guitar hero speaks
guitar hero speaks
When you’re a real-life guitarist like Billy Squier, seeing fans trying to emulate your behavior in a video game can be weird.
Squier, whose “Lonely Is the Night” was in “Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the ’80s” and returns this week in “Guitar Hero 5,” says he once saw some kids playing his hit in an electronics store.
“They were so focused on the game they didn’t even notice who was looking over their shoulder,” he says. “When I do this song in concert, there’ll always be a few young kids playing air guitar ... which I’d attribute to the ’Guitar Hero’ experience.”
For younger musicians, landing a tune on “Guitar Hero” means invaluable exposure.
“It’s ubiquitous, especially among younger fans,” says AFI guitarist Jade Puget.
His band’s “Miss Murder” was on “Guitar Hero III,” and the AFI track “Medicate” is debuting on “GH5.” Premiering a new single in a video game “isn’t something we agonized over,” says Puget. “The fans really enjoy it.
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