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100 Greatest Guitarists: David Fricke’s Picks

  • ️David Fricke
  • ️Fri Dec 03 2010

In 2003, I proposed to my editors a special issue devoted to the best and most influential guitarists in rock. They suggested a number – 100 – and the idea of ranking them. I came up with the names, based on my life-long love of the instrument and those who play it. One hundred proved to be too small for the job – my working list of the worthy ran closer to 500 – and the running order was frustrating work. In the end, I looked at it this way: Jimi Hendrix was Number One in every way; the other 99 were all Number Two.

The original inspiration was a celebration of the guitar and how it changed the world – and me. Everyone has their own version of this list. This was mine, in 2003.

  • Kim Thayil

    Image Credit: Page/Retna

    Soundgarden didn't set out to destroy metal — just take it
    back to basics. Thayil updated the forbidding sludge and
    tweaked-out solos of prime Zep. His fondness for the drop-D tuning,
    in which the low E string is loosened a whole step for maximum
    heaviosity, still resonates throughout hard rock.

  • Greg Ginn

    Image Credit: Mullen/WireImage

    Ginn reshaped blues-based rock in the crucible of punk. From Black
    Flag's 1978 debut EP, Nervous Breakdown, to their 1986
    demise, Ginn steered the band from blue-collar punk to
    molasses-thick metal, anticipating the rise of Seattle grunge.

  • Leigh Stephens

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Back in 1968, before heavy metal had a name, Stephens was shredding
    eardrums with the psychedelic-blues trio Blue Cheer. The group
    bragged of being the loudest in the world, and Stephens' molten
    solos epitomize Sixties rock at its most untethered and abandoned.

  • Robert Randolph

    Image Credit: Legato/WireImage

    A pedal steel guitarist who made his name playing gospel,
    Randolph's family band is one of the most intense live acts in all
    of jamdom. His thirteen-string instrument has a chillingly clear
    tone, and his solos are dotted with howling melodies and
    perpetually cresting, lightning-fast explorations.

  • Angus Young

    Image Credit: Blackburn/WireImage

    Young specializes in the sort of filthy solos that first made
    people characterize the blues as the devil's music. His playing is
    drenched in testosterone, booze and punk venom, but it's the blues
    swing that keeps AC/DC's hard rock trend-proof.

  • Kevin Shields

    Image Credit: Busacca/Getty

    In concert, Shields stood stone-still and played at such
    unspeakable volume the overtones suggested instruments that weren't
    there. His band was labeled "shoegazers" and his music "dream pop."
    My Bloody Valentine's shape-shifting, surreal melodies and contrast
    of delicate beauty with unbearable noise concocted an entirely new
    language for the electric guitar.

  • Bert Jansch

    Image Credit: Dyson/Getty

    Jimmy Page was obsessed with him, and Neil Young has called him his
    favorite acoustic guitarist. Jansch's fusion of jazz, blues and
    classical with traditional folk has made him a standout since his
    1965 debut, and even latter-day groups such as Oasis and Pulp have
    given him props.

  • Fred “Sonic” Smith

    Image Credit: Sinclair/Michael Ochs Archive

    In the MC5, Wayne Kramer and Smith funneled Sun Ra's sci-fi jazz through
    twin howitzers. Together they staked out a vision for hard rock
    that felt ecstatic, giddy, boundless.

  • Wayne Kramer

    Image Credit: Sinclair/Michael Ochs Archive

    In the MC5, Kramer and Fred Smith funneled Sun Ra's sci-fi jazz through
    twin howitzers. Together they staked out a vision for hard rock
    that felt ecstatic, giddy, boundless.

  • Robby Krieger

    Image Credit: Macleaf/Redferns

    Krieger's strengths are flexibility and self-effacement. A broad
    stylist whose influences extend to country, flamenco and raga, he
    could also get as nasty as he needed to, but he understood that
    instrumental interplay was what mattered.

  • Glen Buxton

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Buxton was a gifted mimic whose ability to unlock the guitar
    secrets of his Stones and Yardbirds 45s gave a Phoenix garage band
    the breathing room to develop into Alice Cooper. His dirty,
    elemental leads wrapped around Michael Bruce's meaty riffs to
    create a legacy of exemplary hard rock.

  • D. Boon

    Image Credit: theminutemen.com

    At the time of his death, in 1985, it seemed nothing was out of
    reach for Boon. The forty-three songs on the Minutemen's masterful
    Double Nickels on the Dime ventured thrillingly into
    free-jazz dissonance, up-tempo country, helter-skelter funk and
    dense experimental rock.

