Great job Rhett! The Edge is one of the greatest of all time. A master of sound and parts. Also one of the most accurate players I’ve seen live and a first rate singers.
I finally saw The Edge from extremely close at a concert a few years ago. Accuracy, precision and rhythm were three words that came to mind watching him. Even on the seemingly "simple" chord parts during Sunday Bloody Sunday, he played like he had hands of a surgeon.
One of his big guitar influences was Stuart Adamson of Big Country/the Skids. Listen to the solo at the end of the Skids' "Hurry On Boys" and the debt is obvious.
I've not played the solo to "Time" for - I'd say - 16 years. Yet after Rhett played the first bar, I hit pause and picked up my guitar and played the whole thing from memory. After 16 years of not playing it. Yeah, I'd say the "Time" solo left an impression on me.
10º) 01:43 - Time (Pink Floyd) 9º) 04:00 - Let Me Get By (Tedeschi Trucks Band) 8º) 05:33 - Wind Cries Mary (Jimi Hendrix) 7º) 07:01 - Since I've been Loving You (Led Zeppelin) 6º) 09:06 - New Year's Day (U2) 5º) 11:00 - Help The Poor (Roben Ford) 4º) 12:53 - Kid Charlemagne (Steely Dan) 3º) 14:50 - Gravity (John Mayer) 2º) 16:31 - Statesboro Blues (Allman Brothers) 1º) 18:40 - Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd)
@@keplerarpeggios3215 Thanks! I've never heard of this band but they have a channel and share official audio of their songs. Listened to two tracks so far and I'm all in. Stone Mirrors is the killer track for me so far, but I want to know more. Do you know anything about this band?
"Comfortably Numb" is my number one all time, it's truly epic, but "Time" is really, really, close, it's an astounding solo in it's own right. When I listen to it it makes me question how somebody could have actually created it in the first place, it's mind boggling.
@@TheHumbuckerboy They're both great, although I'm with you on leaning towards "Time" mostly because, although I haven't played in a long time, I remember just how deceptively complex it is. "Eruption," say, is a technical virtuosity, but even with that I could see how I could lock myself in a room for a few weeks and at least get the gist of the technique. With "Time" however, there's just something about it that no amount of practice would ever allow me to pull off.
@@CCNYMacGuy I love the fact that the solo sounds so raw ( you can hear the string bend almost choking-out at one point) and yet so poised and majestic whilst being very expressive . Plus the context within the song also frames the solo brilliantly ... " No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun" !
I played Time at my high school talent show with a few guys in my class. When I played the end of the first part of the solo (at 2:30 here), the audience roared. I'll never forget that.
10) Still Got The Blues from Gary Moore, taught me vibrato 9) Hotel California from the Eagles, master class in soloing 8) Sails Of Charon from Uli Roth, taught me through composing 7) Burn from Ritchie Blackmore, taught me shred 6) Cliffs Of Dover from Eric Johnson, taught me tone as compositional tool 5) Checking Out from Allan Holdsworth, taught me to play lines instead of licks 4) Cause We've Ended As Lovers from Jeff Beck, taught me taste 3) S.A.T.O. from Randy Rhoads, taught me question and answer 2) Comfortably Numb from David Gilmour, taught me right note right place 1) Eruption from Ed, taught me stunt guitar
1. The Trooper 2. Sweet Child O' Mine 3. Freebird 4. Dancing in The Moonlight (Thin Lizzy) 5. Slow Dancing In A Burning Room 6. Sloe Gin (Joe Bonamassa) 7. Midnight In Harlem 8. Hotel California 9. Knockin' On Heavens Door (GNR) 10. The Sky Is Cryin' (Tedeschi Trucks Band live at Red Rocks 2012. Absolute face melter.)
Time is a real beauty. In my opinion, it contains the greatest note in rock history. I think you'll know the one I mean. A chill up the spine every time.
@@plefevre Yep. That note. To me Time is the best because it's JUST the right length (I'll spare putting in a Time-related pun, here) and has that beautiful change in feel, where each half is as good as the other. It also fits the song perfectly, as during the second part where notes seem to hang, it feels like the passage of time has slowed. It's a beautiful piece of music.
Okay here are half a dozen of mine: 1. The Ventures- "Walk Don't Run". This is the song that made we want to play guitar. It dates me, I know. 2. Jimi Hendrix- "Hey Joe". Or just about anything else on his first album. What else needs to be said? 3. Pete Townshend- "Sparks" from Live at Leeds. This album probably influenced my rock style more than any other. 4. George Harrison- intro to "Octopus's Garden". I love love LOVE that solo. It's criminally overlooked. 5. Denny Dias- "Bodhisattva" from Steely Dan's Countdown to Ecstasy. The first time I had heard jazz guitar licks in a rock format. My jaw was on the floor. Dias is another absolutely brilliant unsung guitarist. 6. David Gilmour- "Money". It's hard to pick just one because he's so damn good. This is the one that really grabbed me early on.
I remember learning the something solo, it was a moment for me. Such a mysterious genius sound that I was able to somewhat replicate. Really felt like I wasn't a total beginner when I finally got that.
@@drdre4397 McCartney’s bass on “Something” is also great, and combined with Harrison’s solo, might be the best one-two punch ever. Also, Harrison’s solo on Let it Be (album version) is incredible!
@@mantashaft The "Another Brick in the Wall" was my guitar project while stuck at home. So awesome!! I never grow tired of hearing DG guitar and solos. My playing was heavily influenced by him.
Ikr! Gilmour is so amazing at conveying emotion through everything he plays. The very first Pink Floyd song I heard was Comfortably Numb. The two solos were what got me hooked. The Pulse version is my fav.
I'm happy someone is as obsessed with pink Floyd as I am. That band is everything to me and without comfortably numb's second solo I don't think I'd have the urge to play guitar everyday ❤️
I don't understand why there would be any controversy over The Edge. Do people take issue with his heavy use of delay? Look, he has an instantly recognizable sound, and it's been imitated countless times and has inspired countless other players. He has timing, feel, a good sense of melody, great tone, and has been the melodic core of a power trio of instrumentalists for decades, and he's still going!... and still entertaining arenas full of fans! He's not my favorite player but his talent and impact is undeniable.
I think it's because he's not a heavy rocker or a shredder and so many equate heavy distortion and speed with great guitar playing. As if guys like Chet Atkins or Jerry Garcia aren't great.
I actually agree with the delay objection but that’s a personal preference. I like the physical acrobatics as a player and feel massive delay repeats places too many limitations. Again as a player, not thinking like a songwriter/melody maker. The intro to “welcome to the jungle” comes to mind. I don’t like notes I didn’t pick, even if it’s a slow burn kind of song (i.e. not shredding)
I used to be a real jerk, I used to hate Oasis and was personally offended that other people liked them. I lightened up, got my head out my butt, and decided that I don't care what other people like.
Nicely done, Rhett! I'm a 62 year old pro and I related to quite a bit of what your experience has been and agree with your choices! The tune that I transcribed as a teenager that got my confidence going was 'Cause We've Ended As Lovers. I told myself I was going to stay in my room till I got something and I did. I ended with something that I could play along with the record-it was probably 60-70% correct at best and did not include Jeff's solo, but I was elated and very proud of myself! This was one of many moments that led the way to my lifelong career as a guitarist.
Since I've been loving you is my favorite solo and my favorite song of all time. Achilles Last Stand solo made a huge impact on my life, It was the first time I felt a tight feeling in my chest because of a song, that changed my life forever.
Thanks for this. What I especially respect and appreciate is how you actually played them in a live setting. That was a risk you took but really shows how much true influence these players have had on you. It takes a lot of humility to say, these are iconic solos that inspired me, I can’t play them exactly how they did but it’s worth the shot. You truly honored these players while inspiring the rest of us. Nice work!
This was an incredibly courageous video to make. To put yourself out there with this range of iconic guitar performances is one part. To commit to doing so with live players in your studio with top notch production values is another. And to model your love of these players and your devotion to learning from them is the best of all. Well done, Rhett!
I sat down and listened to Led Zeppelin II when I was 15. When the solo for Whole Lotta Love kicked in it was like an explosion of color sound and emotion and I knew that there was no turning back from that point.
