My Favorite Guitarists
This is a considerably expanded version of
a discussion I started by email a while back.
You don't make
my list if you can't play a solo. Don't tell me that Kurt Cobain
is the best guitarist ever. I just don't see it. I don't confuse
good players and good recordings. They two are mutually exclusive.
Consider Clapton's back catalog. There are a lot of weak songs in
there with great playing. Conversely, there are scores of terrific
pop songs that could have done even better with a great guitar solo (as
demonstrated by EVH's moment on Michael Jackson's "Beat It").
#1
Django Reinhardt
| Signature guitars |
-
Selmer Maccafferi D-hole
-
Selmer Maccafferi oval-hole
|
| Bands |
-
The Quintet Of The Hot Club Of France
-
Solo artist
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Minor Swing (1937 recording)
-
Minor Swing (1949 recording)
-
Honeysuckle Rose (1938 recording)
-
everything else!
|
It's hard to believe that the top guitarist
on my list would also be the one guy among the lot who was dead before
many of the rest here were even born. However, even though he predates
rock and roll, Django remains the most capable guitarist on any "best of"
list. The speed at which he assembled complex phrases is astounding.
Further, he had the ability to play any note and make it
sound natural. His solos are full of blue notes and chromatic runs,
yet absolutely every lick sounds fully formed and perfectly in touch with
the band and the rest of the piece.
Even Jeff Beck acknowledges that to
this day no one has surpassed Django at playing from the heart with
the greatest degree of skill. And he did this with only two working
fingers (and the occasional thumb) on his left hand to fret with!
#2
Jeff Beck
| Signature guitars |
-
Signature Stratocaster with Lace Sensor pick-ups
-
Signature Stratocaster with Vintage Noiseless
pick-ups
-
Black Les Paul with open-face humbuckers
-
An occasional Telecaster
|
| Bands |
-
Solo artist
-
The Jeff Beck Group
-
with Rod Stewart
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Brush With the Blues
-
Cause We Ended As Lovers
-
Amused to Death (concept album with
Roger Waters from Pink Floyd)
-
damned near everything else.
|
Beck has it all: a great sound (several of
them, to be honest), an incredible range of styles, and uncanny technique.
While he can certainly play conventional styles, Beck also has an elastic
approach that is impossible to imitate. Believe me, I've tried!
I have read discussions of Beck's playing where the reviewer was unable
to state with certainty whether a recording was made using a slide or fretted
with fingers.
Beck continues to be an innovator.
He has moved through fusion, blues, classic rock, pop, and even loop-driven
electronica lately. His latest album is better than much of his earlier
material. There aren't that many guitarists who can continue to be
original. Even David Gilmour says Jeff Beck is his favorite guitarist.
I don't know who could give a higher recommendation than that.
#3
Eddie Van Halen
| Signature guitars |
-
Frankenstrat
-
Kramer "5150"
-
Steinberger GL, etc.
-
Ernie Ball/Music Man signature model (now
known as the Axis)
-
Peavey Wolfgang
|
Bands: Van Halen (duh!)
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Entire albums: I, 1984, 5150, most
else!
-
316 (live; encompasses Eruption,
Spanish Fly, Cathedral, etc.)
|
Must See Performance:
Live Without a Net (concert video)
EVH is undeniably one of the most inventive
guitarists and individuals on the planet. Any single innovation Eddie
had a hand in creating or popularizing had such a tremendous effect that
it would have been remarked upon throughout his career. But Eddie
has quite a history. Consider the following.
-
Tapping. Eddie certainly wasn't
the first to do this, but he was the first to employ this technique the
most imaginatively and consistently across his work, inspiring heavy metal
guitarists for the next decade and beyond.
-
The Floyd Rose. He didn't invent
it, but Eddie was an early adopter of this tremolo system, and he used
it to great effect, easily pushing it to extremes beyond anything most
players out there would have considered before he set the example.
