Pantera - Walk (Lyrics on Screen Video 🎤🎶🎸🥁)

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Pantera - Walk (Lyrics on Screen Video 🎤🎶🎸🥁)

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🎤 Lyrics Start 🎤

[Verse 1]
Can't you see I'm easily bothered by persistence?
One step from lashing out at you
You want in to get under my skin and call yourself a friend
I've got more friends like you, what do I do?

[Pre-Chorus]
Is there no standard anymore?
What it takes, who I am, where I've been, belong
You can't be something you're not
Be yourself by yourself, stay away from me
A lesson learned in life
Known from the dawn of time
[Chorus]
Respect, walk
What did you say?
Respect, walk
Are you talkin' to me?
Are you talkin' to me?

[Verse 2]
Run your mouth when I'm not around, it's easy to achieve
You cry to weak friends that sympathize
Can you hear the violins playing your song?
Those same friends tell me your every word

[Pre-Chorus]
Is there no standard anymore?
What it takes, who I am, where I've been, belong
You can't be something you're not
Be yourself by yourself, stay away from me
A lesson learned in life
Known from the dawn of time

[Chorus]
Respect, walk
What did you say?
Respect, walk
Are you talkin' to me?
Respect, walk
What did you say?
Respect, walk
Are you talkin' to me?
Are you talkin' to me?
No way, punk
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[Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
Respect, walk
What did you say?
Respect, walk
Are you talkin' to me?
Respect, walk
What did you say?
Respect, walk
Are you talkin' to me?
Are you talkin' to me?
Walk on home, boy

🎤 Lyrics End 🎤

Vulgar Display of Power is the sixth studio album by American heavy metal band Pantera. Released on February 25, 1992 through Atco Records, it was the band's second collaboration with producer Terry Date, after having previously worked with him on their breakthrough album Cowboys from Hell (1990).

The album was well received by both critics and fans, and is Pantera's highest selling album to date and would eventually be certified double platinum.[5] It is often considered one of the most influential heavy metal albums of the 1990s.[6] In 2017, Rolling Stone ranked Vulgar Display of Power 10th on their list of 'The 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time'.[7] Several of its tracks have become among the band's best known, such as "Mouth for War", "A New Level", "Walk", "Fucking Hostile", and "This Love".

The band's 1990 major label debut, Cowboys from Hell,[8] demonstrated a change in their musical direction, from their 1980s material influenced by hard rock or glam metal bands like Van Halen and Kiss[9][10] to a new similarity to bands like Slayer, Metallica and Black Sabbath.[9][11]

In 1991, Pantera returned to Pantego Sound Studio to record their second release under Atco, Vulgar Display of Power.[12][13] The album was produced by Terry Date, who specializes in the rock and metal genres and had worked with the band on Cowboys from Hell. Date also went on to produce the band's following two albums, Far Beyond Driven (1994) and The Great Southern Trendkill (1996).[12][13] Before Date came in to work on the album, the band had demoed three tracks, "A New Level", "Regular People (Conceit)" and "No Good (Attack the Radical)".[12] The rest of the songs were written in the studio with little preproduction and demoing.[12]

After being in the studio for two months, Pantera were invited to open for Metallica and AC/DC at the 1991 Monsters of Rock free concert in Moscow, Russia's[12] Tushino airfield on September 28, 1991.[14][15] The band then returned to the studio to continue work on the album.[16] They travelled to New York City to master the album at Masterdisk.[17] Although guitarist Darrell Abbott was credited on the album with nickname "Diamond Darrell", during the recording of the album he had dropped that nickname and assumed "Dimebag Darrell", and bassist Rex Brown dropped the pseudonym "Rexx Rocker".[18]

Drummer Vinnie Paul said that Cowboys from Hell was really close to the "definitive Pantera sound".[19] When Metallica released their self titled album in 1991, Pantera considered it a letdown to fans because they believed Metallica abandoned the thrash metal sound heard in previous albums.[12][19] Pantera felt they had an opportunity and a gap to fill; they wanted to make the heaviest record of all time.[12][19]

The riff for "Walk" is played in a time signature of 12/8.[20] Darrell had played the riff during a soundcheck while Pantera was touring for Cowboys from Hell and the rest of the band loved it.[20] Following this tour, the band returned home and found that some friends thought that rock stardom had gone to their heads.[20]

Source(s): https://genius.com/Pantera-walk-lyrics and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulgar_...

Pantera - Walk (Lyrics on Screen Video 🎤🎶🎸🥁)
https://youtu.be/evxpoAyCBQE

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