Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Buckethead wants you to know he appreciates your support all these years, it means so much to him. Buckethead is having some animatronic parts replaced, Slip Disc snuck into the park and caused some mayhem." The mention of Slip Disc is a reference to a Bucketheadland nemesis found on the Bucketheadland album. Bootsy Collins continued to update ...
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 .
Bucketheadland (stylised as バケトヘドランド) is the debut studio album by American guitarist and songwriter Buckethead.It was released on John Zornʼs Japanese record label, Avant, in 1992.
Prior to the inclusion of a studio version of "Jordan" on Guitar Hero II, the instrumental was performed live by Buckethead at a number of shows.While performing the track, Buckethead would omit the guitar solos and interpolate another song (often "Post Office Buddy" from Giant Robot), a series of songs or an improvisation.
This page was last edited on 29 September 2023, at 05:02 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
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.
Monsters and Robots is Buckethead's fifth studio album, released April 20, 1999, by Higher Octave records. A large part of the album was co-written with Les Claypool, who also plays bass on several tracks and lends his vocals to the track "The Ballad of Buckethead".
"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 ...