Buckethead started releasing albums in the "Pikes" series, mini-albums usually around 30 minutes in length, each with a sequential number similar to a comic book .
Buckethead — acoustic guitar, electric guitar, bass guitar; P-Sticks — electronic programming, drum programming, tape effects, artwork; Production. Recorded in the kitchen at Pilo's Loft and track three recorded at Travis Dickerson's recording studio. Mastered by Travis Dickerson at Travis Dickerson Recording Studio, Chatsworth, California.
"Welcome to Bucketheadland" is the second song of the album and was produced by Bill Laswell.. An earlier version of the song, the Bootsy Collins produced "Park Theme", can be found on Buckethead's 1992 debut album Bucketheadland, featuring a different voice-over reciting of the song's title, as well as some other spoken words and a more "electronic feel", due to the use of a drum machine in ...
The song was first called "Dime" (a popular nickname of Darrell) and was released shortly after the incident on Buckethead's web page without any cost and later released on the album with tracks of circuit-bent instruments added to it. The song takes its name from the fifth installment in the Guinea Pig series of Japanese horror films.