Guitar Hero is a music video game for the Sony PlayStation 2 developed by Harmonix and released in 2005. Guitar Hero's gameplay features the use of a special guitar-shaped controller modeled after a Gibson SG guitar to recreate the lead guitar part of several rock music songs; the player scores in the game by both pressing one or more fret buttons on the controller and using a strum bar in time with notes as they appear on screen.[1] The game features a total of 47 songs.

All songs are covers of the original versions, credited as, for example, "'Iron Man' as made famous by Black Sabbath", and were performed by WaveGroup Sound for the game.[4] WaveGroup has released a selection of these covers through paid download services like iTunes in a collection entitled "The Guitar Hero Recordings".[4]


Guitar Hero 6 Songs Download


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Seventeen bonus songs are available within Guitar Hero.[2] Bonus songs can be purchased with in-game money earned from the Career mode within the game's virtual store.[3] Once purchased, the songs will be playable at all difficulty levels in Career, quickplay, and competitive modes. Many of the bands featured in the bonus songs are those that Harmonix members participate in.[5] The song "Cheat on the Church" by Graveyard BBQ was selected for inclusion in the game as the winner of the "Be a Guitar Hero" contest.[6]

The following list contains all of the (approximately 3000) songs that appeared in all of the Guitar Hero games, including most spin-offs (excluding the Guitar Hero Mobile series and toylines).

Every song in Guitar Hero (except the bonus songs) is a cover version by WaveGroup. All the songs will say "as made famous by" except for the bonus songs which do not say anything between the song and the artist, as these are all master tracks.

Every song in Guitar Hero II (except the bonus songs and the new DLC) is a cover version, with the exceptions of Dead! (Xbox 360 only), John the Fisherman, Possum Kingdom (Xbox 360 only) and Stop! as they are master tracks. Every song in the Guitar Hero I DLC packs are the same WaveGroup covers from the first game. This will be displayed by "as made famous by" on a cover track, and "as performed by" on the two master tracks (or four on the Xbox 360 version).

Every song in Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s is a cover version, with the exceptions of Because, It's Midnite, Electric Eye, I Ran, I Wanna Rock and The Warrior as they also master tracks. It is noted that I Wanna Rock is a re-recording that is pitch-shifted down by one pitch. It will be displayed the same as it was in Guitar Hero II, with "as made famous by" on a cover track, and "as performed by" on a master track. Rocks the 80s does not include any bonus songs: Because, It's Midnite was planned to be the only bonus song, but was changed to the 2nd tier encore as I Want Candy was cut from the game.

Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock has a lot more master tracks, as more record companies decided to share their songs as the series gained popularity. It will once again be displayed the same as it was in Guitar Hero II and Rocks the 80s: Any cover version displays "As made famous by" before the song starts, and any master track will display "by" before the song starts. Every bonus song is a master track with the exception of She Bangs the Drums. The main exception is Talk Dirty to Me, as it will say "Feat. Bret Michaels as made famous by" because Bret Michaels recorded the vocals. This is only present in the PS3, Xbox 360 and PC versions of the game.

Ever since Guitar Hero World Tour, every song including bonus songs and DLC has been a master track, with only 2 exceptions for Black Betty and Gimme All Your Lovin which are once again covers by WaveGroup.

I downloaded all the songs for GH1 GH2 and GH Encore: Rocks the 80s from this google sheet and parts of every song are out of tune. (typically the "iconic" parts like the chorus or guitar solos.) Is this normal or is it somehow on my end?

You will need the following to complete this instructable with sucsess:


1. A wii capable of running homebrew.

2. a computer capable of burning data to a dvd-r. you can download imgburn here .

3. a program called "the ghost". you can download that by going to this page.

4. For the ghost to run, you need codecs. codecs allow your computer to encode, decode, and play music and video of various file extension formats. im sure you have heard of mp3, or mp4, but have you ever heard of ogg audio, or flv video? when you download frets on fire song packs use ogg audio and if you dont have the codecs installed, ghost will not function. period. Vista for windows vista. XP for windows xp. if you have linux with wine installed, you may be able to use the ghost, but unfortunately for mac users, ur screwed cus the ghost isnt made for mac... at least not that im aware of. you can google the ghost mac and see what pops up.

