Chords for Armored Saint Rewind | Symbol of Salvation
Tempo:
141.1 bpm
Chords used:
Eb
Db
E
Gb
Bb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
When [Eb] we made Simple Salvation, we got together with John Cornarens, who's a friend from years back.
It's funny, me and John are now playing basketball.
He brought me into his pickup basketball game, and I'm eternally grateful for that.
So I see John a lot now.
But he directed a couple videos for Simple Salvation.
Brian asked [Eb] me if I wanted to direct a video for them, and it was Rain of Fire.
And I said, yeah, I'd love to.
[Db]
[B]
[Db] Brian said, do [Ab] whatever you want, talk to the band.
And I talked to the [Db] band, and [Gb] what do the lyrics mean?
And John said, it's just abstract, it doesn't mean anything.
[Eb] So I was an art history minor in college, so I thought, okay, [Gb] how about I shoot black and white,
I'll throw in some color random photos of [Bb] Hieronymus Bosch, who was a random hippie from the [B] 14th century.
And so he did weird, [Eb] eclectic things.
And Joey liked the idea, so that's what we did.
We shot basically live performance at the Country Club of Rain of Fire, about [Ebm] 10 takes.
It was our first video for Metal Blade ever, really.
[Ab] That was our first one.
I [Ebm] just showed up and I said, I'm not going to put a shirt on today.
And I wasn't something I really did.
I don't know why.
Well, you were cut, man.
You were buff.
Well, I was a lot younger.
[E] I mean, it wasn't like you had a gut or anything.
You looked cool.
Brian came down to the shooting, and he's like, [B] stop, everyone stop!
[Db] Put on your shirt!
He did that?
I don't remember that at all.
He totally stopped.
He's like, dude, what are you doing?
Put your shirt on.
And I was like, too late.
We were already like [Eb] halfway done.
And I said, I'm not going to do it.
He was pissed.
He was mad at me.
[F] He forgave me, though.
That's funny.
I totally did not remember that [Eb] at all.
Oh, yeah.
That's great.
[Gb] [Eb]
Brian says, hey, I want to do another video.
[Ab] He said, do Last Train Home.
I said, okay, [Dbm] what do you want me to do?
Conception?
He goes, I don't know, just do something [E] with trains.
[Db] So that was the direction.
So we actually found a [G] train museum [Abm] out in Paris, California,
and spent a day out [Ab] there.
I wanted to do a 360 shot.
And so that's where the drones were on one spot.
I put Joey up on top of a tanker or something,
and a few [G] other guys were walking around.
[F] And then John starts walking, and we got lucky.
The wind just blew his hair back.
Just as he sang, I was just like, a fluke.
And then Phil had brought his lizard out, so I said,
well, [E] let's put the lizard in the shot.
It was all random.
And they did [D] whatever I asked them to do.
Joey did [Dbm] climb like a water tower.
And how'd you get your cord up there?
It must have been cordless.
Yeah, [Db] it was cordless.
But anyways, it's just a little bit, I don't know,
what's the proper way to describe it?
We were trying to have a more mass appeal.
Yeah, a little more [Gb] commercial, a little more mersh.
[Db]
[A]
[E] [Gbm]
[Dbm] Both of the videos helped out that record tremendously.
That was when Headbanger's Ball was red hot.
They had these battles.
We went up against, I feel like it was like Danger Danger,
and we lost, right?
We lost, and we were like, what?
How did we lose to them?
Number one is that they're not [Bb] even really metal.
No disrespect.
But it just was like
But I guess they were playing some kind of hair metal bands.
And so they beat us.
And so that kind of affected Last Train Home's popularity
with Headbanger's Ball, which kind of sucked.
But Brain of Fire did really well.
[Gb] [Eb]
Your last train
[Gb]
[Abm] [F] Brian or Tracy came to me and said,
[B] Hey, we want to do a tribute to Dave [Db] Pritchard.
And they had all this stuff,
and so I came up with A Trip Through Red Times.
[Dbm] [Db]
[Gbm] [Dm] [A]
[D] [Gbm] [E]
[Ab] [Am]
[A] [Bm] [Am]
[C] [Gb] [Bb]
[A] [E] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[A] I laced videos together with just recollections
basically about Dave, and we used to hang out
underneath the bridge in Pasadena, Suicide Bridge.