I never got into U2 and I'm still not. However, I had an opportunity to play "Streets Have No Name" in a little group I was in, which meant I had to learn it in its entirety. I have a new respect for the Edge and his ability and creativity.
The Edge is a legend. A guitarists guitarist. Dave Gilmour almost every solo. My life changer....Alex Lifeson. His emotive stuff is superb: Limelight, Chemistry, The Garden etc. His technical stuff mind boggling: La Villa Strangiato, Freewill.
Alex Lifeson ss a really underrated guitar player - those solos are all brilliant. I remember buying Permanent Waves in 1980 and marvelling at his seemingly impossible scales. I got to grips with his style and it set me up for understanding that not everything is blues. Rush were really forward thinking
A honorable list of solo's that stay in one's head. I'm older than you (65) but I started at 12 yrs. in 1968 and was a hard core listener since I was 8 in 1964 after seeing The Beatles on Ed Sullivan. Your an old school player and that's what makes you stand out and matter... Don't Ever Change. We share the same "wheelhouse" with many others who know the truth about something to say, feel and TONE.
The most melodic, dynamic, and passionate player I can think of. When I first heard of him in the late 90,s I went who is this guy - he sounded like a blend of Santana meets Eddie Van Halen! I bought all his albums. Everyone probably thinks John McLaughlin is the fastest player of all time, and I did too until I heard an obscure album by Gary Moore called Frontier - I have never heard faster playing - including all the finger tapping players we have all heard.
The intro to "The Calvary Cross" on Richard and Linda Thompson's I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight always does something unexplainable to my nervous system.
It doesn't get on anyone's list, but I find the guitar solo at the end of "Shout" by Tears for Fears to be tremendously effective in the song and quite memorable. It's so melodic.
I remember it like it was yesterday and not many decades ago... Dire Straits: Sultans of Swing - the middle solo. Mark Knopfler set the scene for me for what a solo, and music in general, could be. He started my journey on the guitar.
Comfortably Numb probably has to top my list. It’s just a perfect chord progression to play over, and the emotional weight the original carries makes Floyd one of my favorites to this day.
This could have been my list! I play each of these songs as practice, and because each has meant so much to me. Incredible insight. I'm 68 years old, and have been playing 57 years. All of these songs had such a big influence. There was 1 major turning point for me. I was taking lessons, on acoustic, at 11 when an older kid came into class early, plugged in his electric guitar and started wailing on Gloria, by Them. I quit lessons, and started a band. Those were the days. Great video!
Absolutely! I wish Harrison's songwriting prowess had been better-used in the early days of the Beatles. His solo album All Things Must Pass is a masterpiece and one of my favorite albums.
Exactly, no other player has an effect that prominent EXCLUSIVELY associated with them, besides, playing u2 songs is not what I would call an easy task.....
I'm not even joking when I say that Rhett is the only Guitarist I've ever heard come close to that sound.. and even then it's not quite there. Brilliant musician.
I know when the solo being played is by The Edge. I can also tell when I'm listening to the late James Honeyman Scott of The Pretenders. They're both immediately recognizable to me.
Hi Rhett from down Under! Some great solos to be inspired by. There is a couple solos that still give me goose bumps listening and playing... 1: still got the blues, Gary Moore 2: hitch a ride, Boston 3: comfortably numb, Pink Floyd 4: coming back to life, Pink Floyd Cheers for the sweet playing!
Wind Cries Mary is the song that made me start playing guitar and the first solo I ever learned. I love that you appreciate the greatness of this song. It’s underrated for sure
Rory Gallagher on the Irish Tour album - particularly Million Miles Away. Otherwise grew up on Clapton and Santana, who definitely deserve multiple mentions!
All of the players on your list are not just great guitarists, but they're stylists, they aren't playing something that isn't "them." They aren't showing off or trying to be flashy, they play to the song and that is what makes these or any great solo "great." Also, you fit with this group of players so well, I hope you play more with them. This, in my opinion, is your best video to date, Rhett!
10. You're All that I Needed 9. Money 8. Power To Love (Intro lead) 7. Cause We Ended As Lovers (still working on it) 6. Badge 5. Smoke On The Water 4. Comfortably Numb/Mother 3. Silver Train 2. Can't You Hear Me Knocking 1. Hotel California Although 4 is two I love them equally so I could separate them Great episode Rhett thanks
Allan Holdsworth with UK. In The Dark Of Night. Bill Bruford was quoted as saying that Allan’s solo was the best 90 seconds of guitar playing he had ever heard.
You have great selectins there Rhett and excellent renditions! One of my favorites is the guitar lead in, "Dark Eyed Cajun Woman" by the Doobie Brothers. :)
Great. No solo and no artist changed my life but I remember being speechless when I hear the solo in the song called Nutshell by Jerry Cantrell. I play mainly jazz but as a kid I loved Alice in Chain
Before you even started naming off the bands and the solos I started thinking to myself "what solos have changed my life?" And immediately the first band that came to mind was Pink Floyd and the songs/solos were "Time", "Mother" and I know this is going to sound cliche.. but, the other was "Comfortably Numb"; those songs give me goosebumps every single time I hear them and the emotional power that Gilmour is able to purge out in his playing is unmatched. Nobody even comes close. And then the others that immediately came to mind were "Hey Joe", "The Wind Cries Mary" and "Little Wing" ; All are of course by the great and infamous... *Jimi Hendrix* Sounds like we have similar taste. I think Hey Joe may have been the first solo that I learned all the way through without just taking a few licks from it. Anyway, great video man! I look forward to more content!
Literally had the same experience with "wish you were here". Hendrix got me interested, Gilmore gave me the sound. And I've been butchering their stuff everyday since.
I am 60 and started playing at 9 so this will skew 70's. 10. Folsom Prison Blues Luther Perkins with Johnny Cash. This was the song that made me want to learn guitar. 9. Terraplane Blues Robert Johnson. First time I heard this I was enraptured with bottleneck and alternate tunings. 8. Good Times Bad Times. Jimmy Page with Led Zeppelin 7. Dogs. David Gilmour with Pink Floyd. I thought I had heard everything until I heard this. The structure, the melodic, the tension just blew the top of my head off. 6. My Old School. Jeff Baxter with Steely Dan 5. Jessica. Les Dudek and Dickey Betts with The Allman Brothers. The first time we played the whole song through as a band was a spiritual experience. 4. Maggot Brain Eddie Hazel with Funkadelic. 12 year old white boy in North Dakota hears this and realizes that their is an entire universe to explore. 3. Billion Dollar Babies and Intro/Sweet Jane. Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter with Alice Cooper and Lou Reed. I had too put both on here so sue me. 2. Time Was. Andy Powell and Ted Turner with Wishbone Ash. This took me from obsession to fanaticism. 1. Comfortably Numb. David Gilmore with Pink Floyd. 42 years later and this will still bring tears.
I'm pleased you mentioned Dogs from Pink Floyd - Animals, (for those who don't know). I love that track, I'm always playing it - all 17 minutes of it, and I agree, its a great solo by him and I love the guitar tone. Whatever happened to the concept album? Died with Pink Floyd probably :(
Great list! Two of my favourite solos that I think are often overlooked are Hit me with your best shot and Little Miss can't be wrong. Hidden gems both of them. Have another listen.
I haven’t seen the whole video, but here are some of mine • Kid Charlemagne - Larry Carlton • Manhattan - Eric Johnson • Europa - Santana • Race With The Devil On Spanish Highway - Al Di Meola • Money - David Gilmour • Eruption Live 1983 - EVH • ALL ZZ Top solos - Billy Gibbons • Rosanna - Steve Lukather
Kid Charlemagne is deservedly in there and I am total agreement about Billy Gibbons - I never understand why so few guitar channels look at songs like Apologies to Pearly everything about the tune is fantastic, lead, rhythm bass drums it's perfection
@@peterreeves6825 Apologies to Pearly might be my fave ZZTop tune of all time, and certainly the one that I spent the most time trying learn to play as perfectly as I could
Trey Anastasio (with Phish) - Fast Enough for You Santana - Oye Como Va (first solo I ever learned) David Gilmour - Comfortably Numb Elliott Randall (Steely Dan) - Reeling in the Years Wes Montgomery - Polka Dots and Moonbeams (yeah, I know it's jazz, and yeah - lots of octaves) I'll think of more...