Also, rather than using a floating tremolo, Eddie has almost always used
a flush-mounted version on all his guitars; it can dive-bomb but cannot
be pulled back
-
Guitar building. Eddie always
did things his own way. Countless guitars marketed by Kramer and
their imitators were influenced by his unique one pick-up design.
Further, Eddie's penchant for striping his axes resulted in a similar run
of recreations among guitar makers... at least until Eddie's lawyers set
them straight.
-
Electronics. In addition to playing
a role in building, designing, and rebuilding various pick-ups, Eddie also
modified his amp, including adding a VARIAC to change the properties of
his equipment and to get the sounds he sought.
-
The D-Tuna. This is Eddie's latest
creation. A major drawback of the Floyd Rose tremolo was that even
a simple drop-D tuning could not be achieved without an Allen wrench.
This device gets around that by dramatically extending the range of the
fine tuner on the low E string such that it can drop a full step.
#4
Eric Clapton
| Signature guitars |
-
"Blackie" (black Stratocaster) among many
other Strats
-
original Fender signature model Strat with
Lace Sensor pick-ups
-
modern Fender signature model Strat with Vintage
Noiseless pick-ups
-
various hollowbodies, including a few Gibson
335s
-
Gibson SG (during the Cream years)
-
Gibson Les Pauls
-
signature Martin acoustic
-
...and anything else vintage.
|
| Bands |
-
Solo artist
-
Cream
-
many, many other bands
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
I Wish It Would Rain Down (w/ Phil
Collins)
-
Pros and Cons of Hitchhicking (concept
album with Roger Waters from Pink Floyd)
-
Ain't Gone and Give Up on Love (live
on A Tribute To Stevie Ray Vaughan)
-
River of Tears (compare the recording
on Pilgrim to the live version!)
-
No Alibis
-
She's Gone
-
Crossroads (w/ Cream)
-
Wonderful Tonight (live on 24 Nights)
|
Even if you don't believe the graffiti that
"Clapton is God," at least consider the fact that he has been Eddie Van
Halen's favorite guitarist from the very beginning. However, I will
be the first to admit it's sometimes hard to see where Clapton is an innovator
or a killer guitarist, especially in his latter years. However, he
has largely worked in established styles such as blues and country rock,
although he has also keep a finger in the popular styles of the day including
psychedelic rock (as with Cream), pop music, and even playing with electronic
loops (e.g., on Pilgrim and recording as "X-Sample" on the TDF album
Retail
Therapy).
He has also demonstrated a skill for experimentation
in searching out interesting gear. Decades after building his
trademark "Blackie" from the parts of "seconds" (guitars considered inferior),
Clapton popularized Lace Sensor pick-ups and on-board pre-amps in his signature
model Stratocaster that recreated his famous ax.
Clapton is the ultimate blues player.
There's just no question about it. He simply is the best. Unfortunately,
he rarely shows the full extent of his abilities. Some of his best
recordings (see above) were back-up performances in the shadow of other
artists. He's just quirky that way, but humility always earns points
with me. So does opening a rehab center to help other recovering
addicts.
#5
Brian Setzer
| Signature guitars |
-
Gretsch signature 6120 (orange)
-
Gretsch signature Hot Rod
-
Gretsch White Falcon
|
| Bands |
-
Stray Cats
-
Brian Setzer Orchestra
-
Solo artist
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Rock This Town (Stray Cats)
-
Sleepwalk (with the BSO)
|
It has become a cliché to say this,
but Brian Setzer continues to demonstrate that he's one cat with nine lives.
He started out as the frontman for the Rockabilly band The Stray Cats.
His playing on those albums was an astounding piece of musical time travel.
He took what was good about those early recordings of Eddie Cochran, Gene
Vincent, and others, and pushed it farther than the originals ever could
have. It's an insult to consider the early Stray Cats material that
of "just some cover band."
Setzer tried a brief stint in country music
next, but his songs failed to showcase his capabilities with a guitar.
