Who is mars bonfire




















Share this page:. The Rise of Will Smith. Around The Web Provided by Taboola. Create a list ». Interactive Entertainment and Activision. See all related lists ». Do you have a demo reel? Add it to your IMDb page. Find out more at IMDbPro ». How Much Have You Seen? How much of Mars Bonfire's work have you seen?

What was your main reason for starting an IMDb Account? Known For. RoboCop 2 Soundtrack. Easy Rider Soundtrack. Filth Soundtrack. Show all Hide all Show by Jump to: Composer Music department Soundtrack Self. Hide Show Composer 2 credits. Hide Show Music department 1 credit.

Hide Show Soundtrack credits. Video short writer: "Born to Be Wild". TV Series writer - 1 episode - Nancy Sorrell I writer: "Born To Be Wild".

If there's any man qualified to compile the ultimate collection of road anthems, it's Bonfire, who wrote the most famous road anthem of them all, Born To Be Wild, for Steppenwolf. After climbing to 2 on the Billboard chart in the summer of , the song ingrained itself into the counterculture after featuring in Dennis Hopper's classic road movie Easy Rider.

With this record I knew something very different from the Big Band Swing my parents listened to had arrived! The sensuous, slightly distorted slightly whiney vocal by Elvis with the field holler whoop at the end was mesmerising, as was the reverb- and echo-drenched guitar of Scotty Moore and the slap bass of Bill Black. For three guys with no drummer they had a full and solidly rhythmic sound. I was irresistibly drawn to this new music, and although I didn't realise it at the time, my course in life had been set: I would create music.

I listened to it over and over again until my Mother took my 45 single away. And the line: " She's the queen of all the teens " stirred feelings at a time when I was becoming aware of girls. This is a song that stands on its own, independent of interpretation! I knew nothing of music at the time, and yet it was obvious that in its complexity this was way way beyond the infectious three chord blues based Rockabilly music I loved.

It was an aria fit for an opera that never arrived. This song was always a reference point in my writing, encouraging me to expand the melody and chord progression. Chuck Berry was a great rock'n'roll singer, and a distinctive showman with his duck walk. And his driving guitar style - in which the fifth note of a chord moves to the sixth and continues back and forth - is instantly recognisable as the backbone of early rock'n'roll.

He would be celebrated for any of these skills, yet his songwriting soared into a realm that few have entered. He could tell an engaging story that moved through time and place and do so in natural everyday language that never felt contrived or forced and then put it to a simple and happy melody that the world couldn't help but sing! Like Roy Orbison, he has always been a reference point.



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