[Gbm] We [N] went to a bar or a pool hall,
and I went to one place where they're rehearsed.
It's like one shot, just with John running circles to get warmed up,
get his energy going, and then he comes to the camera and screams,
I like that, so I'll just use it.
Brian gave me plenty, Brian didn't care what I did, he trusted me.
I did whatever I wanted basically, and it was just kind of just fun.
We were all in sync with what would be cool.
Right now you're going to take a look at the one and only
production video that Armored Saint has made to this day.
It's for a song called Can You Deliver
from the March of the Saint album.
We had a lot of fun making this video.
Shot in 2 days, shows a little bit of the band's acting ability
and some of the band's real ability, and that's on stage.
Check it out, Can You Deliver.
[Eb]
We wanted to try to separate ourselves from the jeans
and high-top tennis shoes.
Or the spandex.
Spandex with the leather belts, and like every [E] band at the time
was basically dressing the same,
so that's kind of why we decided to go the more theatrical route,
if you will, because we [Eb] were into Queen and KISS,
[Db] Alice Cooper, we always loved that sort of,
when you go to a concert like that, you're just in a whole other world.
And so we were influenced by that, and that's how we wanted
to separate ourselves, being huge Road Warrior fans and Mad Max fans.
We had the name, so we said let's incorporate the Arlor
as a combination of, like, Joey used to steal a few items
he stole from telephone poles that were like this aluminum
that he built into his chest plate that was really cool,
and then we got some stuff from Western Costume,
which is a big costume supplier for movies and things.
As a matter of fact, the thing I wore I think was in the movie
The Beastmaster, the breastplate I had.
We had the leather jackets, but we put metal on it,
so it kind of took it to another level of making [Ebm] it seem like armor.
And then we of course did the one show where I actually wore
the whole [D] suit of armor for the first song after the sword fight
and took the [Eb] helmet off, and then there's John.
[G] [Bb]
[F]
[C] We only did that the one show,
because I wasn't going to wear armor every day, every show.
But it was hard to move around that.
Then after that first song, during that show,
we went into this long intro of the second song,
because I had to go offstage and take it off with Zach Harmon's help.
That was cool.
But we were into that [F] until we weren't.
When we went on tour, especially in the heart of winter,
and we were trying to dry our clothes, because we played a gig the night before,
and we went on to put on all this cold, wet leather armor stuff
that just wouldn't dry, because we were in Buffalo, New York in January,
and it was awful.
We started to really detest it.
You dislike it.
[Eb]
But it still lasted a couple years until we finally were like,
okay, I [Ab] think we can be done with this.
I look fondly on those [Ebm] times, and we laugh.
[Eb] We did the one show, was it Metal Blade's 30th anniversary?
I think it was the 30th.
We brought all our stuff that we still had out.
Joey and [Bb] I got wigs [Eb] at a shop here [Db] in Hollywood
that looked similar to the hair we [F] had, and then we came out on stage,
and the crowd went bananas, and it was awesome.
And then we took it off after the first song,
and then they were booing, boo!
I'm not wearing this wig the whole show.
[Bb] You're lucky you got 5 minutes out of me.
Yeah.
[Eb] [Bb] [N]
It's funny, me and John are now playing basketball.
He brought me into his pickup basketball game, and I'm eternally grateful for that.
So I see John a lot now.
But he directed a couple videos for Simple Salvation.
Brian asked [Eb] me if I wanted to direct a video for them, and it was Rain of Fire.
And I said, yeah, I'd love to.
[Db]
[B]
[Db] Brian said, do [Ab] whatever you want, talk to the band.
And I talked to the [Db] band, and [Gb] what do the lyrics mean?
And John said, it's just abstract, it doesn't mean anything.
[Eb] So I was an art history minor in college, so I thought, okay, [Gb] how about I shoot black and white,
I'll throw in some color random photos of [Bb] Hieronymus Bosch, who was a random hippie from the [B] 14th century.
And so he did weird, [Eb] eclectic things.
And Joey liked the idea, so that's what we did.
We shot basically live performance at the Country Club of Rain of Fire, about [Ebm] 10 takes.
It was our first video for Metal Blade ever, really.
[Ab] That was our first one.
I [Ebm] just showed up and I said, I'm not going to put a shirt on today.
And I wasn't something I really did.
