8 Great Guitarists - 8 Unforgettable Solos |
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cstack3
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Bloody hell, I meant Stargazer, not Man on the Silver Mountain!!
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I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
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essexboyinwales
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Steve Rothery - Sugar Mice
John Petrucci - solo at the end of The Best Of Times Mike Holmes - so many! But how about the one at the end of Zero Hours?.... |
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dwill123
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Frank Gambale "The Natives Are Restless". There is a live version on YouTube where the guitar playing is even more insane. Terry Kath (Chicago) "Sing a Mean Tune Kid". Long song, solo starts around 4:19) |
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Nogbad_The_Bad
Forum & Site Admin Group RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Online Points: 20847 |
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Not Fripp no Nogbad, Babies On Fire, nuff said
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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I prophesy disaster
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A guitar solo that I quite like is one that I don't think would be on anyone's radar: the guitar solo in KA II.
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No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
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tszirmay
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No Santana? hahahahaha! Too many to choose from. How about Transcendence or Every Step of the Way or Europa or...
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I never post anything anywhere without doing more than basic research, often in depth.
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Steve Wyzard
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My favorite solo from the albums under his name is "The Un-Merry-Go-Round" from Metal Fatigue - truly epic!
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dr wu23
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Mike Holmes.....love the almost 2 minute one on Province of the King from Frequency. |
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin |
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noni
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I agree!
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noni
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Nick Barrett (Pendragon).... Breaking The Spell
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thief
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Okay I'll just stick to the original 8!
1. Steve Howe. Awaken There are actually two prominent solos off the top of my head and they both mop the floor with 95% of "classic rock" guitarists. Not even in terms of technical proficiency (although that's fantastic for 70s) but how well they fit into the song. That is a trademark sound if there is one... 2. Steve Hackett. The Lamia So I'm just being contrarian here, certainly Firth of Fifth is at least TOP3 solo of his career, but I feel The Lamia is so perfectly articulated, so yearning and full of emotion I can't leave it behind. Besides, it's one of the few iconic Hackett moments on TLLDOB, a great album that's not exactly the best display of skills. Also, for some reason, it just sounds so refreshing and original. Perhaps my favorite on this list. 3. David Gilmour. Dogs I just like Animals so much that I had to pick this one. I like Gilmour, but he never was as much of an inspiration as the guys above, perhaps I naturally followed more fiery and showoff axemen... Anyways, Dogs solo does it for me so why not? 4. Jimmy Page. Since I've Been Loving You (TSRTS) That man made me (and 80+ million other teenagers) believe that Les Paul solos are the best thing on Earth, or at least up there with tit*ies and beer. Yeah, there would be a Germany sized country if all Page fans settled there - free Rock Am Ring tickets for everyone in the constitution! Stairway, Achilles, Ten Years Gone, In the Evening, Dazed, I mean he has tons of solos. Stairway to Heaven might be the most influential and timeless of all - that's old news but true. But if I were to turn on YT today and let my jaw drop watching him go ballistic, I'd have this perfect blues rock tearjerker. Today! 5. Alex Lifeson. Limelight I know some solos are more accomplished and fascinating, but this one... this one comes to mind immediately when I think of Lifeson. What a great whammy control, what a flow... and that endless vibrato at the end, it just gets me every time! Seriously give it another shot if you can. Tight, lyrical, simply marvelous. (Ceterum censeo, Alex is underrated) 6. Allan Holdsworth. Letters of Marque What a showoff! But a genius, too. 7. Trevor Rabin. Owner of a Lonely Heart Maybe it's lazy, but this song is just iconic. That hectic, synthesized sound just screams 80s, in a good way. Bonus points for being the only solo I've heard in a mall (from this list). 8. Ritchie Blackmore. Child In Time So if Jimmy Page was like god to my teenage soul, giving my guitar dreams momentum and influencing my equipment choices for years to come... then Ritchie was like lovecraftian Ancient One, the One that started it all. The One who planted a seed, the One who had a Key. The Original Pissed-Off-Like-Titans-Thrown-To-Tartarus One. Seriously, I think he's made me ready for anything that guitar pantheon would throw at me later in life. Shredders following EVH footsteps? Okay. Thrash metal technicians, Vetterlis of the world? Gotcha. Filthy monstrosities brewed by Death, Cryptopsy, Psyopus? Sure! I mean, all of those guys are ferocious, brilliant, AND a lot of fun. But after being exposed to Ritchie's speedruns as a child, I can't be shocked anymore. To me it was Ritchie who invented TAKE NO PRISONERS approach in rock soloing, and I dare you to find pre-1970 record remotely as vicious as Deep Purple In Rock. And it's not only about balls, it's also about guitar storytelling. Blackmore solos truly are like stories, and the one told in Child In Time had so many satisfying twists and turns that would make George R. R. Martin jelly. Seriously, if I had a dime every time I was floored by Blackmore solo, I'd have like $92 in my pocket; and still couldn't afford a Rolling Stones concert Edited by thief - June 01 2021 at 15:42 |
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cstack3
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^Thanks, this is a thoughtful post!!
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I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!
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BarryGlibb
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Tommy by Jan Akkerman has always been my favourite prog guitarist solo. |
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BrufordFreak
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Jan Akkerman “Streetwalker” from Jan Akkerman Roy Buchanan “Fly… Night Bird” John McLaughlin (with Shakti) “Face to Face” from Natural Elements Pat Metheny “The Truth Will Always Be” from Secret Story Bruce Cockburn “The Tibetan Side of Town” from Big Circumstance Ray Gomez “Mating Drive” (from Lenny White’s Venusian Summer) Jeff Beck “Going Down” from “Orange” David Gilmour “Comfortably Numb” from The Wall Steve Howe “Awaken” from Yes’ Going for the One Ernie Isley “Summer Breeze” from 3 + 3 Todd Rundgren “The Last Ride” from Todd Robby Kreiger “Light My Fire” from The Doors Tom Scholz “Long Time” from Boston’s s/t debut Neil Young “Corez the Killer” from Live Rust Robert Fripp on David Sylvian’s “Upon This Earth” from Gone to Earth James Grant “Jocelyn Square” from Strange Kind of Love Mirek Gil on Collage’s “The Blues” from Moonshine Hiram Bullock on Sting’s Nothing Like the Sun “Little Wing” Adrian Belew “Big Electric Cat” from The Lone Rhino John Martyn “Small Hours” from One World Roye Albrighton “Always” from Evolution Pete Townsend “Rough Boys” Nick Barrett “Water” from Love Over Fear Allan Holdsworth “Sahara in the Snow” from Bruford’s One of a Kind Corrado Rustici “Vimana” from Nova’s Vimana Al Di Meola “The Duel of the Jester and the Tyrant” from RTF’s Romantic Warrior Frank Zappa “Black Napkins” and so many more! Edited by BrufordFreak - June 04 2021 at 09:25 |
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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SteveG
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Magog2112
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1. Steve Hackett: "Firth of Fifth" 2. John Mitchell: "The Visitor" 3. Alex Lifeson: "Limelight" 4. Roine Stolt: "A King's Prayer" 5. David Gilmour: "Comfortably Numb" 6. Jimi Hendrix: "All Along the Watchtower" 7. Steve Rothery: "The Great Escape" 8. Nick Barrett: "It's Only Me"
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