album art for I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor

track

I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor

Arctic Monkeys

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notes:

3/14/2025 public

Absolutely fascinating article on the production of this album and how it compares to the demos: https://www.arpjournal.com/asarpwp/arctic-monkeys-the-demos-vs-the-album/

You can find a recording of the demo of this song here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etMgn9tYjIc&ab_channel=ChiquitaDieBanana

For the record: I prefer the album version.

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2/25/2025 public

By convention, I'm used to guitar solos happening after the second chorus, where a bridge would usually be in a song. But it seems like a lot of indie rock songs tend to place them right after the first chorus. This song does that, album art for I Bet You Look Good On The DancefloorI Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor and album art for The Modern AgeThe Modern Age do as well.

Come to think of it, I can't think of a single Strokes song where the solo happens during the bridge.


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2/24/2025 public

There's this accompanying riff that he plays during the chorus that's fantastic where he arpeggiates the triads to chords of the chorus. It sounds so angular and distinct.

He definitely has a very distinctive soloing style, especially for a indie rock guitarist. He really likes playing intervals, triads and changes - it's a lot more sophisticated than your basic pentatonic indie rock soloing (which is mostly what I do). Contrast this to the solos in Arctic Monkeys songs (which I still really like!), which are almost all pentatonic, with basic bends - think album art for I Bet You Look Good On The DancefloorI Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor. Even fancier indie rock solos like the one in album art for Slow Dance IISlow Dance II (or album art for Even FlowEven Flow, if we want to expand to grunge) are mostly pentatonic, and draw mostly from the Hendrix/SRV style of playing. What Nick Valensi plays here sounds completely different, and that's cool.