|
|
|
Written by Dan England
|
|
Thursday, 08 May 2008 |
|
|
|
|

Eric Bellamy |
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
Rick Glynn of Greeley and Paige Omi of Boulder rock out while playing in a “Guitar Hero” tournament last Friday night at Old Chicago in Greeley.
Christie Lind used to play piano, but only because her parents made her take lessons. She, like thousands of other kids forced to spend sunny days inside playing “Chopsticks,” hated it.
But, like thousands of others, she now spends those same sunny days inside playing “Guitar Hero.” She’s addicted to it.
“Guitar Hero,” in case you live on Planet Ambien, is a game where you push color-coded buttons on a “guitar” to play songs such as Heart’s “Barracuda,” Muse’s “Knights of Cydonia” and Kiss’ “Rock ’n’ Roll All Nite.” The game’s popularity really took off with “Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock” and has inspired contests in bars, “Guitar Hero” parties and YouTube clips of kids playing Dragonforce’s “Through The Fire And Flames,” the game’s toughest song.
Even the Greeley Stampede is hosting a “Guitar Hero” competition every Friday until May 23, offering free tickets to the Poison concert and, to the champion of the finals, a signed guitar from the band and a chance to meet them.
For Lind of Greeley, the obsession started when she was visiting her cousins’ house one day and they were playing, and the little snots (they’re actually 13 and 10) were stomping her at the game. She’s 21 and was fed up. So she practiced, and then her husband, Eric, bought her the game.
“You feel like a rock star when you play,” Lind said.
Eric bought the X-Box 360 for “Halo 3,” but his wife is dominating the console these days.
“I think, at times, he thinks, ‘I should have never bought that for her,’” she said and laughed.
The video game, along with the similar “Rock Band” (that one has more instruments), is one of the few that appeals to the masses. Females play it along with males, the 10-year-olds like it as much as the 40-year-olds (and they play the same songs, more on that in a minute) and even those who rarely play games (Lind was one of them) enjoy it.
“Halo 3” may be about destroying and shooting as many things as possible (albeit with a cool storyline), but Paige Omi, a freshman at the University of Boulder, loves the fact that “Guitar Hero” is one of the few popular games that isn’t about just blowing stuff up. She was at last Friday’s “Guitar Hero” contest.
“It’s a challenge but I can actually play it and understand it, unlike all those other games,” Omi said. “You can recognize the music and dance and play.”
A “Wired” article recently asserted that the game was turning people on to learning how to play real guitar. That could be true, with some guitar places offering discounts to gamers buying the real thing, but Rick Busson, who teaches guitar at Aims Community College, isn’t seeing it .
“People go on and on about the game,” Busson said. “But there doesn’t seem to be a connection there. Video games are instantaneous gratification. Music lessons don’t fit that description.”
It usually takes at least two years , Busson said, of hard work before a player gets something back.
“I think the game might create a misconception about how fast you can play guitar,” he said. “We already have a little bit of that with guitar anyway.”
Busson wants to play the game, however, and he does see some value in it. His daughter, Nicole, 19, plays the game.
“If it does spark an interest in music, if it makes people see the power of music, it could be a good thing,” he said. “But I don’t see Nicole picking up the guitar.”
Nick Glynn’s boys, however, just might learn to play an instrument because of “Guitar Hero” and “Rock Band.”
“We bought it for my kids to give them an appreciation for music,” said Glynn, 41, of Greeley. “Now they sing the songs on the radio and download them to their iPod.”
They wouldn’t have known many of the songs Glynn grew up with, and if they did, they’d probably think they were dorky, but now they like them. His 6-year-old daughter, Evy, loves to sing “Mississippi Queen” on “Rock Band.” His son, Zack, 12, wants to play the drums, and Dustyn, 10, loves the music as well.
So he only bought the game for his kids, right?
Well, no.
“I didn’t think I’d like it as much as I do, but it grabs you,” Glynn said. “Then Zack blows me away, and I say, ‘All right, let’s put it away.’”
TO GO • The Greeley Stampede Guitar Hero contest lasts for three more weeks. • Tonight, Old Chicago, 4709 S. Timberline Road, Fort Collins. • May 15 at the Cactus Canyon, 1742 Greeley Mall in Greeley. • May 23 at Old Chicago, 2349 29th St., Greeley. • Sign-up starts at 8:30 p.m. and the competition starts at 10 p.m. It is free to play.
————— | Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. |
|
|  | "Humankind cannot gain anything without first giving something in return. To obtain, something of equal value must be lost. That is Alchemy's first law of Equivalent Exchange. In those days, we really believed that to be the world's one, and only truth." | |
|  | We're not that bright, even though in our own little world, we're geniuses. We like 80s hair bands and one-hit wonders, but among us we have respectable tastes, too. Metallica, Iron Maiden, U2. Pursuit of all things trivial is a lifestyle, not just a game. We like some sports, love other sports, and can find something to say about anything. We watch TV and movies and we've read a book or two, even a few classics (Yes, Classic Comics count!)
We call it insight, you call it what you will. | |
|  | Felix Wong is an outdoor enthusiast living in Fort Collins. A mechanical engineer by day, he is especially passionate about bicycling, running, and backpacking. | |
|  | Hola Amigos! I'm Sandra. I like to believe that people are 70 percent good and 30 percent dumb. I'm stickin to that story. Reading this blog might make you want to be good, but probably just dumb. | |
|  | Donovan Henderson is editor of NEXTnc. | |
|  | Here at Nextnc we have some characters. Get a sneak peak behind the curtain and find out what amusing antics our staffers get themselves into on a weekly basis. | |
|  | What is up FoCo?
I am a recent college graduate of Minnesota State University Moorhead. After recieving my B.A. in English and Mass Communications this past August I moved down to Colorado.
I enjoy long walks on the beach, candlelight dinners, and heavy metal. My hobbies include reading and writing, music, movies, and getting drunk. Some of my favorite contemporary authors include Bret Easton Ellis, Chuck Palahniuk, and Kurt Vonnegut. My top movies are anything directed by Kubrick. I enjoy listening to anything that rocks.
Right now I am just trying to get to know Colorado and FoCo better. Mostly in order to find the best drink specials on each day that ends in Y. So if you know where I can get a cheap drunk on, let me know!
--Drew | |
|  | Life's little morsels of inspiration, observation and encouragement seen through the eyes of the Nextnc reporter.
| |
|  | Ms. Giles currently lives in Colorado where she stars in her own private reality show. She writes aphoristic accounts of her life, taken completely out of context, and embellished with characters and situations disguised to resemble something close to interesting. | |
|  | over and out | |
|  | My name is Michelle Turley and I'm 28 years old. I live in Severance with my hubbie, Brandon. We have 2 dogs and a cat. We enjoy camping, four-wheeling, and just being in the mountains. I like to cook, clean (go figure), flea market, and play poker. I have so much to say about poker... | | |
|