Smoke on the Water is one of the most well known guitar riffs. You could easily find the notes in the form of guitar tabs online.
depends which instruments you mean. with guitar (not including bass) it is played on the E and A strings.
Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore used his cherry red Gibson Es 335 for the legendary riff
6th string no fret, then 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string no fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th sting 6th fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string no fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string no fret
The bones of baby dolls on when the kite string pops.
Smoke on the Water - album - was created in 1998.
The Deep Purple song, "Smoke on the Water," was originally released on their 1972 album, Machine Head.
When he was with Deep Purple, David Coverdale frequently sang "Smoke on the Water" in concert. He was not in the band when it was written or recorded.
6th string no fret, then 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string no fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th sting 6th fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string no fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string 5th fret, 6th string 3rd fret, 6th string no fret
It is most impossible to pour water down a string unless the string is not a string and is a tube. water can only go down hollow things for heaven's sake!
Smoke on the Water was created in 1972.
Nope Most string should float on top of water becomes the string material is less dense than he water.
easy! you just pull the string and throw it :)
The salt temporarily melts the ice. The melted water flows over the string. The water refreezes on top of the string.
It trvels down because it is attracted to the string
i m not sure but i drink water after smoke .
Smoke on the Water, Smoke Gets in your Eyes...
blue smoke is oil. white smoke is water. black smoke is unburnt fuel
water vapors
Smokes are very variable as chemical composition; some components of smoke can be dissolved in water.