I don't know why.
Well, you were cut, man.
You were buff.
Well, I was a lot younger.
[E] I mean, it wasn't like you had a gut or anything.
You looked cool.
Brian came down to the shooting, and he's like, [B] stop, everyone stop!
[Db] Put on your shirt!
He did that?
I don't remember that at all.
He totally stopped.
He's like, dude, what are you doing?
Put your shirt on.
And I was like, too late.
We were already like [Eb] halfway done.
And I said, I'm not going to do it.
He was pissed.
He was mad at me.
[F] He forgave me, though.
That's funny.
I totally did not remember that [Eb] at all.
Oh, yeah.
That's great.
[Gb] [Eb]
Brian says, hey, I want to do another video.
[Ab] He said, do Last Train Home.
I said, okay, [Dbm] what do you want me to do?
Conception?
He goes, I don't know, just do something [E] with trains.
[Db] So that was the direction.
So we actually found a [G] train museum [Abm] out in Paris, California,
and spent a day out [Ab] there.
I wanted to do a 360 shot.
And so that's where the drones were on one spot.
I put Joey up on top of a tanker or something,
and a few [G] other guys were walking around.
[F] And then John starts walking, and we got lucky.
The wind just blew his hair back.
Just as he sang, I was just like, a fluke.
And then Phil had brought his lizard out, so I said,
well, [E] let's put the lizard in the shot.
It was all random.
And they did [D] whatever I asked them to do.
Joey did [Dbm] climb like a water tower.
And how'd you get your cord up there?
It must have been cordless.
Yeah, [Db] it was cordless.
But anyways, it's just a little bit, I don't know,
what's the proper way to describe it?
We were trying to have a more mass appeal.
Yeah, a little more [Gb] commercial, a little more mersh.
[Db]
[A]
[E] [Gbm]
[Dbm] Both of the videos helped out that record tremendously.
That was when Headbanger's Ball was red hot.
They had these battles.
We went up against, I feel like it was like Danger Danger,
and we lost, right?
We lost, and we were like, what?
How did we lose to them?
Number one is that they're not [Bb] even really metal.
No disrespect.
But it just was like
But I guess they were playing some kind of hair metal bands.
And so they beat us.
And so that kind of affected Last Train Home's popularity
with Headbanger's Ball, which kind of sucked.
But Brain of Fire did really well.
[Gb] [Eb]
Your last train
[Gb]
[Abm] [F] Brian or Tracy came to me and said,
[B] Hey, we want to do a tribute to Dave [Db] Pritchard.
And they had all this stuff,
and so I came up with A Trip Through Red Times.
[Dbm] [Db]
[Gbm] [Dm] [A]
[D] [Gbm] [E]
[Ab] [Am]
[A] [Bm] [Am]
[C] [Gb] [Bb]
[A] [E] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[A] I laced videos together with just recollections
basically about Dave, and we used to hang out
underneath the bridge in Pasadena, Suicide Bridge.
[Gbm] We [N] went to a bar or a pool hall,
and I went to one place where they're rehearsed.
It's like one shot, just with John running circles to get warmed up,
get his energy going, and then he comes to the camera and screams,
I like that, so I'll just use it.
Brian gave me plenty, Brian didn't care what I did, he trusted me.
I did whatever I wanted basically, and it was just kind of just fun.
We were all in sync with what would be cool.
Right now you're going to take a look at the one and only
production video that Armored Saint has made to this day.
It's for a song called Can You Deliver
from the March of the Saint album.
We had a lot of fun making this video.
Shot in 2 days, shows a little bit of the band's acting ability
and some of the band's real ability, and that's on stage.
Check it out, Can You Deliver.
[Eb]
We wanted to try to separate ourselves from the jeans
and high-top tennis shoes.
Or the spandex.
Spandex with the leather belts, and like every [E] band at the time
was basically dressing the same,
so that's kind of why we decided to go the more theatrical route,
if you will, because we [Eb] were into Queen and KISS,
[Db] Alice Cooper, we always loved that sort of,
when you go to a concert like that, you're just in a whole other world.
And so we were influenced by that, and that's how we wanted
to separate ourselves, being huge Road Warrior fans and Mad Max fans.
