SteveB
Well-known member
1. Yngwie Malmsteen - Rising Force
2. Vinnie Moore - Mind's Eye
3. Tony MacAlpine - Maximum Security
I think Maximum Security is a little more polished than Edge of Insanity which was mentioned in an earlier post, but either is great.
Maximum Security features guest solos by George Lynch of Dokken and a few other people, too. I think "Tears of Sahara" on this album is one of the greatest guitar pieces you can find... solos by MacAlpine and Lynch that are just brimming over with feeling and lots of shred!
Rising Force by Malmsteen is what started the whole neo-classical craze. Nobody else did it very well until Vinnie Moore unleashed "Mind's Eye" which blended neo-classical with jazz sensibilities.
If you have the budget for 4 discs, get the three above plus:
4. Racer X - Street Lethal
This will let you hear shredding in the context of balls to the wall metal with vocals. (Yeah, Jeff Scott Soto sings a few songs on Rising Force, but the instrumentals are the most memorable on that album.)
2. Vinnie Moore - Mind's Eye
3. Tony MacAlpine - Maximum Security
I think Maximum Security is a little more polished than Edge of Insanity which was mentioned in an earlier post, but either is great.
Maximum Security features guest solos by George Lynch of Dokken and a few other people, too. I think "Tears of Sahara" on this album is one of the greatest guitar pieces you can find... solos by MacAlpine and Lynch that are just brimming over with feeling and lots of shred!
Rising Force by Malmsteen is what started the whole neo-classical craze. Nobody else did it very well until Vinnie Moore unleashed "Mind's Eye" which blended neo-classical with jazz sensibilities.
If you have the budget for 4 discs, get the three above plus:
4. Racer X - Street Lethal
This will let you hear shredding in the context of balls to the wall metal with vocals. (Yeah, Jeff Scott Soto sings a few songs on Rising Force, but the instrumentals are the most memorable on that album.)