  • Dave Davies

    Image Credit: Sunshine/Retna

    Davies' guitar was the dynamo that drove the Kinks. Brash,
    aggressive and entirely unforgettable, his chord progressions on
    their early hits have become a rock & roll rite of passage for
    any aspiring guitarist; "You Really Got Me" has alone launched
    countless garage bands.

  • Joan Jett

    Image Credit: Davis/Getty

    Lead guitarists gave rock its icons; rhythm players gave it soul.
    The line runs from Eddie Cochran to Pete Townshend to Johnny
    Ramone, a lineage in which Joan Jett should not be taken lightly.
    In the early Runaways and the later Black-hearts, she played it
    straight ahead: No frills, all heart, no fucking around.

  • Tony Iommi

    Image Credit: Costello/Redferns

    Heavy, really heavy, starts here. While others were spinning solo stairways to the stars, the left-handed Iommi went in the opposite direction. Black Sabbath took rock's simplicity and simplified it even further. The occasional minor chord and a low, rumbling tone added to a guitar sound dripping menace and foreboding.

  • Randy Rhoads

    Image Credit: Natkin/WireImage

    In 1980, Ozzy Osbourne hired the diminutive, classically trained
    twenty-three-year-old Rhoads from Santa Monica, California, away
    from Quiet Riot. His screeching, arpeggiated solos on "Crazy Train"
    introduced the one true contemporaneous peer of Eddie Van Halen.
    Were it not for his 1982 demise in a plane crash, his already
    enormous influence on metal-guitar playing would have increased a
    hundredfold.

  • Eddie Cochran

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    He became a rockabilly star at nineteen, in 1957, and died at
    twenty-one. In between, his itchy, aggressive strum of fat,
    irresistible rhythm figures was a mighty weapon that could be
    wielded to battle authority ("Summertime Blues"), rally the troops
    ("C'mon Everybody") or summon some lovin' ("Somethin' Else").
    "Summertime Blues," Somethin' Else (1998)

  • Neil Young

    Image Credit: Denholm/WireImage

    The haunting, delicate clarity of Young's acoustic playing should
    not be underestimated. But it's on electric that he has staked his
    claim to ragged glory. A restless experimenter, he returns without
    fail to simple melodies, bludgeoning chords and a savant's knack
    for transforming the most obvious music into something revelatory.

  • David Gilmour

    Image Credit: Mayer/WireImage

    Roger Waters gave Floyd conceptual weight and lyrical depth, but
    Gilmour brought drama. His solos exuded a slow-burn stateliness
    that could be soulful ("Comfortably Numb") or evoke sci-fi
    dreamscapes ("Echoes") first glimpsed by the man he succeeded, acid
    casualty Syd Barrett.

  • Derek Trucks

    Image Credit: Gries/Getty

    Trucks hit the road with his first band at age twelve. Now
    twenty-four, he does double duty as guitarist with the Allman
    Brothers Band and leader of the jazz-tinged Derek Trucks Band. He's
    a fluid slide guitarist who moves easily between Southern rock,
    reggae, gospel, jazz and African music.

  • Robert Quine

    Image Credit: Roberts/Redferns

    With a guitar style that owed as much to free jazz as it did to
    blues and rock, Quine was the perfect choice to complement Richard
    Hell's intuitive street poetry in the New York punk band the
    Voidoids. Quine went on to make vital contributions to Lou Reed's
    solo masterpiece The Blue Mask and Matthew Sweet's Girlfriend.

  • Cliff Gallup

    cliff gallup
    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    In the few months he spent as lead guitarist for Gene Vincent's Blue Caps in 1956, Gallup introduced the stylistic swagger that every rock guitarist now takes for granted. His slashing, razor-blade-in-the-ducktail assaults pushed the instrument one big step away from country picking and down the mean streets that rock & roll guitar has traversed ever since. "Race With the Devil," The Screaming End: The Best of Gene Vincent (1997)

  • Robbie Robertson

    Image Credit: Honda/AFP/Getty

    Robertson's songwriting laid the foundation for the Band's rustic
    soul, but his terse, poignant guitar playing was the group's most
    underrated weapon. The Canada-born Robertson and the rest of the
    Band — then still called the Hawks — backed Bob Dylan
    on his first electric tour, in 1966, during which Dylan proclaimed
    him a "mathematical guitar genius."

  • Henry Vestine

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Vestine's interplay with Alan Wilson's slide in Canned Heat sparked
    hits including "On the Road Again" and "Going Up the Country."
    "Sunflower," as he was called, was an early member of Zappa's
    Mothers and played with free-jazzman Albert Ayler.