Out of all those solos,....and they were all excellent,...?...but your Derek Trucks rendition was jawdroppingly good Rhett. Whole new respect for you man. I know that took FOREVER. Well done brother 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Gravity was the song that made me pick up the guitar at 19 years old. First heard Bold as Love by John Mayor, but once I heard the original, I knew I’ll never stop playing. Could take me while life, but I will play that magic.
So far, I’ve only really got two. War Pigs and One. War pigs because I was impressed at how much of it I could play first try, One because it was when I first used pick tapping.
Elliott Randall on Steely Dan's Reelin' in the Years. Especially the intro solo, which basically starts as a recapitulation of the chorus vocals -- but the phrasing and movement around the fretboard blows me away. One of these days I'll actually play it well, and at tempo (I can dream, anyway)
I was six years old in 1983, standing at the Dairy Queen window, when I heard Tom Schultz play the solo on Boston’s “More than a Feeling”. That’s the moment when I fell in love with the guitar. Thanks Tom
First solo I ever learned by ear: Slash's first solo on Knocking on Heaven's Door. New Year's Day could have made its way on my list, too :D gamechangers for me: Randy Rhoads on Crazy Train, Mr Crowley and Goodbye to Romance. Angus taught me how to use double stops on Hells Bells. Gary Moore, Still got the blues.... I never really played the solo, but played along to the recording a lot, and that told me a whole lotta stuff (XD). Stairway, of course. The guitar solo on No Doubt's Don't speak. Sultans of Swing. Lately I found some really cool small solos in small songs that inspired me a lot, like Rhett Miller's Our Love, The Coral's Dreaming of You.
The solo from Shine by Collective Soul was a good early one for me. A simple very early one was Van Halen’s Running with the Devil solo. Great for a beginner trying to solo. It’s short and simple to focus on perfecting.
Jerry Garcia - I Know You Rider (Europe '72) and Scarlet Begonias (Cornell '77) Jeff "Skunk" Baxter - Rikki Don't Lose That Number Randy Rhoads - Diary of a Madman Eddie Van Halen - Jamie's Cryin Carlos Santana - Black Magic Woman
Hi Rhett, what a tasteful selection. Im so pleased to see not only the usual suspects on the list but also incredible artists like Derek Trucks or Robben Ford. I happened to meet Robben years ago in Cologne/Germany when he suddenly dropped into my favorite small guitar shop. His wife, a well-known singer in another genre, was performing with a program of Bertolt Brecht/Kurt Weill songs that day on her European tour, and he took the chance to meet the guitar store owner he previously knew. He held a spontaneous guitar clinic for that random audience and it was just jaw-dropping.
Enjoyed this Rhett... exploring and sharing where it all began for you helps us know you better. I don't make RUclips videos like you do...but some of my " I gotta learn to play guitar" has come from Eric Clapton Crossroads, Santana samba Pa Ti. The Kinks You Really Got Me... ( ok...so I'm a few years older than Beato! ) Roy Buchanan Wayfaring Pilgrim Jeff Beck. Going Down... Stratus... SRV Life Without You... Robin Trower Too Rollin Stoned Hendrix...Hey Joe plus countless others Lukather, Al Dimiola, Weather Report, I still get chicken skin when ever I hear music that really hits home... Keep following your bliss...
1) Ride The Lightning 2) Pigs (Three different ones) 3) Back in Black (outro solo is my favorite of the two) 4) Haitian Divorce 5) Power of Soul 6) Layla 7) Leper Messiah 8) Maggot Brain 9) Heartbreaker 10) Fade to Black Not in any particular order but are all very memorable solos that definitely made me pick up the guitar
As a drummer, I'll give you my top 10 list of guitar solos with great drums backing them!! 10- Can You Hear Me Knocking, The Rolling Stones: Mick Taylor is solid on that one!! The shift from that hard rocking groove to the latin feel of the outro section is amazing! The whole Sticky Fingers album is the best Stones album ever... All killer, no filler!! 9- We Used To know, Jethro Tull: My dad is really into classical, big band and jazz stuff... My mom on the other hand is more into the Beatles and more folk and bluesy stuff... That was one of her LP's in the collection and my parents eventually gave me their record collection because they switched to CD's and their old turntable broke. That album was one of my high school staples and it's a case of where the music sounds just like the cover looks!! Though they're known for Ian Anderson's flute, there's great switching around between that and an awesome solo by Martin Barre and the whole thing backed up by a killer series of drum fills by Clive Bunker!! 8- When The Music's Over, The Doors: In my later grade school years and through high school I had this cousin who war really into The Doors, he had the whole cassette collection... I had the whole Beatles collection, so we used to trade all the time! It was a while until I got Doors records of my own because I had them kicking around all the time. So my biggest takeaway from these type of Doors songs is the way the playing is so abstract... Sure, that guitar solo doesn't lead anywhere... it just dies there and the band segues into something totally different and it doesn't matter!! Break rules guys!! 7- You, Led Zeppelin: From the BBC sessions album... Another instance of a killer guitar solo with an equally killer drum solo backing it!! What else can I say!! 6- Going Home, Ten Years After: As a kid and in my early teens I had only heard my old music on records... it was the eighties, so everything was about Michael Jackson and Samantha Fox!! Then, one night on CBC tv, they aired the Isle Of Wight film and I taped it to VHS and watched that tape over and over until there were tracking bars that I couldn't get out of the screen!! One of the biggest discoveries I made that night was Ten Years After... Chuck Berry riffs on steroids backed by a jazz rhythm section on amphetamines, it was a real eye opener!! Later in college, I was playing this over the campus radio station and some guy walks into the studio to fetch a bag he'd forgotten there. He stopped dead in his tracks and asked if I had put this on. I replied yes and he said "I thought I was the only guy in town who listened to this stuff!! I'm Étienne and I play guitar..." I made a new best friend that day!! 5- Substitute, The Who: What can you say... The guitar itself isn't doing much, but those drums! Damn!! My biggest take away from the who is the performance aspect! I'd also had a few band projects that died before we had accomplished anything meaningful by then, so from the time I first saw the Kids Are Alright film, I made it a point to play every gig as if it was the last time... Putting suits on, pacing myself for the show and pulling all the stops out for the last 2-3 numbers... A huge influence on how I behave on stage!! 4- Heathrow Or Deathrow, The Dears: A band from Montreal and this song is off the EP I bought when I saw them in concert the first time. They were on tour with Sloan and George, the drummer was playing Andrew's blue sparkle Ludwig kit... Their whole set was like watching a car crash in slow motion for an hour!! Everybody in the venue stood still, awestruck at what was going on in front of them! After the show, I went and bought the LP, had a chat with the drummer and some of the guys from Sloan. We geeked about gear, current favorite records and so on for at least 45 minutes! To this day the best show ever!! Second time I saw them, George had scored a mint '55 Ludwig of his own and we got to chat about that for a while and he's been the guy I often see in concerts in Montreal and have a beer with ever since! 3- Those Were The Days, Cream: When I started playing drums, I was all about Ringo and at the same time really into Mitch Mitchell as well. Ginger was more of an unattainable goal and didn't have the heavy tone of Ringo or Bonham nor the busy fills of Moon or Mitchell that I was aiming for. Turns out though that listened to enough of him to pick up some Baker-isms along the way and it's now a big part of my playing style! Also the guitar solo is amazing, comes back later in the outro of the song and they had the nerve to fade it out when the whole thing was picking up steam at the end!! 2- Axis Bold As Love, Jimi Hendrix: To me the quintessential face melting solo with killer drums played behind it... Then, it stops and starts right back again only crazier!! Amazing!!! Also, my favorite Hendrix album all around! 1- Yer Blues, The Beatles: This is where it all started... It's the very first song I remember hearing of them! I was 6 or 7 years old at the time, kind of aware that they existed but hadn't paid particular attention when one of their songs was on the radio. One day I found the White Album in my parent's LP collection and randomly dropped the needle on a song hoping to hear what I thought I'd heard on the radio... Hearing those bendy riffs and screamed vocals, I'd thought I had broken the record player!! After listening to the whole White Album, I started reading about them, learning about a rivalry between them and another band called the Stones, that they used to hang out in a club with a band called The Who, or that their bass player recommended some guy named Jimi to play at the Monterey rock festival... To me the Beatles are an incredible musical springboard if you want to discover a whole bunch of unrelated stuff about music!! Well, that was an essay.. Sorry to take up that much bandwith! Keep on rocking!!