We had the name, so we said let's incorporate the Arlor
as a combination of, like, Joey used to steal a few items
he stole from telephone poles that were like this aluminum
that he built into his chest plate that was really cool,
and then we got some stuff from Western Costume,
which is a big costume supplier for movies and things.
As a matter of fact, the thing I wore I think was in the movie
The Beastmaster, the breastplate I had.
We had the leather jackets, but we put metal on it,
so it kind of took it to another level of making [Ebm] it seem like armor.
And then we of course did the one show where I actually wore
the whole [D] suit of armor for the first song after the sword fight
and took the [Eb] helmet off, and then there's John.
[G] [Bb]
[F]
[C] We only did that the one show,
because I wasn't going to wear armor every day, every show.
But it was hard to move around that.
Then after that first song, during that show,
we went into this long intro of the second song,
because I had to go offstage and take it off with Zach Harmon's help.
That was cool.
But we were into that [F] until we weren't.
When we went on tour, especially in the heart of winter,
and we were trying to dry our clothes, because we played a gig the night before,
and we went on to put on all this cold, wet leather armor stuff
that just wouldn't dry, because we were in Buffalo, New York in January,
and it was awful.
We started to really detest it.
You dislike it.
[Eb]
But it still lasted a couple years until we finally were like,
okay, I [Ab] think we can be done with this.
I look fondly on those [Ebm] times, and we laugh.
[Eb] We did the one show, was it Metal Blade's 30th anniversary?
I think it was the 30th.
We brought all our stuff that we still had out.
Joey and [Bb] I got wigs [Eb] at a shop here [Db] in Hollywood
that looked similar to the hair we [F] had, and then we came out on stage,
and the crowd went bananas, and it was awesome.
And then we took it off after the first song,
and then they were booing, boo!
I'm not wearing this wig the whole show.
[Bb] You're lucky you got 5 minutes out of me.
Yeah.
[Eb] [Bb] [N]
Key:
Eb
Db
E
Gb
Bb
Eb
Db
E
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
When [Eb] we made Simple Salvation, we got together with John Cornarens, who's a friend from years back.
It's funny, me and John are now playing basketball.
He brought me into his _ pickup basketball game, and I'm eternally grateful for that.
So I see John a lot now.
But he directed a couple videos for Simple Salvation.
_ Brian asked [Eb] me if I wanted to direct a video for them, and it was Rain of Fire.
And I said, yeah, I'd love to. _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Db] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [B] _ _
[Db] Brian said, do [Ab] whatever you want, talk to the band.
And I talked to the [Db] band, and [Gb] what do the lyrics mean?
And _ John said, it's just abstract, it doesn't mean anything.
_ [Eb] So I was an art history minor in college, so I thought, okay, [Gb] how about I shoot black and white,
I'll throw in some color random photos of [Bb] Hieronymus Bosch, who was a random hippie from the [B] 14th century.
And so he did weird, [Eb] eclectic things.
And Joey liked the idea, so that's what we did.
We shot basically live performance at the Country Club of Rain of Fire, about [Ebm] 10 takes.
It was our first video for Metal Blade ever, really.
[Ab] That was our first one.
I [Ebm] just showed up and I said, I'm not going to put a shirt on today.
And I wasn't something I really did.
I don't know why.
Well, you were cut, man.
You were buff.
Well, I was a lot younger. _ _ _
[E] I mean, it wasn't like you had a gut or anything.
You looked cool.
Brian came down to the shooting, and he's like, [B] stop, everyone stop!
_ _ _ [Db] Put on your shirt!
He did that?
I don't remember that at all.
He totally stopped.
He's like, dude, what are you doing?
Put your shirt on.
And I was like, _ too late.
We were already like [Eb] halfway done.
And I said, I'm not going to do it.
He was pissed.
He was mad at me.
[F] He forgave me, though.
That's funny.
I totally did not remember that [Eb] at all.
Oh, yeah.
That's great. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Gb] _ _ [Eb] _
Brian says, hey, I want to do another video.
[Ab] He said, do Last Train Home.
I said, okay, [Dbm] what do you want me to do?
Conception?
He goes, I don't know, just do something [E] with trains.
_ [Db] So that was the direction.
So we actually found a [G] train museum [Abm] out in Paris, California,
and spent a day out [Ab] there.
I wanted to do a 360 shot.
And so that's where the drones were on one spot.
