In an interview, Dom said that while recording the snare drum in the field of sheep, the mics were close to a river so each time he plays the snare drum in the song, the river can be heard along with it. The banging can apparently be heard near the end of the song if the drums are isolated. Examples of this included the leaked release of Drones months early, which turned out to be the released songs up until that point and several renditions of Guiding Light afterwards, and the repeated edits to Setlist.fm's statistics for new Muse gigs to include many performances of Guiding Light (sometimes over twenty) and mock titles such as "Supermassive Guiding Light" and "Guiding Light Syndrome".Īccording to a video posted by Zane Lowe prior to the release of "The Resistance", Matt said that while recording this song in Milan, the music was so loud that a neighbour came over and began banging on the door. This song is treated as a joke by many online members of the Muse fanbase and is often used in humourous acts. The drums at the start bear a heavy resemblance to "Vienna" by Ultravox The intro is a crossfade from United States of Eurasia (song), featuring the same jetfighter sound. The second song on The Resistance with a guitar solo. These types of harmonies have been banned from rock music for at least 18 years, possibly longer." Matt said, "This track is about a troubled relationship and is influenced by 1980s cheesy stadium rock! There is a guitar solo with a deliberate screaming harmonic. Matthew Bellamy, Dominic Howard, Christopher Wolstenholme Studio Bellini, Lake Como and Milan, Italy, 2009 Live at Rome Olympic Stadium CD (10), DVD (14).
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