The Songs

The songs are a really big part of any music game. The cool thing is that there is a decent amount of overlap with Rock Band 2, so you don't need to feel left out of some of the more solid songs no matter which game you pick up. Guitar Hero World Tour has a decidedly more classic influence than RB and RB2, featuring Hendrix, Steely Dan, the Allman Brothers, CCR, Willie Nelson, and other staples. But we also see some completely rockin modern hits from bands like Tool. Especially Tool. Did we mention Tool? There's also some 30 Seconds to Mars, Paramore, and plenty of other modern bands. There's less 90's stuff here, but they've got the important stuff like Foo Fighters, Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., and Blink 182.

I would have a really hard time choosing, and I'm glad I've got access to both games. Honestly I wish I could merge all the songs onto one platform though. But the music is really important to consider when deciding what game to pick up. So here's the list.

Nirvana - About a Girl (Unplugged)
Enemy The Enemy - Aggro
The Guess Who - American Woman
Trust - Antisocial
Lenny Kravitz - Are You Gonna Go My Way
Muse - Assassin
System of a Down - B.Y.O.B.
Wings - Band on the Run
Michael Jackson - Beat It
311 - Beautiful Disaster
Ozzy Osbourne - Crazy Train
Blink-182 - Dammit
Sting - Demolition Man (Live)
Steely Dan - Do It Again
Radio Futura - Escuela de Calor
Foo Fighters - Everlong
Survivor - Eye of the Tiger
Dinosaur Jr. - Feel the Pain
Modest Mouse - Float On
Korn - Freak on a Leash
Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way
Anouk - Good God
Beatsteaks - Hail to the Freaks
Pat Benatar - Heartbreaker
Filter - Hey Man, Nice Shot
Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band - Hollywood Nights
Van Halen - Hot for Teacher
Eagles - Hotel California
Steve Miller Band - The Joker
MC5's Wayne Kramer - Kick Out the Jams
30 Seconds to Mars - The Kill
The Mars Volta - L'Via L'Viaquez
Los Lobos - La Bamba
Silversun Pickups - Lazy Eye
Bon Jovi - Livin' on a Prayer
Doors The Doors - Love Me Two Times
Cult The Cult - Love Removal Machine
The Stone Roses - Love Spreads
Jimmy Eat World - The Middle
Paramore - Misery Business
Tokio Hotel - Monsoon
Jane's Addiction - Mountain Song
Ozzy Osbourne - Mr. Crowley
Answer The Answer - Never Too Late
Beastie Boys - No Sleep Till Brooklyn
Negramaro - Nuvole E Lenzuola
Interpol - Obstacle 1
Willie Nelson - On the Road Again (Live)
At the Drive-In - One Armed Scissor
R.E.M. - The One I Love
Blondie - One Way or Another
Lacuna Coil - Our Truth
Motörhead - Overkill
Tool - Parabola
Sex Pistols - Pretty Vacant
Living End The Living End - Prisoner of Society
Dream Theater - Pull Me Under
The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Purple Haze (Live)
The Allman Brothers Band - Ramblin' Man
Rise Against - Re-Education (Through Labor)
Billy Idol - Rebel Yell
Lostprophets - Rooftops (A Liberation Broadcast)
Sublime - Santeria
Joe Satriani - Satch Boogie
Tool - Schism
Bullet for My Valentine - Scream Aim Fire
Coldplay - Shiver
Oasis - Some Might Say
NOFX - Soul Doubt
No Doubt - Spiderwebs
Black Label Society - Stillborn
Ted Nugent - Stranglehold
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Sweet Home Alabama (Live)
Ted Nugent - Ted Nugent Guitar Duel
The Smashing Pumpkins - Today
Airbourne - Too Much, Too Young, Too Fast
Stuck in the Sound - Toy Boy
Metallica - Trapped Under Ice
Creedence Clearwater Revival - Up Around the Bend
Tool - Vicarious
Kent - VinterNoll2
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club - Weapon of Choice
Linkin Park - What I've Done
Jimi Hendrix - The Wind Cries Mary
HushPuppies - You're Gonna Say Yeah
Zakk Wylde - Zakk Wylde Guitar Duel