Then he somehow he literally wandered into a group of swing musicians and
found that things clicked. Since the formation of the Brian Setzer
Orchestra he has gotten even better, even if the songs are sometimes sappier.
In recent years, Brian has put the Orchestra on hold and he has been rocking
out as a solo performer again. Most recently, the re-united Stray
Cats have been out touring. Who knows what's next?
#6
David Gilmour
| Signature guitars |
-
'50s reissue Fender Stratocaster with EMG
SA pick-ups and EXG and SPC preamps
-
vintage sunburst Telecaster
-
Gretsch Duo Jet
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Okay, yes, the solos on Comfy Numb
and Another Brick Pt 2 from The Wall
-
The solo on the title track of Pink Floyd's
Final
Cut album
-
No More Lonely Nights (w/ Paul McCartney)
-
Live version of Running Up That Hill
(w/ Kate Bush from The Secret Policeman's Third Ball)
|
Dave's playing is remarkable in its clarity
and beautiful, almost hummable melodies. But as big a role as Roger
Waters played in establishing the lyrical themes and song stylings of Pink
Floyd, David Gilmour's sound is an unmistakable presence on every track.
I didn't realize how integral his sound was (Roger's solo work not withstanding)
until I heard Dave's first solo album. Somehow Dave gets a unique
tone out of his rig that is impossible to imitate, although I've been trying
to for years.
#7
Eric Johnson
Signature guitar: vintage sunburst
Fender Stratocaster
Bands: Solo... always
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Cliffs of Dover
-
Trademark
-
SRV
|
I was fortunate enough to see Eric Johnson
live at a relatively small club when I was an undergrad. I think
about 90% of the guys in the audience were fellow guitarists because everyone
just stood there with an unbreakable focus on Eric's left hand. No
one
moved as he worked through an extended opening to Cliffs of Dover.
We all knew what was coming next and we definitely wanted to figure out
how the hell he could play like that!
Eric's style is built around a number of
unconventional techniques. For example, he's famous for "string skipping,"
a conscious bounding across the fretboard instead of the usual scale runs.
Of course, he can do those too. In fact, Ah Via Musicom is
like traveling across the history of guitar music. Pieces like Song
for George take you way back, whereas Steve's Boogie brings
you to closer to the present, and then tracks like Trademark are
from a genetically enhanced future where everyone has extra fingers and
lightning reflexes.
#8
Buddy Guy
Signature guitar: signature
polka dot Fender Stratocaster
Bands: Solo... always
| Must Hear Recordings: |
-
Long Way From Home (from the SRV tribute
album)
-
Title track from Damn Right I Got the Blues
|
Buddy has amazing energy, yet can be incredibly
laid back. Consider the two tracks above. On "Long Way," he
takes a machine gun SRV track and brings it down to super cool. Then
he plays "Damn Right" like he's going to kill his guitar, and you're next
on his list.
But Buddy has a sense of humor too.
At the close of the SRV Tribute concert some years back, there was an extended
blues jam that had the performers each wrap up the piece with a signature
lick. Robert Cray played the usual minor pentatonic lick. Bonnie
Rait ran her bottleneck slide around something sort of bluesy. The
Buddy let out a chicken-scratch rendition of Mary Had a Little Lamb.
The audience went nuts. Even Eric Clapton acknowledges Buddy Guy
as "the greatest living blues player."
#9
Jimmy Page
| Signature guitars |
-
signature Les Paul with coil taps, series/parallel
switching, and a phase switch
-
Double-neck SG (red)
|
| Bands |
-
Led Zeppelin
-
Solo artist
-
Page & Plant
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
Stairway to Heaven
-
Rock and Roll
-
Going to California
-
and everything else on Led Zeppelin IV
|
Page was the master of all riffs, and he was
a genius at innovations in studio recording and multi-track guitar orchestration
(although a more apt description might be to call them guitar armies).