5. A guitar hero 3 or aerosmith nintendo wii ISO file. i dont think that i am legally allowed to distribute a link for this one because that would make me a "piracey promoter" and im a good person. i owned my game before i dumped it. 

6. Some frets on fire song folders. go here, make an account, and browse by artist to get song folders.


next step -->


enter the tools folder, and run the audio tool application. install the wav dest filter, and the xbadpcm codec. then click the begin tests button. you should here a guitar solo, then get a poppup box asking if you heard the noise. if you heard the noise, click yes. the box doesnt even pop up if you dont have the codec, so there is no reason for the no. if you have no red X's and all checks, you can continue to the next step.

you are pretty much done. just take the iso you pointed to is the beggining of ghost and burn it to a high quality, i reccomend sony, DVD-R. That is a MINUS!!! MINUS R!! not plus r, or minus rw. if it isnt minus r, it won work. and burn at 3x.

lets say you want to make two different versions of the same guitar hero 3 game, but want to track your process defferently on each disk. normally if you just burned 2 different ones, lets say the original and a metal version, you would have the same band, and if you played one more than the other, the same progress and score. you can fix this by changing the disk id. normally it is R as in Wii game, 2 letters, in this case gh like guitar hero, and then some numbers. change the numbers, and you get a new save. you can do this by running theghostwiiisotool.exe you can also change the name of the game to show up under the save icon. i havent actually used this tool, but once i do i will document it further.

I fretted (added notes to) my own songs with this great program called EOF, it takes MP3s, and then you add the notes, and when it saves it, it saves it in the Frets on Fire Format.


You could also use the computer (All OSes) program called Frets on fire to test out your songs with a keyboard or USB guitar.


My First Song was Boats 'N Hoes from Step Brothers. I FRETTED IT MYSELF AND TAKE ALL CREDIT. heres the song folder:


 _and_Hoes.zip


ok thanks. i might run it through mp3gain just to make sure though : ) i think i should have done that with all of my songs before hand. it starts off by making all of the songs in the work directory the same volume, then allowing you to change them up or down all at a time, or individually. takes a while though, even with only 300 songs. i wonder how long it will take when i let it loose on my 1644 song ipod directory haha. itunes says it takes 36.9 days (no joke 3, 6, 9) to listen to it all. 5.7 gigs.

i just ran through the song and its perfectly fretted! if thats your first song, you did a really great job. i know i had to adjust the offset of about 18 of my other songs from other people AT LEAST. so eof eh, ill go grab that right away, but before i do, how long did that song take you?

Guitar Hero: Guitar Zero is a full difficulty set list designed after those of the first couple of Guitar Hero games; a large set list with a wide variety of songs from a wide variety of artists, genres, and eras. The main set list consists of 40 songs by major artists divided into 8 tiers ranked by difficulty. The 24 bonus songs range from people you've definitely heard of to obscure 90's funk bands that haven't released an album in twenty years. Regardless of what level you play at, there's something for everyone to enjoy!

Going forward, it's my intention to support Guitar Zero with hopefully regular and hopefully frequent DLC packs consisting of at least three songs. I had way more ideas for songs to chart than I could actually fit on the set list without it feeling bloated, so I figured the best way to get them out there was to bunch them together and release them as themed packs! Obviously, I have a life outside of charting, so I can't make any promises on timetables or schedules, but I'll be doing my best to keep on top of them. Expect to start seeing them being released... soon?

If you find any issues with any of the songs, please let me know, either on Reddit (u/GuitarZero132) or on Discord (GuitarZero132#3759). There's a lot of songs and while they've all gone under review (some of them A LOT), there certainly could be something I missed!

shiver would be hard, but that's a good one. also daylight, yellow, fix you (well, not really...only at the end), talk...there are lots. why havent they done this before? i think they would make the perfect guitar hero songs!!

problem with coldplay songs in guitar hero, is yhat guitar hero wants songs with very prominent electric guitar throughout...I've thought about it and I can't think of anything that would work for non-coldplay fans.

Not even GPASUYF, me thinks. I mean, the verses are almost entirely acoustic guitar which wouldn't work in a game like this. Jonny's part is absent for the first 46 seconds, and after that short little riff there's nothing until the chorus... 2351a5e196

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