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Hmmm, I have got to agree about Jimi. Add to your list one Phil Keaggy, a Nashvillian who can play amazing rock or amazing acoustic stuff. He has lots of records out, but is not well known because he is a Christian artist.
Jeff Beck can really play, as can Al DiMeola. Marc Ribot has never buttered my toast though.
Fun topic! I can't wait to see who else is mentioned.
Trey
Bill Frisell
And we can't forget Les Paul for innovation in both equipment and playing.
Oh goodie!
Not in any order:
Jimi
Stevie
Clapton
Beck
Page
I'm a little prejudice on the genre.
Five that didn't make it on my list because they missed a note once:
Ritchie Blackmore
Joe Satriani
Check Berry
Duane Allman
Carlos Santana
Honorary notes:
Chet Atkins
Roy Clark
Marnie Stern
Ruyter Suys
Katherine Thomas
To hell with:
Eddie Van Halen
Ted Nugent
Peter Frampton
Nancy Wilson
Brian May
And now *drum roll*.... Who is this great guitarist (hint: Writes for NPR) And no peeking please.
Nice one!
Oh yeah! She kills. She also spit beer on me once!
Carrie Brownstein (hot!)
Sonny Sharrock - agreed, 100 percent. 'Ask The Ages' is one of the great albums.
Duane Allman - Very, very, very good guitarists can play lots of notes. Great guitarists can make beautiful, coherent music from them. Duane Allman sang above the notes.
Mississippi John Hurt - You can't find many people who would list him as a great guitarist, but if you look at the influence he had on everyone from John Fahey to Dylan, he is. And the proof of the pudding is...his stuff is a joy to listen to.
Robbie Robertson - Another Duane Allman kind of pick. The man does not waste notes. His solos fit the Band's (and Dylan's wild electric) music perfectly.
Steve Cropper - the best soul guitarist.
Another five:
Bruce Springsteen - what? Am I stupid? Nope. There is no better guitar player over the last 30 years in mainstream rock music, if you pick on the basis of taste, sound, concision, soul. He is severely under-rated.
Eddie Hazel - Was he better than Hendrix? Maybe.
Grant Green - His quartet recordings with Sonny Clark are my favorite jazz guitar.
Hank Garland - Where jazz and country met perfectly.
Neil Young - My reasoning here is exactly like Springsteen, only Young is weirder, deeper, noisier.
Yes! Tasteful, serves the music, never phones in a performance.
Now this is a tricky one; do you go for those that managed a great career, experience, talent, or with a mixture of all of those.
From a talent perspective one that is usually missed is Peter Green (the original guitarist and co-creator of Fleetwood Mac), if it was not for his breakdown and drugs abuse beyond most others his could had been one of the most definitive careers.
Both B.B.King and Eric Clapton mention him as one of the greatest, amongst others as well.
Cheers
Orb
Are you all nuts? Have anybody heard of Jerry Douglas? Duh!
That's not a real guitar.
Bruce and Neil are great additions.
And that is a guitar whar I cum from. (Nashville.)
And Albert Lee can really pick too. So did Jerry Reed for that matter.
Trey
Just to put out some names that haven't come up, but are worthy of consideration:
Robert Quine (freakiest guitarist/tax lawyer ever)
Ollie Halsall (so unknown that it's a tragedy. One of the best ever-- if you don't know the name, run it through Youtube and be stunned)
Tom Verlaine
Richard Lloyd (He and Verlaine on Television's album Marquee Moon are just incredible)
Albert King (every lick that Stevie Ray Vaughan didn't rip off from Hendrix came from Albert King)
John McLaughlin
Buck Dharma/Don Roeser (Blue Oyster Cult)
Django Reinhardt
Well said Lionel. I totally agree with all those great guitarists that played with Matthew Sweet! That was some power pop you can believe in!
Trey
He is indeed excellent!
(While it is a dobro, it is a type of guitar.)