The solo that caused me to learn guitar was Brick in the Wall, David Gimour. Phil Keaggy and Dann Huff never make these lists, but I think they would if more people knew who they were. Everyone has a favorite song that Dann Huff played on, they just don’t know it.
Phil Keaggy’s Further Adventures Of is one of my all time favorite guitar pieces. So many amazing parts in that jam. What crazy is I don’t know how many people even know about it. -P
I’ve enjoyed a number of your videos, but figured I’d comment on this one! I’m still learning, but breakthrough moments in my playing are: 1. Money For Nothing, Dire Straits Learning that killer riff early on was a huge thrill 2. Johnny B Goode, Chuck Berry. Figuring out how to play that one well enough that people knew what I was doing gave me confidence that I could play actual rock and roll 3. Where The Devil Don’t Stay, The Drive By Truckers. The awesome lead slide part on the album version is played by a young Jason Isbell, and it’s still a thrill to listen to it after thousands of times for me. It’s my gateway drug to slide guitar 4. Hey Hey, My My, Neil Young and Crazy Horse. Neil is my model on how to put your guts into what you play Keep up the great work!
All of these are on my list too. I started right when Clapton unplugged came out. So He and the Beatles, the crowes, and everyone else on this list was on mine plus I have so many more I have to hear a lot.
for me it was Marc Ford's solos with the Black Crowes, All of Clapton's unplugged, Gilmour, Page. Knopfler, Buddy Guy, Lynsey Buckingham, and of course, Mike Campbell.
People really underestimate how insanely hard it is to nail the Edge's sounds. Lots of people just use a Vox & delay, but it always sounds like a bad imitation. Edge uses so many things to get his sounds, and has waaaay more sounds than he's given credit for. Amazing player that totally deserves the recognition.
If you ever watch an interview where they are talking about Syd, you can watch a part of Gilmour die every time he talks about when one of the band members asked if they should go around to pick up Syd for the gig that night. It is there that he says that one of the others said... "No." I honestly think it was DG that said no, and he still feels an immense sense of guilt over that. So sad. And no amount of logic or business sense will ever change hurt like that.
I think it was likely Roger who said Naw. David is glad for the opportunity, but he has a musical ability that it would be hard to imagine Floyd without him. I think Roger feels the guilt and David the feeling that he never really was accepted as one of them, that he worked so hard and that he and Syd had busked around Europe together he is wounded by what happened to Syd. When he was with Jokers Wild he even did a song for a Bridget Bardot movie. His parents basically threw him into boarding school at 5 and didn’t build a sense of family until he hit it big with Floyd and resents it. Where were you Mom and Dad? I grew up the same way only in America we don’t have boarding schools.
Marty Friedman’s solo on Tornado of Souls Robben Ford’s Help the Poor solo Kirk Hammett’s solo on The Frayed Ends of Sanity I was more in to Metal than anything else at that stage.
Fantastic video. Thank you Rhett. Although most of these are my favourites as well, Carlos Santana's Black Magic Woman did it for me because of it's simplicity and power.
Great job Rhett! The Edge is one of the greatest of all time. A master of sound and parts. Also one of the most accurate players I’ve seen live and a first rate singers.
I finally saw The Edge from extremely close at a concert a few years ago. Accuracy, precision and rhythm were three words that came to mind watching him. Even on the seemingly "simple" chord parts during Sunday Bloody Sunday, he played like he had hands of a surgeon.
One of his big guitar influences was Stuart Adamson of Big Country/the Skids. Listen to the solo at the end of the Skids' "Hurry On Boys" and the debt is obvious.
Et tu, Rick?
Thanks Rick!
That anyone doubts The Edge is so incredibly stupid. He's the Dave Gilmour of a different era.
I've not played the solo to "Time" for - I'd say - 16 years. Yet after Rhett played the first bar, I hit pause and picked up my guitar and played the whole thing from memory. After 16 years of not playing it. Yeah, I'd say the "Time" solo left an impression on me.
10º) 01:43 - Time (Pink Floyd)
9º) 04:00 - Let Me Get By (Tedeschi Trucks Band)
8º) 05:33 - Wind Cries Mary (Jimi Hendrix)
7º) 07:01 - Since I've been Loving You (Led Zeppelin)
6º) 09:06 - New Year's Day (U2)
5º) 11:00 - Help The Poor (Roben Ford)
4º) 12:53 - Kid Charlemagne (Steely Dan)
3º) 14:50 - Gravity (John Mayer)
2º) 16:31 - Statesboro Blues (Allman Brothers)
1º) 18:40 - Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd)
The solo in Time has such a haunting vibe just like the lyrics....IMO one of the best written solos ever written.
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
Thanks for posting this.
Thank you lincoln tube... What Rhett has to / should do.
@@keplerarpeggios3215 Thanks! I've never heard of this band but they have a channel and share official audio of their songs. Listened to two tracks so far and I'm all in. Stone Mirrors is the killer track for me so far, but I want to know more. Do you know anything about this band?
"Comfortably Numb" is my number one all time, it's truly epic, but "Time" is really, really, close, it's an astounding solo in it's own right. When I listen to it it makes me question
how somebody could have actually created it in the first place, it's mind boggling.
I much prefer Time
@@TheHumbuckerboy I'm not going to debate you, that's totally fair!
Same. Comfortably Numb is God tier.
@@TheHumbuckerboy They're both great, although I'm with you on leaning towards "Time" mostly because, although I haven't played in a long time, I remember just how deceptively complex it is. "Eruption," say, is a technical virtuosity, but even with that I could see how I could lock myself in a room for a few weeks and at least get the gist of the technique. With "Time" however, there's just something about it that no amount of practice would ever allow me to pull off.
@@CCNYMacGuy I love the fact that the solo sounds so raw ( you can hear the string bend almost choking-out at one point) and yet so poised and majestic whilst being very expressive . Plus the context within the song also frames the solo brilliantly ... " No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun" !
I played Time at my high school talent show with a few guys in my class. When I played the end of the first part of the solo (at 2:30 here), the audience roared. I'll never forget that.
You probably get goosebumps thinking about it. Rad, Man!
10) Still Got The Blues from Gary Moore, taught me vibrato
9) Hotel California from the Eagles, master class in soloing
8) Sails Of Charon from Uli Roth, taught me through composing
7) Burn from Ritchie Blackmore, taught me shred
6) Cliffs Of Dover from Eric Johnson, taught me tone as compositional tool
5) Checking Out from Allan Holdsworth, taught me to play lines instead of licks
4) Cause We've Ended As Lovers from Jeff Beck, taught me taste
3) S.A.T.O. from Randy Rhoads, taught me question and answer
2) Comfortably Numb from David Gilmour, taught me right note right place
1) Eruption from Ed, taught me stunt guitar
Nice list. Can you play them all? :)
Great list, Great musicians & Great spectrum of lessons! Things that are missing in published music today.
Good stuff here.
great list, add SRV for all out energy!
@@ahall3823 I could at one time yes, unfortunately not anymore, but some of them I still can.
1. The Trooper
2. Sweet Child O' Mine
3. Freebird
4. Dancing in The Moonlight (Thin Lizzy)
5. Slow Dancing In A Burning Room
6. Sloe Gin (Joe Bonamassa)
7. Midnight In Harlem
8. Hotel California
9. Knockin' On Heavens Door (GNR)
10. The Sky Is Cryin' (Tedeschi Trucks Band live at Red Rocks 2012. Absolute face melter.)
Very cool, diverse list
Oh hey Ross! I would probably put Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door probably at the top of the list but now I’m trying to think of what my first solo was. 🤘🎸🤔
I easily agree with at least 5 of these. Well done.
Some recognition for dancing in the moonlight, one of my all time favorite solos. Nah, favorite songs!
Just spot on! Great choices!
the greatest part of this is that music is being played live, thank you Rhett
It’s refreshing to see someone recognise Time. Most would just insert Comfortably Numb. My favourite guitar work of Gilmour is Dogs.
Time is a real beauty. In my opinion, it contains the greatest note in rock history. I think you'll know the one I mean. A chill up the spine every time.