I put Joey up on top of a tanker or something,
and a few [G] other guys were walking around.
[F] And then John starts walking, and we got lucky.
The wind just blew his hair back.
Just as he sang, I was just like, a fluke.
And then Phil had brought his lizard out, so I said,
well, [E] let's put the lizard in the shot.
It was all random.
_ And they did [D] whatever I asked them to do.
Joey did [Dbm] climb like a water tower.
And how'd you get your cord up there?
It must have been cordless.
Yeah, [Db] it was cordless.
But anyways, it's just a little bit, I don't know,
what's the proper way to describe it?
We were trying to have a more mass appeal.
Yeah, a little more [Gb] commercial, a little more mersh.
[Db] _
_ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
[Dbm] Both of the videos helped out that record tremendously.
That was when Headbanger's Ball was red hot.
They had these battles.
We went up against, I feel like it was like Danger Danger,
and we lost, right?
We lost, and we were like, what?
How did we lose to them?
Number one is that they're not [Bb] even really metal.
No disrespect.
But it just was _ _ like_
But I guess they were playing some kind of hair metal bands.
And _ _ so they beat us.
And so that kind of affected Last Train Home's popularity
with Headbanger's Ball, which kind of sucked.
But Brain of Fire did really well.
_ [Gb] _ _ [Eb] _
Your last _ train_
[Gb] _ _ _
_ _ [Abm] _ _ _ _ [F] Brian or Tracy came to me and said,
[B] Hey, we want to do a tribute to Dave [Db] Pritchard.
And they had all this stuff,
and so I came up with A Trip Through Red Times. _
[Dbm] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ [Gbm] _ _ [Dm] _ _ [A] _ _
[D] _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ [Ab] _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ [Bm] _ _ [Am] _
[C] _ _ [Gb] _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _
_ [E] _ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
[A] _ _ _ I laced videos together with just recollections
basically about Dave, and we used to hang out
underneath the bridge in Pasadena, Suicide Bridge.
[Gbm] We [N] went to a bar or a pool hall,
and I went to one place where they're rehearsed.
It's like one shot, just with John running circles to get warmed up,
get his energy going, and then he comes to the camera and screams,
I like that, so I'll just use it. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Brian gave me plenty, Brian didn't care what I did, he trusted me.
I did whatever I wanted basically, and _ it was just kind of just fun.
We were all in sync with what would be cool.
Right now you're going to take a look at the one and only
_ production video that Armored Saint has made to this day.
It's for a song called Can You Deliver
from the March of the Saint album.
We had a lot of fun making this video.
Shot in 2 days, shows a little bit of the band's acting ability
and some of the band's real ability, and that's on stage.
Check it out, Can You Deliver.
_ [Eb] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ We wanted to try to separate ourselves from the jeans
_ _ and high-top tennis shoes.
Or the spandex.
Spandex with the leather belts, and like every [E] band at the time
was basically dressing the same,
so that's kind of why we _ decided to go the more _ _ theatrical route,
if you will, because we [Eb] were into Queen and _ KISS,
[Db] _ Alice Cooper, we always loved that sort of,
when you go to a concert like that, you're just in a whole other world.
And so we were influenced by that, and that's how we wanted
to separate ourselves, being huge Road Warrior fans and Mad Max fans.
We had the name, so we said let's incorporate the Arlor
as a combination of, like, Joey used to steal a few items
he stole from telephone poles that were like this aluminum
that he built into his chest plate that was really cool,
and then we got some stuff from Western Costume,
which is a big costume supplier for movies and things.
As a matter of fact, the thing I wore I think was in the movie
The Beastmaster, the breastplate I had.
We had the leather jackets, but we put metal on it,
so it kind of took it to another level of making [Ebm] it seem like armor.
And _ then we of course did the one show where I actually wore
the whole [D] suit of armor for the first song after the sword fight
and took the [Eb] helmet off, and then there's John.
_ [G] _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] We only did that the one show,
because I wasn't going to wear armor every day, every show.
But it was hard to move around that.
Then after that first song, during that show,
we went into this long intro of the second song,
because I had to go offstage and take it off _ with Zach Harmon's help.
That was cool.
But we were into that [F] until we weren't.
When we went on tour, especially in the heart of winter,
and we were trying to dry our clothes, because we played a gig the night before,
and we went on to put on all this cold, wet leather armor stuff
that just wouldn't dry, because we were in Buffalo, New York in January,
and it was awful.