In The Studio: Creating Music Interface and Game Modes
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  • crash resistant - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    Reply:

    1: You can hit both cymbals (can't believe I misspelled that 100 times) anytime and you will NOT lose your streak. It will automatically hit whatever notes were there. Try it. You need to try it before assuming you will lose your streak. Perhaps you are trying it at a bad time and not hitting them at the same time? I find this a fun and rewarding gameplay element. The only downside is that it is harder than the solo-session that RB provides. However the downside to RB is the solo-sections are not part of the original songs and, IMO, ruin the drumming in the song.

    2: The kick will not slide if you don't push it away with your foot. You should practice going down with the foot instead of forward. As a novice drummer I found my leg to wear out faster and get knee pain after long sessions when I was carelessly kicking instead of bouncing or tapping.... Seriously- try aiming "further up" on the pedal instead of just applying random pressure on the entire thing.
    In response to this article I had a friend play who I consider, well, an animal. His pedal moved about 6 inches by the end of Soul Doubt. This guy isn't a drummer or coordinated by any means- so it was the very best "worst case" scenario I could find.
    In comparison, the RB2 pedal is crap because it feels like you have to travel twice the distance. I would prefer to hone my skills to use the GH pedal and have a much better experience than use the current RB2.
    With that said, I can't wait for GH5 or RB3's kits- assuming they are even more tweaked.

    3: The cymbals are not responsive in terms of "bounce"... I agree. They aren't brass or sheet metal... they are really thick pieces of crap. However they are 100x better than another drum to emulate a cymbal.

    4: Oh yeah.. you can go progressive with cymbals with drums... true. However it's never going to appear or feel natural. It's relatively much harder and requires practice on different kits as they are all arranged differently.
    E.g. I began drumming on a kit with a snare, two toms, and a floor tom. I got used to the 4. Then I played at a friend's house for several days and he had only 1 tom. It took some serious getting used to. Similar to having a splash cymbal front and center between your toms. It's awesome- but awkward at first.

    5: The interface loads faster time-wise and feels better overall. Changing difficulty in the middle of a song with 4 players takes, at the most, 30 seconds. Try that on RB. (oh wait you can't) hehe

    6: I was in line in front of Best Buy on Sunday morning. There were 24 people in line. After the store manager came out and asked to divide the line based on preorders, he asked for a raise of hands. I followed with this question: "HOW MANY OF US ARE BUYING THIS GAME BECAUSE THERE ARE 3 TOOL SONGS ON IT?"
    I would say... all but 5-10 at the most didn't raise their hand. Proof that GH may just be a huge marketing game. (songs, cymbals, studio, etc)
    I still love it and will buy both games until they merge or I die.
  • aGreenAgent - Saturday, November 1, 2008 - link

    I couldn't disagree more with on the drum section of the review.

    First of all, the kick pedal is substantially better than Rock Band's. I've been playing drums for years, and this is much closer to the feel of a real kick pedal. I can't get the kick to move one bit. Once I set that kick pedal on the ground, it usually takes me a few seconds to peel it back off the ground. Enormous improvement over rock band. Also, double and triple kicks on the RB pedal are almost painfully difficult, but they're easy on the GHWT pedal. This pedal just feels much more like a real pedal.

    Also, I've had no trouble playing anything, the layout of the drum kit in the game matches my real kit's almost exactly (except the ride is a little further to the left than it would be).

  • dblagent - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    Look on the GHWT forums and you will see a LOT of upset people with instrument problems. The drums have got some press now, and they say that new production is fixed, but it is not confirmed as of yet that is for sure.

    As for me, I purchased the guitar and game kit, and the down strum broke on the guitar after just three hours use on easy mode! This seems to be a common problem reported widely and as of yet there has been no reply from the company. I exchanged and got a new one, and it now has about 4 hours on it and the strum has started squeaking horribly on the up strums. I strum up, my wife strums down so it is getting equal wear, but now this one needs exchanged as it is too bad to play with that is for sure! This was also reported on the GHWT forums and I can now confirm it too. Moral is, maybe wait for them to sort the issues out before I can recommend purchasing.