@@plefevre Yep. That note. To me Time is the best because it's JUST the right length (I'll spare putting in a Time-related pun, here) and has that beautiful change in feel, where each half is as good as the other. It also fits the song perfectly, as during the second part where notes seem to hang, it feels like the passage of time has slowed. It's a beautiful piece of music.
totally agree with "Since I've Been Loving You", one of my all time favs. Great playing btw!!
anything from Thin Lizzy
Naaaah, great that you love it but no.
Yes! Personally, Since I've Been Loving You was the main reason why I picked up guitar
Basically taught myself guitar learning it note for note
working on that one....im not much of a shredder but that ones worth the effort
Okay here are half a dozen of mine:
1. The Ventures- "Walk Don't Run". This is the song that made we want to play guitar. It dates me, I know.
2. Jimi Hendrix- "Hey Joe". Or just about anything else on his first album. What else needs to be said?
3. Pete Townshend- "Sparks" from Live at Leeds. This album probably influenced my rock style more than any other.
4. George Harrison- intro to "Octopus's Garden". I love love LOVE that solo. It's criminally overlooked.
5. Denny Dias- "Bodhisattva" from Steely Dan's Countdown to Ecstasy. The first time I had heard jazz guitar licks in a rock format. My jaw was on the floor. Dias is another absolutely brilliant unsung guitarist.
6. David Gilmour- "Money". It's hard to pick just one because he's so damn good. This is the one that really grabbed me early on.
That this is bookended by Pink Floyd is so very appropriate
I noticed that too AND I like it
Arguably the most memorable guitarist around. Every note sticks in your mind like there's a lyric attached to it
I was expecting comfortably numb in here somewhere lol
@@BobJones-bh9qz it’s a great solo, but Gilmour has done better than that with songs like Money, Time, & Dogs
Gilmour’s solos were independent melodies!
Jimi on “Little Wing” and Gorge Harrison on “Something” is what came to mind for me for life changing solos
I remember learning the something solo, it was a moment for me. Such a mysterious genius sound that I was able to somewhat replicate. Really felt like I wasn't a total beginner when I finally got that.
'Something' is an amazing solo. A song within a song.
@@drdre4397 McCartney’s bass on “Something” is also great, and combined with Harrison’s solo, might be the best one-two punch ever. Also, Harrison’s solo on Let it Be (album version) is incredible!
Comfortably Numb is the ONE solo that did it for me. I'm a lifelong Floyd fan. David Gilmour is, in my opinion, the absolute master of solos.
The solos from Comfortably numb and another brick in the wall part 2 are perfection
Comfortably numb live in Gdansk is an absolute masterpiece!
@@mantashaft The "Another Brick in the Wall" was my guitar project while stuck at home. So awesome!! I never grow tired of hearing DG guitar and solos. My playing was heavily influenced by him.
Ikr! Gilmour is so amazing at conveying emotion through everything he plays. The very first Pink Floyd song I heard was Comfortably Numb. The two solos were what got me hooked. The Pulse version is my fav.
Which one? There are two.
I'm happy someone is as obsessed with pink Floyd as I am. That band is everything to me and without comfortably numb's second solo I don't think I'd have the urge to play guitar everyday ❤️
Martin Barre's solo in Aqualung; forever changed my taste in music...
Martin Barre and Barriemore Barlow are two of the most criminally underated musicians ever.
@@cletusbeauregard1972 AGREE!
@@cletusbeauregard1972 Barrie was maybe the best drummer in rock, ever.
Absolutely! Whatever he played ist great.
@@cletusbeauregard1972 So true. I agonized to put this on my list.
I don't understand why there would be any controversy over The Edge. Do people take issue with his heavy use of delay? Look, he has an instantly recognizable sound, and it's been imitated countless times and has inspired countless other players. He has timing, feel, a good sense of melody, great tone, and has been the melodic core of a power trio of instrumentalists for decades, and he's still going!... and still entertaining arenas full of fans!
He's not my favorite player but his talent and impact is undeniable.
I think it's because he's not a heavy rocker or a shredder and so many equate heavy distortion and speed with great guitar playing. As if guys like Chet Atkins or Jerry Garcia aren't great.
Do we all have to like the same things?
I actually agree with the delay objection but that’s a personal preference. I like the physical acrobatics as a player and feel massive delay repeats places too many limitations. Again as a player, not thinking like a songwriter/melody maker. The intro to “welcome to the jungle” comes to mind. I don’t like notes I didn’t pick, even if it’s a slow burn kind of song (i.e. not shredding)
They do, and their criticisms are valid. His impact may be negligible to folks in different circles. It’s all good.
I used to be a real jerk, I used to hate Oasis and was personally offended that other people liked them.
I lightened up, got my head out my butt, and decided that I don't care what other people like.
Yeah man. This is great. Great playing, great solo choices, great band. ALL OF IT.
Hey you and Rhett are the best ever
Goosebumps 10 out of 10 - out of the park! Everyone's playing is solid!
Thanks man!!
@@RhettShull yeah buddy!
Winf Cries Mary is my favorite Hendrix song and I love The Edge. We’re totally best friends now!
Eruption changed my life, Cliffs of Dover stunned me, and Comfortably Numb is the most hypnotizing solo I’ve ever heard.
Nicely done, Rhett! I'm a 62 year old pro and I related to quite a bit of what your experience has been and agree with your choices! The tune that I transcribed as a teenager that got my confidence going was 'Cause We've Ended As Lovers. I told myself I was going to stay in my room till I got something and I did. I ended with something that I could play along with the record-it was probably 60-70% correct at best and did not include Jeff's solo, but I was elated and very proud of myself! This was one of many moments that led the way to my lifelong career as a guitarist.
That really is an amazing track. Jeff Beck is criminally underrated.
One of my favorites. I can so relate. Cheers
Steve Hackett..firfth of fifth almost 3min solo with an amazing sustain..a true classic
Good choice!
Solos of all kinds are timeless, and are probably what made us pick up the guitar in the first place! Always a pleasure to tune in!
Since I've been loving you is my favorite solo and my favorite song of all time. Achilles Last Stand solo made a huge impact on my life, It was the first time I felt a tight feeling in my chest because of a song, that changed my life forever.
I love that you bracketed this whole list with Gilmore. He is the beginning and the end in my book as well.
Thanks for this. What I especially respect and appreciate is how you actually played them in a live setting. That was a risk you took but really shows how much true influence these players have had on you. It takes a lot of humility to say, these are iconic solos that inspired me, I can’t play them exactly how they did but it’s worth the shot. You truly honored these players while inspiring the rest of us. Nice work!
Mad respect for putting (and playing) derek trucks on the list. The dude is generational.
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
This was an incredibly courageous video to make. To put yourself out there with this range of iconic guitar performances is one part. To commit to doing so with live players in your studio with top notch production values is another. And to model your love of these players and your devotion to learning from them is the best of all. Well done, Rhett!
I sat down and listened to Led Zeppelin II when I was 15. When the solo for Whole Lotta Love kicked in it was like an explosion of color sound and emotion and I knew that there was no turning back from that point.
1.Nothing else matters
2.The Unforgiven
3.Floods (outro solo)
4.Kockin' on heaven's door
These four helped me a lot in learning to play the guitar.
I never got into U2 and I'm still not. However, I had an opportunity to play "Streets Have No Name" in a little group I was in, which meant I had to learn it in its entirety. I have a new respect for the Edge and his ability and creativity.
Only one solo in my mind, what got me into guitar - Sultans of Swing
+1
You just gave me goosebumps!
Precisely, the whole song ... remarkable .. :-)
@@BassGoBomb shure, especially beginning, this sound... so sweet...
Oh yeah! Great!
Texas flood was the guitar solo that changed my life.
Kevin R..that and Lenny are a toss up
EXCUSE ME...KERIN
And the SRV version of Little Wing....magic
@@greganders1 🔥🔥
The intro of Texas flood is like the perfect calm before the storm ⛈
The intro solo to Johnny B good from back to the future. Made me want to play guitar.
Why, Since I've Been Loving You? Words no one ever spoke, ever.
I don't play a ton of solos well, but I play most of these. Fantastic list, Rhett.
Zeppelin had so many great solos but that one you picked is truly a piece of art.
For me, Brian May on "We will rock you" hooked me on guitar when I was ten. Far and away the most important solo for me still 27 years later.
