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3 Long Classic Rock Intros That Are Worth the Wait

Many classic rock songs ignore the donโ€™t-bore-us-get-to-the-chorus crowd. Beginning in the 1960s, artists such as Bob Dylan and The Beatles challenged convention with longer and more complex arrangements. Now, with slow-build classics like โ€œTimeโ€ by Pink Floyd and โ€œWar Pigsโ€ by Black Sabbath, listeners have proved they have the patience to endure lengthy songs with long intros.

So letโ€™s look at three long classic rock intros that are worth the wait.

โ€œCochiseโ€ by Audioslave

Supergroups look good on paper. And some better than others. But when the members of Rage Against The Machine announced a new band with Soundgardenโ€™s Chris Cornell, the thought of Cornellโ€™s screams over Tom Morelloโ€™s shredding riffs was an exciting one. They did not disappoint. โ€œCochiseโ€ is the opening track on Audioslaveโ€™s self-titled debut. And if youโ€™re going to write an intro this good, youโ€™d better back it up with a banger of a payoff like โ€œCochiseโ€. Crank it!

โ€œForty Six & 2โ€ byย Tool

Now I wonโ€™t attempt to explain what this song is about. You are free to google it and enjoy the rabbit hole. Here, Toolโ€™s persistent epic features one of rockโ€™s finest guitar riffs. But it takes a while to get there. And like others on this list, itโ€™s well worth the wait. The guitar and bass arrangement offers a spiraling motif that echoes Maynard James Keenanโ€™s anxiety over a lurking shadow. The track then reaches peak alchemy with Danny Careyโ€™s explosive drum fills. Itโ€™s hard to make complex music groove. But then thereโ€™s only one Tool.

In my shadow,
My shadow,
Change is coming through my shadow
.

โ€œMaster Of Puppetsโ€ by Metallica

One way to keep attention spans focused on a long intro is to fill it with crushing riffs. Decades before โ€œMaster Of Puppetsโ€ had a revival in The Upside Down in Stranger Things, it appeared as the title track to Metallicaโ€™s third album. The Bay Area legends hadnโ€™t yet become the heavy metal Beatles, but they were quickly approaching the title. This track finds James Hetfield leading his band through a sprawling eight-plus minutes of Wagner, Motรถrhead, and Black Sabbath virtuosity.

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