Steve Vai - Flex-Able
Steve Vai - Flex-Able
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Project C

Original Poster:

739 posts

228 months

Saturday 18th June 2011
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I first discovered Steve Vai when I heard Zappa's "You are what you is", and so got "Flex-Able" when it came out in 1984 after hearing "The Attitude Song" on a flexi disc with Guitarist magazine.

I've probably not listened to "Flex-Able" for years if not decades and in my quest to obtain digital copies of vinyl stuff I've now had a chance to listen to this again - and blown away again! I didn't like his later shred stuff so lost touch of him. "call it sleep" is my stand out track mixing shred stuff with controlled almost minimalistic playing.

Mastodon2

14,164 posts

188 months

Saturday 18th June 2011
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Steve Vai did shred?

Baryonyx

18,225 posts

182 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2011
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Flex-Able had a couple of good tunes on it (and Stuart Hamm playing some bass too IIRC). Things like the Girl/Boy Song and Viv Woman were great but there were plenty of naff tunes on there too. Not a patch on his later stuff like Passion and Warfare.

Nom de ploom

4,890 posts

197 months

Friday 24th June 2011
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I'm inclined to agree.

Flex-able suffers from the lame production it sounds empty.

I think its over twiddly and lacks the melodic depth of the later stuff, although after Fire Garden I confess to have gone off Vai. He's become more of a composer now as opposed to outright guitar hero stuff...

Live at the Astoria is a must though

Malam

719 posts

226 months

Saturday 25th June 2011
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I love Flex-Able. It's one of my all time favourite guitar albums and probably my favourite Vai album next to Sex & Religion.

AdeTuono

7,606 posts

250 months

Saturday 25th June 2011
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Malam said:
I love Flex-Able. It's one of my all time favourite guitar albums and probably my favourite Vai album next to Sex & Religion.
Ditto; there's also Flex-able Leftovers, which you'd expect to be the dross left over (sic) from the original, but it has 'F*ck Yourself' on it, one of his better moments (IMO), and very much in the style of Zappa.