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Top 3 Greatest Guitarist Ever

There are alot of great guitar players.

Chet Atkins , Jerry Reed, Glen Campbell , Roy Clark come to mind.

I watched Prince on my guitar gently weeps. I liked it.


There are just to many.
 
Well I could only narrow my list down to a top 15...and in no certain order. There's about 40 others that could have just as easily been named! Considering influence/legacy as much as any other criteria--

Al DiMeola
Chet Atkins
John McLaughlin
John Petrucci
Jimi
Clapton
Yngwie
George Benson
Eddie
Tommy Tedesco
Chuck Berry
Les Paul
Mother Maybelle Carter
James Burton
Glenn and KK (cheatin' a little there!)
 
Guitar shmitar. Zamfir was king of the pan flute.
Maybe so...but nobody played the skin flute like Sveti
7107739af2a348987413d67b7ae7.jpg




:lol:
 
Oof this is tough.

Two guys that I haven't seen posted here that deserve more attention:

Jason Becker. Dude was INSANELY talented before getting ALS. Completely overshadowed Marty Friedman in their band, which is no easy task. He could've potentially been the most technically sound guitarist to ever live, if his health stayed good. He's worth a deep dive and listen.

Tim Henson is a new young guy that is reinventing modern guitar tone and composition. Also extremely technically proficient. His band Polyphia has an insane talent level.

Page,Clapton, Hendrix,EVH, etc all have extreme influence on guitar in general.

Honorable mention to Buckethead for being a weirdo outlier.
 
Hell of a list you all have going - 99% of which I concur on. Congrats all!
Lots of connotations and wiggle room to the mere definition of "greatest", of course -
what's that mean? Technical prowess? Speed? Accuracy? "Tricks"?
I submit into all that shreddery (hello Yngwie) the notion that, least to me, the ability
to write tasty stuff on the guitar means as much to my enjoyment of their playing as
anything else, eh?
Gotta be able to write hooks - runs - and to improvise as needed, too!

I can't do just three - hell, I can't do just three dozen - but as both an old headbanger and
a bluegrass fan, it makes it even more difficult.
Who hasn't been mentioned yet? I'm gonna cheat like hell here:

1. The Yoda's:
The entire group known as Certified Guitar Players by none other than Mr. Chet Atkins -
Jerry Reed (who even Glen Campbell admired - and Chet deferred to), Tommy Emmanuel
(other-worldly; I think he was born a guitar and evolved into a human over time), John Knowles,
Steve Wariner.
You wanna see total zen mastery of an instrument, there's your master class, right there....
Not just this or that genre', electric or acoustic, fast or slow - those gentlemen know the instrument
better than about anyone walking.

2. The Shredders:
Shredding typically refers to speed, of course - but I'll add to that definition those that can improvise,
performing live - and could do so at the drop of a hat in a way that actually added to the song.
That's a key to being a "great" guitarist I believe - they can be the most talented player walking, but
if it's all just showing off and noodling, I lose interest quick - it's GOT to serve the song or it's wasted
effort.
Most of the best have already been mentioned, but I'll toss a few more into the mix:
- Warren Haynes - dear Lord, the music flows through him like he's a conduit, just like it used to be with
Stevie Ray; it's like it comes from another world and they're the "speaker" it passes through to us.
- Speaking of which - Stevie Ray Effing Vaughn. If guitar was a religion, he's the freakin' messiah.
- (Cheating again) Charlie Sexton and Doyle Bramhall II. Arc Angels. Do yourself a favor, look 'em up...
If you're getting chased down by the likes of Clapton and Bob Dylan to play with them, well - they were.
- Metal shout out to Mr. Jake E Lee. Groove, mastery of many styles and yes....he can blaze as needed.
(He wrote the highest selling Ozzy songs of all time, too - then got shafted over them).

3. The Gifted Creators/Songwriters:
Self-explanatory... here we go:
- Mark Effing Knopfler. His magic is in live performance (you can lose hours just watching some of his
performances on YT), but his songwriting skills, all based on his finger-picking style guitar first, are without
peer. He doesn't just write tunes - he tells stories when he writes songs.
- A surprise entry! Ritchie Kotzen. Blazing skills (no pick, either!), sure, but the man takes the listener on
journeys with his songwriting. Mesmerizing stuff and quite prolific, thankfully.
Dude has a resume' in music gigs that will boggle your mind, too...
- I could not do this "list" without mentioning Alex Lifeson, now could I?
(For you young folks - he's the guitarist from RUSH. Don't get me started...)
- Last total surprise out of left field - with a bit of a caveat (is the dobro a guitar?): Jerry Douglas.
He's been voted best on the planet at his chosen instrument so many times, they ought to just stop giving
it out. Dude is a legend - the excellence just rolls out of him when he plays, ALWAYS to enhance and serve
the song.

How'd I do?
 
My top 3 still stand but a few left off my honorable mention..

The great Randy Rhodes!
Marty Friedman
Jason Becker
Michael Angelo Batio (speed is unbelievable)
Joe Satriani
Steve Via
Steve Howe
Alan Holdsworth
Yngwei Malmsteen
John Petrucci
Roy Buchanan
Ry Cooder

and the list continues...:lol:


As I think, more and more come to mind
 
Hell of a list you all have going - 99% of which I concur on. Congrats all!
Lots of connotations and wiggle room to the mere definition of "greatest", of course -
what's that mean? Technical prowess? Speed? Accuracy? "Tricks"?
I submit into all that shreddery (hello Yngwie) the notion that, least to me, the ability
to write tasty stuff on the guitar means as much to my enjoyment of their playing as
anything else, eh?
Gotta be able to write hooks - runs - and to improvise as needed, too!