I’m not a huge U2 fan but I respect the Edge and what he does. Very unique.
The Edge is a legend. A guitarists guitarist.
Dave Gilmour almost every solo.
My life changer....Alex Lifeson. His emotive stuff is superb: Limelight, Chemistry, The Garden etc. His technical stuff mind boggling: La Villa Strangiato, Freewill.
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
Alex Lifeson ss a really underrated guitar player - those solos are all brilliant. I remember buying Permanent Waves in 1980 and marvelling at his seemingly impossible scales. I got to grips with his style and it set me up for understanding that not everything is blues. Rush were really forward thinking
Randy Rhoads made me pick up the guitar and teach myself how to play back in the 80’s. Still hitting the stage today. Excellent video.
Long live Randy Rhoads!
@@che2335 Still my all-time favorite guitarist...
A honorable list of solo's that stay in one's head. I'm older than you (65) but I started at 12 yrs. in 1968 and was a hard core listener since I was 8 in 1964 after seeing The Beatles on Ed Sullivan. Your an old school player and that's what makes you stand out and matter... Don't Ever Change. We share the same "wheelhouse" with many others who know the truth about something to say, feel and TONE.
Gary Moore Empty Rooms 1st solo and still got the blues. Taught me how right sound and phrasing can make people cry
The most melodic, dynamic, and passionate player I can think of. When I first heard of him in the late 90,s I went who is this guy - he sounded like a blend of Santana meets Eddie Van Halen! I bought all his albums. Everyone probably thinks John McLaughlin is the fastest player of all time, and I did too until I heard an obscure album by Gary Moore called Frontier - I have never heard faster playing - including all the finger tapping players we have all heard.
I was thinking his cover of 'The Messiah will come again' but basically anything Gary did.
@@calderwd1965 RIP Gary, Saw him with Thin Lizzy in Melbourne 78 Unbelieveable
The intro to "The Calvary Cross" on Richard and Linda Thompson's I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight always does something unexplainable to my nervous system.
The one that always gives me goosebumps..Steve Hackett's Firth of Fifth
Good call. I think Supernatural Anesthetist is his benchmark at least in Genesis
Rhett has great tone and ears. Totally love his playing.
It doesn't get on anyone's list, but I find the guitar solo at the end of "Shout" by Tears for Fears to be tremendously effective in the song and quite memorable. It's so melodic.
November Rain 🌧️☔ , Comfortably Numb and Still got the blues changed my life.
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
@@keplerarpeggios3215yeah sure 👍
I remember it like it was yesterday and not many decades ago... Dire Straits: Sultans of Swing - the middle solo. Mark Knopfler set the scene for me for what a solo, and music in general, could be. He started my journey on the guitar.
Comfortably Numb probably has to top my list. It’s just a perfect chord progression to play over, and the emotional weight the original carries makes Floyd one of my favorites to this day.
This could have been my list! I play each of these songs as practice, and because each has meant so much to me. Incredible insight. I'm 68 years old, and have been playing 57 years. All of these songs had such a big influence. There was 1 major turning point for me. I was taking lessons, on acoustic, at 11 when an older kid came into class early, plugged in his electric guitar and started wailing on Gloria, by Them. I quit lessons, and started a band. Those were the days. Great video!
Love the Page, Gilmore and Hendrix choices. One huge solo for me is Peter Green's into to Need Your Love So Bad. It still blows my mind every time.
George Harrison’s solo in “Something”.
Yes
Definitely! Studying Harrison's guitar work is a great lesson in all the fine qualities Rhett mentioned about his choices on this video.
Absolutely! I wish Harrison's songwriting prowess had been better-used in the early days of the Beatles. His solo album All Things Must Pass is a masterpiece and one of my favorite albums.
I can dig! Larry Carlton's "Kid Charlemagne" solo is c.razy. Sounds great as always
In defense of The Edge, no one has ever sounded like him, and there are very few guitarists you can say that about.
Exactly, no other player has an effect that prominent EXCLUSIVELY associated with them, besides, playing u2 songs is not what I would call an easy task.....
@@powdershredder1136 its fcking Hard,...
I'm not even joking when I say that Rhett is the only Guitarist I've ever heard come close to that sound.. and even then it's not quite there. Brilliant musician.
I know when the solo being played is by The Edge. I can also tell when I'm listening to the late James Honeyman Scott of The Pretenders. They're both immediately recognizable to me.
Beginning guitarists also need achievable goals, which is important
Hi Rhett from down Under! Some great solos to be inspired by.
There is a couple solos that still give me goose bumps listening and playing...
1: still got the blues, Gary Moore
2: hitch a ride, Boston
3: comfortably numb, Pink Floyd
4: coming back to life, Pink Floyd
Cheers for the sweet playing!
Wind Cries Mary is the song that made me start playing guitar and the first solo I ever learned. I love that you appreciate the greatness of this song. It’s underrated for sure
For me, my favorite Hendrix solo is from Hey Joe! LOVE the feel of that song... but its hard to argue anything from Hendrix...
Could not agree more with you about 'New Year's Day". The Edge deserves the credit, sound and feel exactly!
Love and respect his playing, but can’t take him seriously for asking people to call him The Edge. What are you Sting? No, Gordon.
Rory Gallagher on the Irish Tour album - particularly Million Miles Away.
Otherwise grew up on Clapton and Santana, who definitely deserve multiple mentions!
Trying to learn bad penny solo as we speak. Love Rory
Yes, glad someone mentions Rory, and in particular that piece. Such an underrated/underappreciated player.
That album should be required listening for all guitarists.
David Gilmour, a guitarist so nice
Hes gotta be on the list twice.
All of the players on your list are not just great guitarists, but they're stylists, they aren't playing something that isn't "them." They aren't showing off or trying to be flashy, they play to the song and that is what makes these or any great solo "great." Also, you fit with this group of players so well, I hope you play more with them. This, in my opinion, is your best video to date, Rhett!
10. You're All that I Needed
9. Money
8. Power To Love (Intro lead)
7. Cause We Ended As Lovers (still working on it)
6. Badge
5. Smoke On The Water
4. Comfortably Numb/Mother
3. Silver Train
2. Can't You Hear Me Knocking
1. Hotel California
Although 4 is two I love them equally so I could separate them
Great episode Rhett thanks
Allan Holdsworth with UK. In The Dark Of Night. Bill Bruford was quoted as saying that Allan’s solo was the best 90 seconds of guitar playing he had ever heard.
Totally with you on “Wind Cries Mary”. That solo has so much feel it gives me second hand guitar face
Duane Allman was *so* good. And he died *so* young.
You have great selectins there Rhett and excellent renditions! One of my favorites is the guitar lead in, "Dark Eyed Cajun Woman" by the Doobie Brothers. :)
Great. No solo and no artist changed my life but I remember being speechless when I hear the solo in the song called Nutshell by Jerry Cantrell. I play mainly jazz but as a kid I loved Alice in Chain
Before you even started naming off the bands and the solos I started thinking to myself "what solos have changed my life?" And immediately the first band that came to mind was Pink Floyd and the songs/solos were "Time", "Mother" and I know this is going to sound cliche.. but, the other was "Comfortably Numb"; those songs give me goosebumps every single time I hear them and the emotional power that Gilmour is able to purge out in his playing is unmatched. Nobody even comes close.
And then the others that immediately came to mind were "Hey Joe", "The Wind Cries Mary" and "Little Wing" ; All are of course by the great and infamous... *Jimi Hendrix*
Sounds like we have similar taste.
I think Hey Joe may have been the first solo that I learned all the way through without just taking a few licks from it.
Anyway, great video man! I look forward to more content!
The Edge is pure genius. Not terribly hard stuff to play, but nothing else on planet earth sounds like it. That’s what is impressive
Plus, the Edge’s rhythms are still being utilized today in Alt, Indie and pop music.
Literally had the same experience with "wish you were here". Hendrix got me interested, Gilmore gave me the sound.
And I've been butchering their stuff everyday since.
Yeah...I've buggered up most of their stuff too! Happy days
The last line made me laugh so hard...😅
I am 60 and started playing at 9 so this will skew 70's.
