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Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > The Music Lounge > The Polling Booth > Best Guitar Solo


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  #91  
Old June 24th, 2006
Jove d'Ark Jove d'Ark is offline
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Huggy49=Wrote,

I'd rather listen to Angus Young tune his guitar than most scalloped-fretboard shredmasters play their material.================
=========================
This is a most worthwhile comment and fits with much of what I have been trying to say in all of my various posts. Skill and Artistic integrity equates to Great Music. All those SPEED Demons gives us is a BLUR of sound. I like my music TIGHT and TASTY( throughout the whoel BAND) and decorated with obvious Tradesmanship that can only be aquired by arduous years as a journeyman/apprentice no matter who the artist or the genre.
For those who say a 3 chord tune that moves them to tears is on par with the greatest Masters of Fugue, I say No Way.
As to Angus, I think his best solo is on A Whole Lotta Rosie, but as I peruse all the name thrown up I must say There is NO BEST EVER SOlO. From Jimi's Red House through all of the afore mentioned, these are great works by competent Tradesmen and woman who have taken thier Particular skill to the Enth degree within Thier particular genre. There will NEVER be a ONE ONLY Greatest Whilever Music continues to to be the NeverEnding Story that it is.
Go and check out the depth of musical knowledge and Guitar Artistry of Jean Felix Lalanne. As many have pointed out to me in these Forums MUSIC is SUCH A PERSONAL CHOICE WE ALL MAKE given our own PERSONAL Maturity.

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  #92  
Old June 24th, 2006
MoonShine MoonShine is offline
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Great post Jove d'Ark,
I've always been inclined to take note of who the actual guitarists/muso's recognize as the artist who excels over all others, but not many do put another up on a pedestal, they use the word, 'influence' a lot.
And not many suggest one or the other, they spread their choice out over several genre's or technique.

'Too many to mention' is my answer to this thread, and thats only from a music loving observer and not a proficient guitarist or artist as such. You can rattle out hundreds of names of exceptionally talented guitarists, each having huge respect and admiration for their colleagues ability.....
(well, except for some with ego problems such as Richie Blackmore who tried to stick it up Eric Clapton lol?)

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  #93  
Old June 24th, 2006
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gravitas gravitas is offline
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I don't post here often, but I figured that this one was worth a post:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMJD_...andy%20timmons

That right there is one of my favourites. It meets with a lot of flak, though. Why? Well, specifically, because Andy is so damn good. There is a certain clique of guitarists (I'm not accusing anyone) that can only enjoy songs in which all of the guitar playing is compact, purposeful, you know? And I respect that, in some ways, but that school of thought is limiting.

Listen to Andy with a critical ear, and understand the scope of his musicality. He understands the different wavelengths on which our brains work: first, he catches our attention with that melancholy melody. It's the kind of thing you can't ignore. But he realizes that the human brain is difficult to occupy for too terribly long, and it's such a simple melody isn't it? So he switches it up a little. Now, those aforementioned guitarists are probably still digging the song with him. But those melodic cadences get exhausted, too. So he resorts to those scalar runs, those runs that are so admired and rejected, loathed and envied, sought after and reviled. But why should they be hated in this context? They're perfectly tasteful.

And this is where that school of thought can damage your appreciation of music. Because it stresses the importance of the individual note rather than the impact of the run as a whole, you get lost. Wait, though, your brain does a funny thing when it receives that kind of exposure: it shuts off. It ceases to function. But see how Andy returns to the melody right after? What he's doing isn't to inflate his ego (though I'd venture to guess that it does), it's to instill this total sensory overload in us as listeners. In the same way the sugar at the bottom of your coffe is surprising or a cigarette after a stressful day is refreshing, that overload is stupefying. Think of it like impressionism. Van Gogh drew some pretty big, ugly pitctures of blurs, but step back and see how they turn into some pretty damn nice lookin' flowers.