    Lastly, the manufacturer is telling people to send in the instruments for exchange or repair, but you have to pay for the shipping! When RB had trouble they helped the customers for free and footed the bill, GH is not going to apparently. Not very cool on their part, and it is angering the early adopters who are the biggest fans. Hope they can sort all this out.

    Now to do my second exchange tomorrow. Do like the game itself though, it just works better with my old guitars! I also looked at the demo guitars on display at Best Buy and the strum is different than what you get in the retail box. It is better feeling, stronger spring and better click feedback and feels GREAT. The ones you get in the box are more mushy and feel different. The ones in the store are wired, but otherwise identical units. I assume they are wired so no batteries and no theft, but I want one of those! They actually work. Myself and two employees compared both the first bad one and the one I exchanged for and there we could all tell the difference in the strum. Strange.

  • djdjohnson - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    It's interesting that Rock Band is given the nod in this review. I own all of the RB and GH games, and I definitely prefer GH over RB.

    The main reason is that I find Rock Band not challenging enough. With most songs in RB, I 5-* the songs the first time through on Expert, and pass all of them on the first attempt (with a couple exceptions). In GH I 5-* a few at the beginning of a career, but by 1/3 into the career I'm barely passing the songs the first time through. Any farther and I usually have to play them a time or two before I can get it down.

    I may be off base here, but if people are able to breeze through the hardest difficulty level in a game the first time through, doesn't that take some of the fun out of it?

    My other big gripe with RB is the constant repetition of songs. When you pick the "random set list" option the game might pick a song, then that same song appears again on the next set list you have to play. If all of the songs were awesome, this wouldn't be such an annoyance, but it seems like most of the time it's the songs I don't like playing. It has made me turn off the game a few times because of it. Playing through a bad song once is frustrating enough, but to be asked to play it twice nearly in a row is enough to send me over the edge.

    And contrary to the opinion of the author of this article, I actually like the layout of the GHWT drums. I did have to run their calibration utility to get mine to work properly, but once I did they are WAY better in every way than the RB version. And I actually like the pedal better too, despite its "wobbliness." It's a lot easier on the calf muscles than the Rock Band version. No more burning leg muscles for me.
  • Woodchuck2000 - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    I'm with you on that one... The fundamental problem I found with RB is that all of the songs are just too easy. If I can sight-read my way through on Expert getting 5* all the way, then where's the challenge?

    I actually like the fact that I'm stuck on the last couple of songs for GH3 on expert - it's always good to have a challenge!

    Does anyone know how guitar difficulty compares with RB1 and GH3?
  • crimson117 - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    Regarding paying for gigs, many bands have a choice:
    1. Get hired directly by the venue/event organizers and get paid a flat rate (like playing a wedding or cruise ship)
    2. Agreeing to play at a venue for no fee and just splitting the ticket revenue with the venue
    3. Pay to rent out the venue and sell your own tickets, provide your own security, etc, taking on the risk and keeping the profits yourself.

    Phish actually got started that 3rd way. "On January 26, 1989, Phish played the Paradise Rock Club in Boston, Massachusetts. The owners of the club had never heard of Phish and refused to book them, so the band rented the club for the night. The show sold out due to the caravan of fans that had traveled to see the band."
  • DerekWilson - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    i've done 1) and 2) but never 3) ...

    that's a very interesting point though ...
  • Myrandex - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    On the last page..."We prefer the non-cartoonish look over Rock Band, but that's just a preference issue really."

    I really think RB looks a lot less cartoonish than GHWT.

    I think that I will rent this one to just play some of the cooler songs on here. I'm all about LP's "What I've Done" and the Tool songs look pretty sweet. There were some other ones on the list too that looked good, but of course there will always be some bad ones too.
  • Sanctusx2 - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    You mentioned that the RB2 instruments don't have XBL headset plugs. That's incorrect.

    I usually play guitar and drums with the headset plugged in and it works fine. Maybe you missed it? They are pretty small holes.
  • jnmfox - Friday, October 31, 2008 - link

    That's what she said...

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