10. Folsom Prison Blues Luther Perkins with Johnny Cash. This was the song that made me want to learn guitar.
9. Terraplane Blues Robert Johnson. First time I heard this I was enraptured with bottleneck and alternate tunings.
8. Good Times Bad Times. Jimmy Page with Led Zeppelin
7. Dogs. David Gilmour with Pink Floyd. I thought I had heard everything until I heard this. The structure, the melodic, the tension just blew the top of my head off.
6. My Old School. Jeff Baxter with Steely Dan
5. Jessica. Les Dudek and Dickey Betts with The Allman Brothers. The first time we played the whole song through as a band was a spiritual experience.
4. Maggot Brain Eddie Hazel with Funkadelic. 12 year old white boy in North Dakota hears this and realizes that their is an entire universe to explore.
3. Billion Dollar Babies and Intro/Sweet Jane. Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter with Alice Cooper and Lou Reed. I had too put both on here so sue me.
2. Time Was. Andy Powell and Ted Turner with Wishbone Ash. This took me from obsession to fanaticism.
1. Comfortably Numb. David Gilmore with Pink Floyd. 42 years later and this will still bring tears.
Wishbone Ash Argus. Best guitar album ever.
@@dickati Oh hell to the yes. Just think of how many players were influenced by Andy Powell
Your number #3 "Sweet Jane" is the same song as Mott The Hoople?
@@michaelcrawley5211 Yes. It is a Lou Reed song from his time in the Velvet Underground. Mott covered it on All the Young Dudes.
I'm pleased you mentioned Dogs from Pink Floyd - Animals, (for those who don't know). I love that track, I'm always playing it - all 17 minutes of it, and I agree, its a great solo by him and I love the guitar tone. Whatever happened to the concept album? Died with Pink Floyd probably :(
Great list!
Two of my favourite solos that I think are often overlooked are Hit me with your best shot and Little Miss can't be wrong. Hidden gems both of them. Have another listen.
And you my friend are changing many people's lives with the universal language of music.
I haven’t seen the whole video, but here are some of mine
• Kid Charlemagne - Larry Carlton
• Manhattan - Eric Johnson
• Europa - Santana
• Race With The Devil On Spanish Highway - Al Di Meola
• Money - David Gilmour
• Eruption Live 1983 - EVH
• ALL ZZ Top solos - Billy Gibbons
• Rosanna - Steve Lukather
Those are all great.
The solo from sharp dressed man. That slide solo is just....
"ALL ZZ Top solos - Billy Gibbons" +1!
Kid Charlemagne is deservedly in there and I am total agreement about Billy Gibbons - I never understand why so few guitar channels look at songs like Apologies to Pearly everything about the tune is fantastic, lead, rhythm bass drums it's perfection
@@peterreeves6825 Apologies to Pearly might be my fave ZZTop tune of all time, and certainly the one that I spent the most time trying learn to play as perfectly as I could
David Gilmour is in my opinion, the greatest guitar player alive today.
Or ever ever ever
Derek Trucks is far better than Gilmour right now. You could make an argument about Gilmour at his peak though.
no Clapton or Lifeson. or Rhett....
I agree Derek trucks is a one of a kind. But the amount of albums sold has got to count for something. Gilmour stands above all of them.
Don’t jinx it yo
Trey Anastasio (with Phish) - Fast Enough for You
Santana - Oye Como Va (first solo I ever learned)
David Gilmour - Comfortably Numb
Elliott Randall (Steely Dan) - Reeling in the Years
Wes Montgomery - Polka Dots and Moonbeams (yeah, I know it's jazz, and yeah - lots of octaves)
I'll think of more...
I love Wes Montgomery. Very underrated guitarist.
Out of all those solos,....and they were all excellent,...?...but your Derek Trucks rendition was jawdroppingly good Rhett. Whole new respect for you man. I know that took FOREVER. Well done brother 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Gravity was the song that made me pick up the guitar at 19 years old. First heard Bold as Love by John Mayor, but once I heard the original, I knew I’ll never stop playing. Could take me while life, but I will play that magic.
So far, I’ve only really got two. War Pigs and One. War pigs because I was impressed at how much of it I could play first try, One because it was when I first used pick tapping.
Tony Peluso's solo in The Carpenters' "Goodby to love" and pretty much everything from Wishbone Ash's first album
This!
Elliott Randall on Steely Dan's Reelin' in the Years. Especially the intro solo, which basically starts as a recapitulation of the chorus vocals -- but the phrasing and movement around the fretboard blows me away. One of these days I'll actually play it well, and at tempo (I can dream, anyway)
Jimmy Page's favourite solo as far as I know !
I was six years old in 1983, standing at the Dairy Queen window, when I heard Tom Schultz play the solo on Boston’s “More than a Feeling”. That’s the moment when I fell in love with the guitar. Thanks Tom
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
A man I'll never be solo is my fav from Schultz - I love Boston
"Highway Star" -- first solo I learned note for note. "Sultans of Swing" -- the solo that gave me chills over and over.
First solo I ever learned by ear: Slash's first solo on Knocking on Heaven's Door. New Year's Day could have made its way on my list, too :D gamechangers for me: Randy Rhoads on Crazy Train, Mr Crowley and Goodbye to Romance. Angus taught me how to use double stops on Hells Bells. Gary Moore, Still got the blues.... I never really played the solo, but played along to the recording a lot, and that told me a whole lotta stuff (XD). Stairway, of course. The guitar solo on No Doubt's Don't speak. Sultans of Swing. Lately I found some really cool small solos in small songs that inspired me a lot, like Rhett Miller's Our Love, The Coral's Dreaming of You.
The solo from Shine by Collective Soul was a good early one for me. A simple very early one was Van Halen’s Running with the Devil solo. Great for a beginner trying to solo. It’s short and simple to focus on perfecting.
Jerry Garcia - I Know You Rider (Europe '72) and Scarlet Begonias (Cornell '77)
Jeff "Skunk" Baxter - Rikki Don't Lose That Number
Randy Rhoads - Diary of a Madman
Eddie Van Halen - Jamie's Cryin
Carlos Santana - Black Magic Woman
Hi Rhett, what a tasteful selection. Im so pleased to see not only the usual suspects on the list but also incredible artists like Derek Trucks or Robben Ford. I happened to meet Robben years ago in Cologne/Germany when he suddenly dropped into my favorite small guitar shop. His wife, a well-known singer in another genre, was performing with a program of Bertolt Brecht/Kurt Weill songs that day on her European tour, and he took the chance to meet the guitar store owner he previously knew. He held a spontaneous guitar clinic for that random audience and it was just jaw-dropping.
Enjoyed this Rhett... exploring and sharing where it all began for you helps us know you better. I don't make RUclips videos like you do...but some of my " I gotta learn to play guitar" has come from
Eric Clapton Crossroads,
Santana samba Pa Ti.
The Kinks You Really Got Me... ( ok...so I'm a few years older than Beato! )
Roy Buchanan Wayfaring Pilgrim
Jeff Beck. Going Down... Stratus...
SRV Life Without You...
Robin Trower Too Rollin Stoned
Hendrix...Hey Joe plus countless others
Lukather,
Al Dimiola,
Weather Report,
I still get chicken skin when ever I hear music that really hits home...
Keep following your bliss...
It's bold to play a cover of pretty much everything Derek Trucks has recorded.
1) Ride The Lightning
2) Pigs (Three different ones)
3) Back in Black (outro solo is my favorite of the two)
4) Haitian Divorce
5) Power of Soul
6) Layla
7) Leper Messiah
8) Maggot Brain
9) Heartbreaker
10) Fade to Black
Not in any particular order but are all very memorable solos that definitely made me pick up the guitar
Dammit I always forget Maggot Brain. Eddie was the shit
The opening solo for Dinosaur Jr's "Out
There" and the solo from "The Lung" changed my life. Gotta agree with Gilmour too. Sometime less is more.
This list could be all mascis solos
As a drummer, I'll give you my top 10 list of guitar solos with great drums backing them!!
10- Can You Hear Me Knocking, The Rolling Stones: Mick Taylor is solid on that one!! The shift from that hard rocking groove to the latin feel of the outro section is amazing! The whole Sticky Fingers album is the best Stones album ever... All killer, no filler!!