Of course, constant exposure will numb you to the quality of those flurries of notes. But my point is that an appretiation for airtight songs shouldn't instill a rejection of proficiency.


Holophonic dog howling at the moon / Lying with the dumb baby death at noon / I love this war cos I never lose / Cut me baby I just bleed booze ~ Zodiac Mindwarp
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  #94  
Old June 24th, 2006
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allthumbs allthumbs is offline
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Boy you have put a lot of thought into this. I liked the tune for the most part. Niether good nor bad here, just a matter of personal taste. Thanks for posting it.

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  #95  
Old June 25th, 2006
MoonShine MoonShine is offline
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Yeah agree Thumbs, some real nice laid back stuff there, depending on what mood you're in could mellow out with that style quite comfortably, and go 'dynamic' with some SRV whenever I need an adrenalin fix.

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  #96  
Old June 25th, 2006
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fly135 fly135 is offline
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Nine enough song. Kind of epic chill music. Camel did that sort of thing, although I'm not necessarily equating the guitar playing. But as far as a guitar solo goes it has no hook. Just a lot of transitioning between a bunch of "sounds familiar" soloing. Good stuff, I'd sure like to play it 1/10 as good.

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  #97  
Old July 2nd, 2006
Carlos74 Carlos74 is offline
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"Tornado of Souls" played by Marty Friedman while in Megadeth

Has anyone watched the G3 with Malmsteen? Is it good? I'm about to buy it, but I would like some feedback first.

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  #98  
Old July 2nd, 2006
metalkour metalkour is offline
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it was my favorite G3
i suggest buying it

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  #99  
Old July 3rd, 2006
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Everything Yengwie. Without a doubt.....


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  #100  
Old July 13th, 2006
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Gazbow Gazbow is offline
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Most things by Pete Townshend.


Gazbow got drunk yesterday!
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  #101  
Old July 13th, 2006
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Matty22 Matty22 is offline
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One of my favorites would be the Deep Purple Solo in "Sometimes I Feel Like Screeming" live with the london philaharmonic orchestra...

I find it a diffrent(interesting) use of tapping

OR maybe i just dont know what im talking about


Make me a sandwich <<>> NO! Make it yourself
sudo make me a sandwich <<>> OK
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  #102  
Old July 13th, 2006
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cayenne cayenne is offline
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  Favorite..

Quote:
Originally Posted by sale
What do you think is the best guitar solo of all the time
Well, like many here..so hard to narrow it down to just one...here's my picks off the top of my head:

Rush: La Villa Strangiato (pretty much the whole song is a solo)
Zeppelin: Communication Breakdown (blistering) / Since I've Been Loving You
Pink Floyd: Solos on Time and Shine on you crazy diamond
Yes: Mood For A Day (whole song solo)
Klaatu: Anus of Uranus (wild tone on that guitar)
Hendrix: All Along the Watchtower

The list could go on ad-nauseam, but, those were the first quick ones off the top of my head, and it is always best to go with your first instincts...

:-)

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  #103  
Old July 13th, 2006
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"Klaatu: Anus of Uranus (wild tone on that guitar)"

Holy cow! I think I still have this album on vinyl. Now I'm going to have to dig it up and give it a listen.

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  #104  
Old July 13th, 2006
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cayenne cayenne is offline
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  You know them??

Quote:
Originally Posted by fly135
"Klaatu: Anus of Uranus (wild tone on that guitar)"

Holy cow! I think I still have this album on vinyl. Now I'm going to have to dig it up and give it a listen.
Wow...I'm amazed anyone much still knows who they are!! I loved their 1st two albums....

If you like them...they have remasterd and re-issued the catalog...got it from a Canadian company. I'm too much a noob to post the URL right now to them...but, ask me later or pm me..and I can give you the link if you're interested.

cayenne

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  #105  
Old August 18th, 2006
andyp18 andyp18 is offline
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It isn't really a solo but I love the beginning of Sweet Child O' Mine

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