I can't do just three - hell, I can't do just three dozen - but as both an old headbanger and
a bluegrass fan, it makes it even more difficult.
Who hasn't been mentioned yet? I'm gonna cheat like hell here:

1. The Yoda's:
The entire group known as Certified Guitar Players by none other than Mr. Chet Atkins -
Jerry Reed (who even Glen Campbell admired - and Chet deferred to), Tommy Emmanuel
(other-worldly; I think he was born a guitar and evolved into a human over time), John Knowles,
Steve Wariner.
You wanna see total zen mastery of an instrument, there's your master class, right there....
Not just this or that genre', electric or acoustic, fast or slow - those gentlemen know the instrument
better than about anyone walking.

2. The Shredders:
Shredding typically refers to speed, of course - but I'll add to that definition those that can improvise,
performing live - and could do so at the drop of a hat in a way that actually added to the song.
That's a key to being a "great" guitarist I believe - they can be the most talented player walking, but
if it's all just showing off and noodling, I lose interest quick - it's GOT to serve the song or it's wasted
effort.
Most of the best have already been mentioned, but I'll toss a few more into the mix:
- Warren Haynes - dear Lord, the music flows through him like he's a conduit, just like it used to be with
Stevie Ray; it's like it comes from another world and they're the "speaker" it passes through to us.
- Speaking of which - Stevie Ray Effing Vaughn. If guitar was a religion, he's the freakin' messiah.
- (Cheating again) Charlie Sexton and Doyle Bramhall II. Arc Angels. Do yourself a favor, look 'em up...
If you're getting chased down by the likes of Clapton and Bob Dylan to play with them, well - they were.
- Metal shout out to Mr. Jake E Lee. Groove, mastery of many styles and yes....he can blaze as needed.
(He wrote the highest selling Ozzy songs of all time, too - then got shafted over them).

3. The Gifted Creators/Songwriters:
Self-explanatory... here we go:
- Mark Effing Knopfler. His magic is in live performance (you can lose hours just watching some of his
performances on YT), but his songwriting skills, all based on his finger-picking style guitar first, are without
peer. He doesn't just write tunes - he tells stories when he writes songs.
- A surprise entry! Ritchie Kotzen. Blazing skills (no pick, either!), sure, but the man takes the listener on
journeys with his songwriting. Mesmerizing stuff and quite prolific, thankfully.
Dude has a resume' in music gigs that will boggle your mind, too...
- I could not do this "list" without mentioning Alex Lifeson, now could I?
(For you young folks - he's the guitarist from RUSH. Don't get me started...)
- Last total surprise out of left field - with a bit of a caveat (is the dobro a guitar?): Jerry Douglas.
He's been voted best on the planet at his chosen instrument so many times, they ought to just stop giving
it out. Dude is a legend - the excellence just rolls out of him when he plays, ALWAYS to enhance and serve
the song.

How'd I do?
Well said!
 
I have to do this in 15 seconds or I will name 25-30.

I need to add Cris Oliva (Savatage).

IMO the most under-rated guitarist in the history of rock.
 
Hard to pick just three.
EVH #1
Steve Vai
Nugent

So many more.
Clapton
Page
Billy Gibbons
Angus Young
Stevie Ray Vaughn
The list goes on. However, it takes the whole band to make great music.
 
There are so many great ones and Nashville is full of them but the top 3 of your choice is what we are looking for.
 
Oof this is tough.

Two guys that I haven't seen posted here that deserve more attention:

Jason Becker. Dude was INSANELY talented before getting ALS. Completely overshadowed Marty Friedman in their band, which is no easy task. He could've potentially been the most technically sound guitarist to ever live, if his health stayed good. He's worth a deep dive and listen.

Tim Henson is a new young guy that is reinventing modern guitar tone and composition. Also extremely technically proficient. His band Polyphia has an insane talent level.

Page,Clapton, Hendrix,EVH, etc all have extreme influence on guitar in general.

Honorable mention to Buckethead for being a weirdo outlier.
Heck Yes. Becker and the rest of the Mike Varney crew was awesome!!

Buckethead...definitely in a class by himself.
 
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Roy Clark was good, but Glen Campbell was better. :lol:

One of my favourite clips....watch Roy's face.



Even Willie is impressed.

1964-65 he was a Beach Boys member too :thumbsup:
 
Muddy Waters (not mentioned)
or Howlin' Wolf (don't remember his real name)

I used to really like Jerry Reed music, sort of forgot that name

Hendricks for sure

whoever it is
that does that Intro/Riff for Aldo Nova "Fantasy" song was great too
 
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Heck Yes. Becker and the rest of the Mike Varney crew was awesome!!

Buckethead...definitely in a class by himself.
I honestly think Altitudes by Becker is one of the most well rounded guitar songs ever written. It has everything. It's amazing he wrote that at the ripe old age of 16 lmao. It's insane knowing that all his stuff was played and recorded before he was 22.

I feel like Buckethead could make anyone's list if he made music that appealed to the masses. The dude is a wizard, but he's just... Weird? Niche? Extraordinarily proficient, to say the least
 
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