Most importantly, he was an inventive player, and he continues to try new
styles and techniques. Some of the tangents he has explored include
Middle Eastern influences, bowed guitar, and alternate tunings (lately
with the TransPerformance system).
#10
Reeves Gabrels
| Signature guitars |
-
Steinberger GM
-
Parker Fly
-
various Fernandez models
|
| Bands |
-
Tin Machine (w/ David Bowie)
-
David Bowie (as a "solo artist")
-
Protecto
|
Must Hear Recordings: Anything live
by Tin Machine
Reeves is probably the most unconventional
player on this list. While he is capable of playing traditional rock
and roll (see Tin Machine, for example), Gabrels has moved steadily toward
abstraction like no one since perhaps Robert Fripp. The first time
I saw him was during his time with Tin Machine on a SNL performance.
That was also the first time I ever saw a Steinberger guitar (ever the
innovator, Gabrels now plays a Parker). I had never seen such wild
playing before. He demonstrated the extremes to which a Steinberger
can be pushed.
Playing aside, Gabrels is also a very well-read
and all-around intelligent guy. He used to write a column in Guitar
for the Practicing Musician magazine that went well beyond presenting
interesting scales and alternate chord inversions. His articles focused
on ways to be different, to reconceptualize the guitar, and he often did
this through analogies unrelated to music. This was quite a departure
from the style and content of the other columnists in GFTPM, and
it was vastly more instructive. If you can get a copy of these, they
are definitely worth the price of the issue.
#11
Stevie Ray Vaughan
Signature guitar: Number One sunburst
(what was left of the finish) Stratocaster with gold hardware including
a left-handed tremolo (according to his guitar tech who built it, he wanted
gold hardware and all that was available for the trem was a leftie!)
| Bands |
-
SRV and Double Trouble
-
with David Bowie on Let's Dance
|
Must See Performance: On Austin City
Limits (frequently re-run on PBS during pledge drives)
Unfortunately, and this is just my opinion
(and an unpopular one at that), I feel like on a lot of recordings he's
too drunk or stoned or whatever to produce great music. Granted,
he's a great guitarist, head and shoulders above just about anyone playing
the blues, but you can see where some performances are clearly below what
he demonstrated he was capable of delivering.
However, when you see some of the live
material, it's amazing what he was able to do with (and to)
that instrument. The simultaneous rhythm and lead playing is uncanny.
He was two guitarists in one.
#12
Steve Vai
| Signature guitars |
-
Ibanez 7 string (smeared/streaked dayglow
rainbow)
-
Ibanez 777 (white with vine inlay)
-
Ibanez 777 (black with mirrored pickguard
and pyramid inlay on body)
|
| Bands |
-
Solo artist
-
w/ Frank Zappa
-
Whitesnake
-
w/ David Lee Roth
|
| Must Hear Recordings |
-
The entire Passion & Warfare album
-
The duel at the end of the movie Crossroads
(no, not the one with Britany Spears)
|
Steve doesn't push a lot of boundaries, but
he's good at what he does. He was also one of the first guys in rock
with a 7-string guitar (some jazz men were doing it first). This
was ten years or so before KoRn and the rest of those neanderthals had
even plugged in.
Vai is anything but afraid of guitar effects,
and Passion & Warfare is guitar rock what Star Wars was
to science fiction. He is very showy, but he knows how to employ
big sounds.
Other Noteworthy
Axe-men (in not particular order)
In a few words....
-
B.B. King - Who needs chords?
-
Joe Satriani - Who needs hair?
-
Brian May - Versatile and the
master of guitar orchestration.
-
Kirk Hammett - Faster and more
intense.
-
The Edge - Great songs
and an inventive player.
-
Carlos Santana - A living legend.
-
Jimi Hendrix - A dead one.
-
Jake E. Lee - Even more underrated.
-
Allan Holdsworth - Channeled
dissonance.
Copyright heavy
metAle[x].