  • Ali Farka Toure

    Image Credit: Kilby/Retna

    The Malian singer and guitarist is often compared to John Lee
    Hooker, though that's too easy. He has clearly been influenced by
    rural blues, but Toure is a technical marvel, and his delicately
    plucked clusters and blindingly fast runs gather influences from
    African hymns to folk songs.

  • Adam Jones

    Image Credit: Photo: Getty

    In high school, Tool's Adam Jones played bass in a band with future
    Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello. In Tool, he
    combines the tuned-down chug of death metal with ominous
    atmospherics influenced by Rush and King Crimson. Rarely letting
    loose with a conventional solo, Jones prefers riffing in 15/8 time.

  • Johnny Winter

    Image Credit: michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    In the early Seventies, Winter took the blues into hard-rock
    territory with his overdrive takes on anthems such as "Johnny B.
    Goode"and "Jumpin' Jack Flash." He produced a string of solid
    albums for his hero Muddy Waters in the late Seventies. "It's a
    living music," Winter has said. "For me, blues is a necessity."

  • Trey Anastasio

    Image Credit: Gries/Getty

    Anastasio can play anything he hears. Phish's guitar anti-hero has
    Pat Metheny's cinematic sense of pacing and Frank Zappa's impish
    inclination toward noise. His epic solos balance technical
    finger-work against screaming climaxes, and they're exciting even
    when he's sloppy. Especially when he's sloppy.

  • Joni Mitchell

    Image Credit: Russel/Redferns

    The secret to Mitchell's daring guitar work is that she uses more
    than fifty different tunings. Mitchell devised the alternate
    tunings to compensate for a left hand weakened by childhood polio.
    In time she used them as a tool to break free of standard
    approaches to harmony and structure.

  • Lightnin’ Hopkins

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins learned the blues from Blind Lemon
    Jefferson in the Twenties. He was a ferocious electric stylist in
    the Fifties, though he's perhaps best known for his nimble acoustic
    fingerpicking during the Sixties folk-blues revival. As
    unpredictable as John Lee Hooker, he seemed to be making it up as
    he went along, and often was.

  • Eddie Van Halen

    Image Credit: Aaron/Retna

    The sound-obsessed Van Halen makes even simple lines sound like
    towering chorales and pioneered all kinds of tricks, such as
    fingers hammering the fretboard. Van Halen sought something
    different from his rock peers: music that was defiantly arty, but
    never so much so that it lost touch with devastating hooks.

  • Steve Howe

    Image Credit: Temme/WireImage

    During an era when everyone wanted to be a bluesman, Howe brought
    jazz, country, flamenco, ragtime and psychedelia into the mix for
    prog — rockers Yes. The ringing harmonics that open
    "Roundabout" may be Howe's best-known moment but Close to the Edge
    shows his range, from acoustic delicacy to high-octane riffs.

  • Jerry Miller

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Miller was tightly tempered on the Pacific Northwest R&B bar
    scene before joining the San Francisco ballroom band Moby Grape.
    His playing was never self-indulgent, and his soloing was
    propulsive, always aware of where the song was headed.

  • Link Wray

    Image Credit: Ellis/Redferns

    Wray is the man behind the most important D chord in history. You
    can hear that chord in all its raunchy magnificence on the epochal
    1958 instrumental "Rumble." By stabbing his amplifier's speaker
    cone with a pencil, Wray created the overdriven rock-guitar sound
    taken up by Townshend, Hendrix and others.

  • Vernon Reid

    Image Credit: Natkin/WireImage

    Reid reinvigorated hard rock with shots of soul, jazz and hip-hop.
    Reid's solos embraced the free-form abstraction of his early days
    as a jazz player, but they flexed enough muscle to bowl over any
    Metallica fan.

  • Hubert Sumlin

    Image Credit: Fraher/Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Sumlin's work on Howlin' Wolf classics such as "Wang Dang Doodle,"
    "Back Door Man" and "Spoonful" inspired Keith Richards and an
    entire generation of British bluesmen. Wolf's idiosyncratic
    phrasing humbled countless sidemen, but Sumlin embellished the
    singer's every pronouncement with angular phrases, vibrato-laden
    riffs and audacious glissandos.

  • Mick Ronson

    Image Credit: Foster/Retna

    This working-class lad from northern England lent musical substance
    to David Bowie's theatrical conceits in the Seventies. Ronson, who
    died in 1993, was the archetypal flash Brit guitarist, known for
    wrenched, physical solos that favor his hero, Jeff Beck. A sharp,
    sensitive accompanist, he worked with everyone from Bob Dylan to
    Morrissey.

