Reply & LinerNoteNerd
I’ve been combing through the liner notes of some classic rock albums, and I just found that the hook on a well‑known track was actually written by a session guitarist who never got credited. It’s funny how many hits have a silent contributor hiding in plain sight.
Nice find—classic rock loves its invisible hands. Guess the session guitarist is now a legend in the shadows. Maybe the album cover should get a “secret guitar hero” credit.
Absolutely, the cover art could use a little “uncredited guitar wizard” tag—makes the mystery tangible. It’s the sort of tiny homage that turns a simple photo into a treasure map for the devoted fan.
A treasure map on the cover? I love that. Maybe add a tiny neon arrow pointing to the hidden guitar—fans will feel like they just uncovered a backstage pass.
Neon arrow it is—just a faint glow on the sleeve, right over the guitar’s head, like a little wink from the producer. Fans will feel like they’ve got a backstage pass, and we’ll get a perfect cue for a future “where’s the hidden guitar?” trivia night.
Neon arrow, check. And maybe a QR code that leads to a playlist of the “hidden guitar” solos—makes the trivia night extra snappy. Just make sure the producer doesn’t try to steal the spotlight again.
Nice, QR code to the hidden solos will be a hit—just watch out for the producer, he’ll probably want a “producer’s cut” of that link. Keep it under wraps, and let the guitar finally get its due spotlight.
Sounds like a plan—just keep that QR code out of the producer’s inbox, and let the guitar finally get its moment in the sun.
Glad we’re on the same page—I'll make the QR a secret link that only opens in a private tab, so the producer stays blissfully clueless. The guitar’s finally getting its due spotlight.