_ _ _ _ We started to really detest it.
You dislike it.
_ [Eb] _
But it still lasted a couple years until we finally were like,
okay, I [Ab] think we _ can be done with this.
I look fondly on those [Ebm] times, and we laugh.
[Eb] We did the one show, was it Metal Blade's 30th anniversary?
I think it was the 30th.
We brought all our stuff that we still had out.
Joey and [Bb] I got wigs [Eb] at a shop here [Db] in Hollywood
that looked similar to the hair we [F] had, and then we came out on stage,
and the crowd went bananas, and it was awesome.
And then we took it off after the first song,
and then they were booing, boo! _ _
_ _ I'm not wearing this wig the whole show.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ You're lucky you got 5 minutes out of me.
Yeah.
_ [Eb] _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ _ [N] _
When [Eb] we made Simple Salvation, we got together with John Cornarens, who's a friend from years back.
It's funny, me and John are now playing basketball.
He brought me into his _ pickup basketball game, and I'm eternally grateful for that.
So I see John a lot now.
But he directed a couple videos for Simple Salvation.
_ Brian asked [Eb] me if I wanted to direct a video for them, and it was Rain of Fire.
And I said, yeah, I'd love to. _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Db] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ [B] _ _
[Db] Brian said, do [Ab] whatever you want, talk to the band.
And I talked to the [Db] band, and [Gb] what do the lyrics mean?
And _ John said, it's just abstract, it doesn't mean anything.
_ [Eb] So I was an art history minor in college, so I thought, okay, [Gb] how about I shoot black and white,
I'll throw in some color random photos of [Bb] Hieronymus Bosch, who was a random hippie from the [B] 14th century.
And so he did weird, [Eb] eclectic things.
And Joey liked the idea, so that's what we did.
We shot basically live performance at the Country Club of Rain of Fire, about [Ebm] 10 takes.
It was our first video for Metal Blade ever, really.
[Ab] That was our first one.
I [Ebm] just showed up and I said, I'm not going to put a shirt on today.
And I wasn't something I really did.
I don't know why.
Well, you were cut, man.
You were buff.
Well, I was a lot younger. _ _ _
[E] I mean, it wasn't like you had a gut or anything.
You looked cool.
Brian came down to the shooting, and he's like, [B] stop, everyone stop!
_ _ _ [Db] Put on your shirt!
He did that?
I don't remember that at all.
He totally stopped.
He's like, dude, what are you doing?
Put your shirt on.
And I was like, _ too late.
We were already like [Eb] halfway done.
And I said, I'm not going to do it.
He was pissed.
He was mad at me.
[F] He forgave me, though.
That's funny.
I totally did not remember that [Eb] at all.
Oh, yeah.
That's great. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Gb] _ _ [Eb] _
Brian says, hey, I want to do another video.
[Ab] He said, do Last Train Home.
I said, okay, [Dbm] what do you want me to do?
Conception?
He goes, I don't know, just do something [E] with trains.
_ [Db] So that was the direction.
So we actually found a [G] train museum [Abm] out in Paris, California,
and spent a day out [Ab] there.
I wanted to do a 360 shot.
And so that's where the drones were on one spot.
I put Joey up on top of a tanker or something,
and a few [G] other guys were walking around.
[F] And then John starts walking, and we got lucky.
The wind just blew his hair back.
Just as he sang, I was just like, a fluke.
And then Phil had brought his lizard out, so I said,
well, [E] let's put the lizard in the shot.
It was all random.
_ And they did [D] whatever I asked them to do.
Joey did [Dbm] climb like a water tower.
And how'd you get your cord up there?
It must have been cordless.
Yeah, [Db] it was cordless.
But anyways, it's just a little bit, I don't know,
what's the proper way to describe it?
We were trying to have a more mass appeal.
Yeah, a little more [Gb] commercial, a little more mersh.
[Db] _
_ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
[Dbm] Both of the videos helped out that record tremendously.
That was when Headbanger's Ball was red hot.
They had these battles.
We went up against, I feel like it was like Danger Danger,
and we lost, right?
We lost, and we were like, what?
How did we lose to them?
Number one is that they're not [Bb] even really metal.
No disrespect.