9- We Used To know, Jethro Tull: My dad is really into classical, big band and jazz stuff... My mom on the other hand is more into the Beatles and more folk and bluesy stuff... That was one of her LP's in the collection and my parents eventually gave me their record collection because they switched to CD's and their old turntable broke. That album was one of my high school staples and it's a case of where the music sounds just like the cover looks!! Though they're known for Ian Anderson's flute, there's great switching around between that and an awesome solo by Martin Barre and the whole thing backed up by a killer series of drum fills by Clive Bunker!!
8- When The Music's Over, The Doors: In my later grade school years and through high school I had this cousin who war really into The Doors, he had the whole cassette collection... I had the whole Beatles collection, so we used to trade all the time! It was a while until I got Doors records of my own because I had them kicking around all the time. So my biggest takeaway from these type of Doors songs is the way the playing is so abstract... Sure, that guitar solo doesn't lead anywhere... it just dies there and the band segues into something totally different and it doesn't matter!! Break rules guys!!
7- You, Led Zeppelin: From the BBC sessions album... Another instance of a killer guitar solo with an equally killer drum solo backing it!! What else can I say!!
6- Going Home, Ten Years After: As a kid and in my early teens I had only heard my old music on records... it was the eighties, so everything was about Michael Jackson and Samantha Fox!! Then, one night on CBC tv, they aired the Isle Of Wight film and I taped it to VHS and watched that tape over and over until there were tracking bars that I couldn't get out of the screen!! One of the biggest discoveries I made that night was Ten Years After... Chuck Berry riffs on steroids backed by a jazz rhythm section on amphetamines, it was a real eye opener!! Later in college, I was playing this over the campus radio station and some guy walks into the studio to fetch a bag he'd forgotten there. He stopped dead in his tracks and asked if I had put this on. I replied yes and he said "I thought I was the only guy in town who listened to this stuff!! I'm Étienne and I play guitar..." I made a new best friend that day!!
5- Substitute, The Who: What can you say... The guitar itself isn't doing much, but those drums! Damn!! My biggest take away from the who is the performance aspect! I'd also had a few band projects that died before we had accomplished anything meaningful by then, so from the time I first saw the Kids Are Alright film, I made it a point to play every gig as if it was the last time... Putting suits on, pacing myself for the show and pulling all the stops out for the last 2-3 numbers... A huge influence on how I behave on stage!!
4- Heathrow Or Deathrow, The Dears: A band from Montreal and this song is off the EP I bought when I saw them in concert the first time. They were on tour with Sloan and George, the drummer was playing Andrew's blue sparkle Ludwig kit... Their whole set was like watching a car crash in slow motion for an hour!! Everybody in the venue stood still, awestruck at what was going on in front of them! After the show, I went and bought the LP, had a chat with the drummer and some of the guys from Sloan. We geeked about gear, current favorite records and so on for at least 45 minutes! To this day the best show ever!! Second time I saw them, George had scored a mint '55 Ludwig of his own and we got to chat about that for a while and he's been the guy I often see in concerts in Montreal and have a beer with ever since!
3- Those Were The Days, Cream: When I started playing drums, I was all about Ringo and at the same time really into Mitch Mitchell as well. Ginger was more of an unattainable goal and didn't have the heavy tone of Ringo or Bonham nor the busy fills of Moon or Mitchell that I was aiming for. Turns out though that listened to enough of him to pick up some Baker-isms along the way and it's now a big part of my playing style! Also the guitar solo is amazing, comes back later in the outro of the song and they had the nerve to fade it out when the whole thing was picking up steam at the end!!
2- Axis Bold As Love, Jimi Hendrix: To me the quintessential face melting solo with killer drums played behind it... Then, it stops and starts right back again only crazier!! Amazing!!! Also, my favorite Hendrix album all around!
1- Yer Blues, The Beatles: This is where it all started... It's the very first song I remember hearing of them! I was 6 or 7 years old at the time, kind of aware that they existed but hadn't paid particular attention when one of their songs was on the radio. One day I found the White Album in my parent's LP collection and randomly dropped the needle on a song hoping to hear what I thought I'd heard on the radio... Hearing those bendy riffs and screamed vocals, I'd thought I had broken the record player!! After listening to the whole White Album, I started reading about them, learning about a rivalry between them and another band called the Stones, that they used to hang out in a club with a band called The Who, or that their bass player recommended some guy named Jimi to play at the Monterey rock festival... To me the Beatles are an incredible musical springboard if you want to discover a whole bunch of unrelated stuff about music!!
Well, that was an essay.. Sorry to take up that much bandwith! Keep on rocking!!
This list introduced me to Derek trucks band, and the outro lead on down in the flood almost brought me to tears, so thank you for that!
The solo on Blue Sky is way up there for me. Talk about melodic.
listen to the solo in fire fly, sailor light by The Silver Thinkers. Frickin Epic !
Really nice job on "Since I've Been Loving You"
They did a cover for that song on the second Backstage Live show, if you remember, with Good Trouble/Deacon Knight
The solo that caused me to learn guitar was Brick in the Wall, David Gimour. Phil Keaggy and Dann Huff never make these lists, but I think they would if more people knew who they were. Everyone has a favorite song that Dann Huff played on, they just don’t know it.
Phil Keaggy’s Further Adventures Of is one of my all time favorite guitar pieces. So many amazing parts in that jam. What crazy is I don’t know how many people even know about it. -P
I’ve enjoyed a number of your videos, but figured I’d comment on this one! I’m still learning, but breakthrough moments in my playing are:
1. Money For Nothing, Dire Straits Learning that killer riff early on was a huge thrill
2. Johnny B Goode, Chuck Berry. Figuring out how to play that one well enough that people knew what I was doing gave me confidence that I could play actual rock and roll
3. Where The Devil Don’t Stay, The Drive By Truckers. The awesome lead slide part on the album version is played by a young Jason Isbell, and it’s still a thrill to listen to it after thousands of times for me. It’s my gateway drug to slide guitar
4. Hey Hey, My My, Neil Young and Crazy Horse. Neil is my model on how to put your guts into what you play
Keep up the great work!
All of these are on my list too. I started right when Clapton unplugged came out. So He and the Beatles, the crowes, and everyone else on this list was on mine plus I have so many more I have to hear a lot.
for me it was Marc Ford's solos with the Black Crowes, All of Clapton's unplugged, Gilmour, Page. Knopfler, Buddy Guy, Lynsey Buckingham, and of course, Mike Campbell.
People really underestimate how insanely hard it is to nail the Edge's sounds. Lots of people just use a Vox & delay, but it always sounds like a bad imitation. Edge uses so many things to get his sounds, and has waaaay more sounds than he's given credit for. Amazing player that totally deserves the recognition.
Agreed. The Edge is great. End of story. Haters, suck it up: you should be as talented.
@@johnvcougar I was in a U2 tribute band and the guitarist needed four guitars, a Vox and a Helix to cover all of The Edge's sounds.
@@jonclarke1266 not surprised! I recall reading about how he is seldom seen without a bag of pedals he carries around, bit of a mad professor.
David Gilmore plays like he's been through stuff!!!
If you ever watch an interview where they are talking about Syd, you can watch a part of Gilmour die every time he talks about when one of the band members asked if they should go around to pick up Syd for the gig that night. It is there that he says that one of the others said... "No." I honestly think it was DG that said no, and he still feels an immense sense of guilt over that. So sad. And no amount of logic or business sense will ever change hurt like that.
It don't come easy
I think it was likely Roger who said Naw. David is glad for the opportunity, but he has a musical ability that it would be hard to imagine Floyd without him. I think Roger feels the guilt and David the feeling that he never really was accepted as one of them, that he worked so hard and that he and Syd had busked around Europe together he is wounded by what happened to Syd. When he was with Jokers Wild he even did a song for a Bridget Bardot movie. His parents basically threw him into boarding school at 5 and didn’t build a sense of family until he hit it big with Floyd and resents it. Where were you Mom and Dad? I grew up the same way only in America we don’t have boarding schools.
Marty Friedman’s solo on Tornado of Souls
Robben Ford’s Help the Poor solo
Kirk Hammett’s solo on The Frayed Ends of Sanity
I was more in to Metal than anything else at that stage.
Fantastic video. Thank you Rhett. Although most of these are my favourites as well, Carlos Santana's Black Magic Woman did it for me because of it's simplicity and power.
Wind cries Mary is just glorious. Great video Rhett!