1. Had a mini-practice today...ran that set but without our bass player. The singer's mix on the PA was off as well...we're trying to figure out if either the mic is mysteriously broken or if his PA channel is just fucked up. Either way, I had the drummer's brother tape us practicing "American Woman", "Creep", and "Superstition". I managed to mess up an entire melodic part in "Creep", and the other guitar player went into the chorus 4 bars early one time in "Superstition", but that's why they're practices....I can post the videos on here tomorrow at some point. No time today.

    And Aaron, our singer actually sounds much more like the version off of Dusted. He has his own way of singing the songs, since most of the time when he tries to perfectly match the studio versions, they come out sub-par. He figures its a little better to throw a little originality into the mix, and that way people can't blame us for trying too hard to sound authentic and failing. Works for him, works for me. Was a fun day though.

    Also, setlist updates- Today, added "My Own Worst Enemy" by Lit, and "Pour Some Sugar On Me" by Def Leppard. "Under Pressure" may be cut, we aren't sure yet. Pretty hard to pull off since Freddie Mercury couldn't make it to practice. PSSOM will be used solely if we need to fill more time at our bar gig- it's hard for a 5-piece garage band to pull off an arena rock anthem like that.
  2. I was surprised the other day regarding you passion for Under Pressure... I don't think you'll leave that one off the set without giving a tough fight, will you?
  3. ¡Hola mi amigos! ¿Cómo estás?


  4. Mycket bra!! Och du?

    (Yes, absolutely. Google translate )



    Oh, by the way, let me do a little correction to you, I think it will do good for you:
    Amigo = friend
    AmigoS = friendS

    And then, if you use the plural, then you have to use the verb in plural as well:
    I am - yo estoy
    you are - tú estás
    (s)he is - el(la) está
    we are - nosotros estamos
    you are - vosotros estáis
    they are - ellos están


    So, if your ¿Cómo estás? question was aimed just to me, then it should have been "¡Hola mi amigo! ¿Cómo estás?" , but if it was aimed to the whole community, it should have been "¡Hola miS amigoS! ¿Cómo estáis?"



    Anyway, it's really GREAT to see you writing in Spanish
  5. ¡Pardón Sergio!

    I fucked up, hahaha. My bad habit of changing what I'm going to say mid sentence combined with laziness. Because I do know that grammar, believe it or not, I'm pretty good at grammar. I actually have the highest grade in Spanish. I also have that in German and English. The only language I don't have the highest grade in is Swedish

    Oh, and: ¡Bien, también!
  6. hahaha, I speak Swedish better than you!!

    Nah, it's seriously fantastic seeing you people speaking Spanish every now and then! For example, Kirsten and I use to exchange Spanish and German roles in our PMs, and it's very very funny because you don't expect such common expressions in your language to come from a 2000 kms away virtual friend


  7. Google translate ain't that good

    And yes, it's always a lot of fun to read some Swedish in this forum.
  8. The bad thing for you is that, while Spanish is almost up there with French and German in popularity and spread, I don't think that the full number of Swedish speakers exceedes the 15-18 million mark worldwide ... I don't even know the basic "hello, thanks, goodbye" thing in Swedish. I know it in a lot of languages including Russian, Japanese, etc etc but in all honestly I never heard them in Swedish I wish I could learn some Swedish some day!


    PS. I know, Google Translate sucks. I laugh a lot when Kirsten translates long sentences from German to Spanish because then the translations remain more or less understandable, but become pretty senseless and funny
  9. Originally posted by LikeASong:The bad thing for you is that, while Spanish is almost up there with French and German in popularity and spread, I don't think that the full number of Swedish speakers exceedes the 15-18 million mark worldwide ... I don't even know the basic "hello, thanks, goodbye" thing in Swedish. I know it in a lot of languages including Russian, Japanese, etc etc but in all honestly I never heard them in Swedish I wish I could learn some Swedish some day!


    PS. I know, Google Translate sucks. I laugh a lot when Kirsten translates long sentences from German to Spanish because then the translations remain more or less understandable, but become pretty senseless and funny


    hej=hi
    tack=thanks
    hejdå=goodbye
    hur mår du?=how are you doing? (not really correct, since it's a pleasantry in English, and a real question in Swedish)
    bra=good
    dåligt=bad

    Anything else you need to know? Maybe something for the girls?
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