But it just was _ _ like_
But I guess they were playing some kind of hair metal bands.
And _ _ so they beat us.
And so that kind of affected Last Train Home's popularity
with Headbanger's Ball, which kind of sucked.
But Brain of Fire did really well.
_ [Gb] _ _ [Eb] _
Your last _ train_
[Gb] _ _ _
_ _ [Abm] _ _ _ _ [F] Brian or Tracy came to me and said,
[B] Hey, we want to do a tribute to Dave [Db] Pritchard.
And they had all this stuff,
and so I came up with A Trip Through Red Times. _
[Dbm] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ [Gbm] _ _ [Dm] _ _ [A] _ _
[D] _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ [Ab] _ _ _ _ [Am] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ [Bm] _ _ [Am] _
[C] _ _ [Gb] _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ _ [A] _
_ [E] _ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
[A] _ _ _ I laced videos together with just recollections
basically about Dave, and we used to hang out
underneath the bridge in Pasadena, Suicide Bridge.
[Gbm] We [N] went to a bar or a pool hall,
and I went to one place where they're rehearsed.
It's like one shot, just with John running circles to get warmed up,
get his energy going, and then he comes to the camera and screams,
I like that, so I'll just use it. _ _ _ _
_ _ _ Brian gave me plenty, Brian didn't care what I did, he trusted me.
I did whatever I wanted basically, and _ it was just kind of just fun.
We were all in sync with what would be cool.
Right now you're going to take a look at the one and only
_ production video that Armored Saint has made to this day.
It's for a song called Can You Deliver
from the March of the Saint album.
We had a lot of fun making this video.
Shot in 2 days, shows a little bit of the band's acting ability
and some of the band's real ability, and that's on stage.
Check it out, Can You Deliver.
_ [Eb] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ We wanted to try to separate ourselves from the jeans
_ _ and high-top tennis shoes.
Or the spandex.
Spandex with the leather belts, and like every [E] band at the time
was basically dressing the same,
so that's kind of why we _ decided to go the more _ _ theatrical route,
if you will, because we [Eb] were into Queen and _ KISS,
[Db] _ Alice Cooper, we always loved that sort of,
when you go to a concert like that, you're just in a whole other world.
And so we were influenced by that, and that's how we wanted
to separate ourselves, being huge Road Warrior fans and Mad Max fans.
We had the name, so we said let's incorporate the Arlor
as a combination of, like, Joey used to steal a few items
he stole from telephone poles that were like this aluminum
that he built into his chest plate that was really cool,
and then we got some stuff from Western Costume,
which is a big costume supplier for movies and things.
As a matter of fact, the thing I wore I think was in the movie
The Beastmaster, the breastplate I had.
We had the leather jackets, but we put metal on it,
so it kind of took it to another level of making [Ebm] it seem like armor.
And _ then we of course did the one show where I actually wore
the whole [D] suit of armor for the first song after the sword fight
and took the [Eb] helmet off, and then there's John.
_ [G] _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] We only did that the one show,
because I wasn't going to wear armor every day, every show.
But it was hard to move around that.
Then after that first song, during that show,
we went into this long intro of the second song,
because I had to go offstage and take it off _ with Zach Harmon's help.
That was cool.
But we were into that [F] until we weren't.
When we went on tour, especially in the heart of winter,
and we were trying to dry our clothes, because we played a gig the night before,
and we went on to put on all this cold, wet leather armor stuff
that just wouldn't dry, because we were in Buffalo, New York in January,
and it was awful.
_ _ _ _ We started to really detest it.
You dislike it.
_ [Eb] _
But it still lasted a couple years until we finally were like,
okay, I [Ab] think we _ can be done with this.
I look fondly on those [Ebm] times, and we laugh.
[Eb] We did the one show, was it Metal Blade's 30th anniversary?
I think it was the 30th.
We brought all our stuff that we still had out.
Joey and [Bb] I got wigs [Eb] at a shop here [Db] in Hollywood
that looked similar to the hair we [F] had, and then we came out on stage,
and the crowd went bananas, and it was awesome.
And then we took it off after the first song,
and then they were booing, boo! _ _
_ _ I'm not wearing this wig the whole show.
_ _ [Bb] _ _ You're lucky you got 5 minutes out of me.
Yeah.
_ [Eb] _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ _ [N] _