While it's hard to leave Jimi off any such list, my (perhaps more unusual choices) include:
- Earl Hooker
- Peter Green
- Rory Gallagher
and for something completely different:
- Lenny Breau
Electric:
Jimi Hendrix
Johnny Winter
Roy Buchanan
Barney Kessel
Warren Haynes
Acoustic:
Leo Kottke
Doc Watson
Ed Gerhard
Kenny Sultan
Tommy Emmanuel
Chet Atkins
Les Paul
Norman Blake
Mark Knopfler.
Honorable mentions to:
Eric Clapton
Jimi
Ooh - forgot about him. Great guitarist and one of my favorites.
Hey I am not one to disagree with BB King/Santana/Eric Clapton who have said the same thing about Green
But, his career never matched his talent and that was a shame so if that is part of your criteria I can understand.
Cheers
Orb
We would like to hear that story...
No classical guitarists ?
WTF is wrong with you plebe , beer drinking low culture nuts !!!!
OK, just joking.
But how about <rather than "best" we talk about about "favorite" guitarists.
And how about categories:
FAV:
Rock guitarists
Blues (electric)
Blues (acoustic)
Folk
Jazz
Classical
Flamenco
OK here are some classical:
Segovia
John Williams
Pepe Romero
David Russel
Eliot Fisk
Manuel Barrueco
Alvaro Pieri
Pavel Steidl
Composer Guitarists:
Leo Brouwer
Roland Dyens
Carlo Domeniconi
Here's an interesting bit of news on Robert Johnson from The Guardian -
"We've been listening to the immortal 'King of the Delta Blues' at the wrong speed, but now we can hear him as he intended"
At least 20% faster is the claim and this incorrect speed includes the original 78s. I wonder if I'll like him better with a slow-er hand?
Flamenco:
Paco de Lucia
Gerardo Nunez
Manitas de Plata
Paco Pena
Folk/Acoustic:
Michael Hedges
John Fahey
Michael Chapdelaine
Very good pick.
s.
Perhaps he belongs in the "my favorites" category instead of "the greatest," but...
Steve Hackett
Jazz (improv. and experimental):
-Derek Bailey
-Keith Rowe
-Nels Cline
-Masayuki Takayanagi
-Pete Cosey
Folk (English Premier League)
-Richard Thompson
-Bert Jansch
-Davy Graham
-John Renbourn
-Wizz Jones
The coolest thing about this thread is the guitarists I haven't heard about.
Time to hit Rhapsody , youtube etc. to take a listen.
Great thread, Stephen
Have you ever seen Nashville Pussy play live? If you're anywhere near the stage, you're definitely going home (if you go home at all) covered in beer. And maybe with a few burns.
That band is exhausting!
This is surprising to me. Why do you only give Jimi an honorable mention? I think he's one of the most innovative and influential guitarists.
Awesome. I need to hear those slower versions!
You lose points for forgetting that a guitar is played with hands - never teeth, and its meant to be played from the front - never over head
Definitely one of the most influential, but then from that perspective you also have Led Zeppelin and Jimmy Page and also Nirvana with Kurt Cobain, IMO.
Cheers
Orb
Of course! What was I thinking?
Yup. Good points. I guess what I'm saying is that Jimi Hendrix is and, I believe, will continue to be, more influential than either Jimmy Page or Kurt Cobain. (Edit: I don't mean to take anything away from those guys, though. They are extremely important and awesome players.)
I wouldn't go anywhere near that swamp....
Excellent! As far as "experimental" guitarists go, I want to add to the list Sarah Lipstate (aka Noveller). She really impresses me.
Experimental? Add Henry Kaiser to the list. (Lots of his live work is available for free in high-res on archive.org, incidentally. Being a trust-fund baby means that he gets to release lots of freebies for his fans. )
Influential is an odd concept. Every one of the UK guitarists mentioned in this thread would mention Hank Marvin of the Shadows as an influence, but I doubt the Shadows even had a gold record on this side of the pond. Chuck Berry, who is considered pretty much the founding rock guitarist in the US, will tell anyone who asks that he learned everything he knows from T-Bone Walker records. And he's right, except that T-Bone could have played circles around him. Likewise, there isn't a jazz guitarist in the world who wouldn't cop to a Charlie Christian influence, but Christian (who died of TB in his early 20s) has such a small body of recorded work (mostly backing up Benny Goodman) that most non-guitarist jazz fans have never heard of him, and if they have, it's because of a really crappy-sounding bootleg acetate where he's jamming with Thelonius Monk and playing bebop years before the term was invented...
