• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

Pratt2112

New member
Joined
May 15, 2008
Messages
2
Location
Oak Harbor, Wa
I have been reading a lot of forums lately on who's the "Greatest Guitarist of all Time?" . I am not sure exactly why this bugged me. And I understand people are entitled to they're opinions. But I noticed that people like Kurt Kobain, Jack White, and Johnny Ramone are consistently in the top 20. ARE YOU KIDDING ME??? While all of them have done they're part for Rock n' Roll, players like Jason Becker and Alex Lifeson were barely mentioned. Is Rock n' Roll officially dead or what?
 

slukather

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 17, 2003
Messages
1,589
Location
Melbourne, Australia
The "greatest guitarist of all time" thread are really subjective, and l try to stay out of them, but hell l'm here, it's just peoples options. All round great guitarist, i'd say Luke, then you have Alex Lifeson, l dig Ty Tabor, Michael Landau (a pure genius who has never got his due) then there's freaks like Albert Lee, he's music isn't really to my liking, have a listen to the cat, he blows my mind. This list can go on.

Scott.
 

TNT

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2005
Messages
3,576
Location
Oakland - Raider Nation!
Yeah, I know what you mean!!! We "players" look at it a little differently.

It's NOT about technical playing ability, i.e., dexterity and skill, it's more about playing "style".

Big difference!!
 

EBMM7181

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2007
Messages
1,494
Location
Atlanta, Ga
I dont think there's one person who is '' the greatest ''

With all the different styles of music, playing styles, techniques, ect, there's no way to say who is hands down the best of all time

But I really dig Stevie Ray Vaughan
 

colinboy

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2007
Messages
1,742
Location
Corkcity,Ireland
its all about personal preference at the end of the day.theres is no such thing as the greatest guitar player ever.theres is fantastic players in all the different styles out there.

with reference to the likes of kurt cobain,jack white etc then they were great musicians and contributed alot to the music industry but you must understand that people arent educated about the real guitar players out there like we are so they give mis-informed opinions.
 

guitar_guy12

Member
Joined
May 14, 2008
Messages
7
Location
Boisbriand, Québec, Canada
From me my personal best guitar player and I said FOR ME!!!!
It's

- Kirk Hammett
- Jason Backer
- Steve Vai
- Joe Satirani
- S.R.V
- Hendrix
- DImebag
- Jimmy Padge
- James Hetfield
- Alexi Laiho
- Yngwie Malsteen
- John Petrucci

Note: the ordre doesn not mean anything.
 

Pratt2112

New member
Joined
May 15, 2008
Messages
2
Location
Oak Harbor, Wa
I know that personal taste is a key factor, but even someone who isn't a fan of rock n roll can tell that Kurt Cobain and Joe Satriani don't belong in the same sentence.
 

Petersonic

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
81
I'm by no means a Kurt Cobain fan, but I'm gonna have to defend him on this one. What constitutes being a good guitarist? I think it has a lot more to do with knowing how to play what you play than with anything else. And if you look at it this way, maybe Cobain wasn't that bad after all.

But as you said, personal taste is a key factor: neither Kurt Cobain nor, say, Jason Becker would be anywhere near my top 100.
 

muggsy

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
787
Location
Alexandria, VA
It's not just taste, though obviously that has much to do with it. There are plenty of shredders who do nothing for me musically. Are they technically better than Kurt Cobain or Johnny Ramone? Of course. But it can be difficult to isolate that one aspect when comparing musicians who play guitar against other musicians who play guitar but also sing and write songs. I'd rate Cobain's musical accomplishments as a whole above those of many people who could play rings around him, including Joe Satriani, but that's just my humble opinion. I'd guess, though, that may be how a lot of people who vote in these polls probably look at it.
 

ScoobySteve

Well-known member
Joined
May 1, 2008
Messages
3,309
Location
Busan, Republic of Korea
Those lists are always so subjective.

There's no concrete criteria in which to list them, and the criteria, if any at all are subjective as well.

I mean, for me its:

Robert Johnson
Hendrix
Satriani
SRV
Petrucci
EJ
Morse
 

MrMusashi

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 26, 2007
Messages
2,840
Location
69 degrees north
cobain was a musical rulebreaker, and for that he deserves appreciation... even though i find the whole grunge era a sidetrack in music history ;)

we want the funk! give us the funk! awwwweeeee...
repeat for 8 minutes :D

MrM
 

ScoobySteve

Well-known member
Joined
May 1, 2008
Messages
3,309
Location
Busan, Republic of Korea
cobain was a musical rulebreaker, and for that he deserves appreciation... even though i find the whole grunge era a sidetrack in music history ;)

we want the funk! give us the funk! awwwweeeee...
repeat for 8 minutes :D

MrM

Oh, I'll take me some Earth, Wind and Fire any day of the week.

Love me some of that good ol' Funk!
 

mgs316

Member
Joined
Dec 1, 2007
Messages
9
Location
The Minnyapple
There are great players, but greatest embodies more then just skill, it's influence, innovation, etc.

I fricken love John Petrucci and his skill is hardly matched, but can he be mentioned in the greatest guitarist conversation? No.

I'd think it's a short list: EVH, Vai, Page, Claptop, Hendrix, SRV, and some of the other blues legends plus others that I'm obviously missing.
Then you have your secondary studs like: Satch, Lifeson, Gilmour, Malmsteen, etc.
Then my third column would be the Petrucci's, Gilberts, Lynchs, Bettencourts of the world.

The tough part is where do you stick a Jerry Cantrell? He was the most influencial guitar player to come out of the "Grunge" era, all the bands today are spawns of AIC's sound. Where does he fit?

There is not right or wrong, but Jack White isn't a guitarist, he just happens to play guitar and should not be in the discussion.
 

Eilif

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 9, 2004
Messages
1,131
Location
Mililani, Hawaii
Obviously, this is subjective. But another problem--perhaps the biggest problem--with asking or stating who the greatest is, is that there is usually no definition or criteria for "greatest", and that's where the whole thing usually falls apart.

Examples of what "greatest" could mean:
1) most influential (and if so, in which genre?)
2) most technical skill (and even this needs further definition: are we talking picking speed? the ability to shred? what exactly?)
3) most musical? (and what, exactly, would "musical" mean?)
4) most recorded?
5) all of the above?
etc. etc. etc.

And then another issue is that the lists usually start with the 1960s, but there were plenty of great guitarists before then. What about Chet Atkins? What about Wes Montgomery? What about Les Paul? And what about guitarists in genres other than rock, such as Glen Campbell?

Anyhow, these I think are why asking or talking about the "greatest" is difficult to do with a decent degree of objectivity. It all goes to a lack of definition of the term and a set of objective criteria with which to judge, so it ends up just being a popularity contest of sorts.
 

GGK

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 11, 2008
Messages
198
Location
Simcoe County, ON
Favorite sounds much better, and it's all relevant to musical taste as well as style.

Duane Allman
Steve Howe
Keith Richards

I Love them all for their musical contributions; they could be tops in their individual genre, overall, well you folks decide

Bring on the "BASS"
 

Volt

Well-known member
Joined
May 17, 2008
Messages
397
Location
Bluesville, The People's Republic of Ohio
Sit all the "greatest" contenders down somewhere together and see who can outdo all the others in every style of music.
Not really a very good way to decide who's best..........but I'd love to be listening to that jam session. :D
 
Top Bottom