From me an honorable mention is pretty good, I'm told.
But why? To me it's the sense of effortless performance. And it's hard, hard, hard to beat Chet for that.
I think "folk" myself, with a drift into the real "country" music (not the Nashvile (sic) version) when I think guitar.
If you said "electric guitar" I'd include Jimi, Page, Fripp, Clapton, perhaps Les Paul (yeah, it is electric, but not what you youngsters think of as electric )... I'm probably leaving somebody out, but that's what comes to mind.
King Krimson, LZ, Dire Straits (but that's already mentioned), Uriah Heep (surprise!), Green Day come to mind as bands that use guitars well.
Pink Floyd I put into its own catagory, ditto Queen. Hard to characterize a band that did "I'm in love with my car" and "39" on the same album.
Isn't one of those a flautist?
You're not the only one taking notes.
Thanks! At least one who understand!
Allow me to expound a bit on my list of Composer guitarists;
Rolan Dyens has a lot of jazz influence in his composing.
His arrangements of some jazz standards are unbelievable. You can hear a trio with "vocals" all from one little classical guitar.
He wrote an homage to Frank Zappa that is very interesting.
Carlo Domeniconi wrote an Homage to Jimi Hendrix and check out Carlo's most known piece; Koyambaba on you tube.
Tons of classical guitarists have put their performances of Koyambaba on you tube. Johns Williams recording of that piece is exceptional.
Check out Leo Brouwer's El Decameron Negro.
I forgot about Sergio Assad's "Aquarelle"
David Russel's recording of that is superb
on that same Cd David records Ben Verdery's music.
In fact that whole CD is music written for David by other guitarists.
David won the Grammy for best solo classical album in 2004. He records for Telarc.
I think you guys would like most of these recommendations............let me know if you hear some of them.
The dobro is one cool instrument.
OOPS, forgot about Pavel Steidl's composing.
When Pavel plays 19th century music he seems like the reincarnation of Paganini.
His amazing virtuosity takes back seat to the organic musicianship.
Scales don't sound like scales, they sound like melody sung through the guitar.
He learned to do dual tone humming with circular breathing.
He wrote a piece for guitar that uses that technique.
When Pavel plays Domeniconi's Homage to Hendrix you have the feeling he is channeling Hendrix as a classical guitarist...........it is uncanny.
1. Eric Johnson
2. Pat Metheny
3. Tuck Andress
4. Shawn Lane
5. Sabicas
Don't know Shawn Lane but I really like all the rest, I'll have to hunt for Shawn.
Tuck's arrangement of somewhere over the rainbow is killer.
One of my students adapted it for classical guitar and he plays it very well.......hhmmm I've got to learn that piece , I had forgotten all about it.
Doc Watson
Clarence White
Elliot Smith
Jerry Reed
Merle Travis
Buster B. Jones
Thom Bresh
Pat Donahue
Rev. Gary Davis
David Bromberg
Earl Klugh
Peppino D'Agostino
Mississippi John Hurt
Don Alder
Pierre Bensusan
Peter Finger
Martin Taylor
Richard Thompson
John Fahey
Robbie Basho
Bill Fay
Tommy Emmanuel
John Renbourn
Buddy Emmons
Speedy West
Bert Jansch
Cindy Cashdollar
Derek Bailey
jack Rose
Anne Briggs
Sabicus
Leo Kottke
you must buy this album, Keld
http://www.amazon.com/Great-Dobro-Sessions-Various-Artists/dp/B000000EYC
Just did! Thanks for the heads-up
I am absolutely crazy about the double CD: Alison Krauss + Union Station LIVE, especially CD #2 where Jerry starts the session with 2 wonderful tracks: "A tribute to Peador O'Donnel" and "Monkey let the hogs out"
Two disparate types who haven't been mentioned (or great guitarists with matching initials ):
Steve Stevens
John Jorgenson
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