  • Danny Gatton

    Image Credit: Pownall/Getty

    Never a superstar, Gatton was nevertheless a hero to fellow
    guitarists. He could pluck easygoing, banjo-like country rambles or
    grind out power chords or create wonderfully melodic jazz
    excursions that revealed just a sliver of his massive technique.
    Gatton committed suicide in 1994, just as his national profile was
    on the rise.

  • Zoot Horn Rollo

    Image Credit: Costello/Redferns

    "Mr. Zoot Horn Rollo, hit that long, lunar note and let it float,"
    commanded Captain Beefheart, and the former Bill Harkleroad did
    that and much more. Rollo was only nineteen when he cut the
    astonishing Trout Mask Replica in 1969; for the next five
    years, he brought Beefheart's cubist riffs and science-fiction
    Delta blues to life.

  • Ike Turner

    Image Credit: Angel/Retna

    Born on the Mississippi Delta, Turner was one of the first
    guitarists to successfully transplant the intensity of the blues
    into more-commercial music. His sound, built around his own
    razor-sharp rhythm guitar, combined four-on-the-floor rock energy,
    brash soul shouts and precision execution into a dizzying assault.

  • Jonny Greenwood

    Image Credit: Nicholson/Getty

    Radiohead's two lead guitarists have a symbiotic relationship.
    Greenwood is closer to a traditional lead man; those are his unwell
    bends at the end of "Just" and "Paranoid Android." O'Brien likes
    the wacky noises; the ghostly above-the-nutjangle on OK Computer's
    "Lucky" and the high, reverberating pops on Hail to the
    Thief
    's "2 + 2 = 5" are his handiwork.

  • Ed O’Brien

    Image Credit: Shearer/Getty

    Radiohead's two lead guitarists have a symbiotic relationship.
    Greenwood is closer to a traditional lead man; those are his unwell
    bends at the end of "Just" and "Paranoid Android." O'Brien likes
    the wacky noises; the ghostly above-the-nutjangle on OK Computer's
    "Lucky" and the high, reverberating pops on Hail to the
    Thief
    's "2 + 2 = 5" are his handiwork.

  • Dickey Betts

    Image Credit: Rabanne/Getty

    From 1969 to 1971, Duane Allman swooped and soared while Betts kept
    the music moving with lyrical boogie. After Duane's death, Betts
    handled both roles. He also wrote many of the Allmans' best-known
    songs, including "Ramblin' Man" and the instrumental "Jessica."

  • Roy Buchanan

    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    In 1971, a documentary about Roy Buchanan aired on public TV; it
    was called The Best Unknown Guitarist in the World. The
    title remains apt today. Buchanan's gritty blues-rock playing
    entranced other guitarists such as Jeff Beck. But the Washington,
    D.C., virtuoso never caught the break he deserved, and in 1988, at
    age forty-eight, he took his own life while in jail for public
    drunkenness.

  • Tom Verlaine

    Image Credit: McGhie/WireImage

    There was punk energy propelling Television, but guitarist Tom
    Verlaine was no angry primitive hacking at the strings. He used a
    crisp, needling attack and favored long, carefully developed
    exchanges with guitarist Richard Lloyd. The result was music of
    Coltrane-like depth at a time when the spastic outburst was the
    norm.

  • Ritchie Blackmore

    Image Credit: Costello/Redferns

    The Deep Purple and Rainbow leader is a master of both bottom-line
    riffs and jaw-dropping virtuoso flights. It's ironic that despite
    his classical leanings, this master technician is best-known for
    one of the most simplest riffs of all time: Purple's "Smoke on the
    Water."

  • Jorma Kaukonen

    Image Credit: McCaffrey/Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

    Jefferson Airplane's and Hot Tuna's Kaukonen is a gifted
    fingerpicker and bluesman who developed a raga-inflected style as
    the Airplane's folk rock grew increasingly psychedelic. His
    acid-rock peak may be "Spare Chaynge," nine minutes of jamming on
    After Bathing at Baxter's that grew out of his admiration
    for Cream.

  • Mickey Baker

    Image Credit: Roland Godefroy

    Baker may have been the busiest session guitarist of the Fifties
    — it's his brittle playing that underpins R&B classics
    such as Joe Turner's "Shake, Rattle and Roll" and the Drifters'
    "Money Honey." But it's his million-selling 1956 duet with Sylvia
    Vanderpool, "Love Is Strange," that's his crowning achievement.
    Those keening licks and hectic chords sound as unearthly today as
    they did five decades ago.

  • Lou Reed

    Image Credit: Schmidt/AFP/Getty

    Reed's ramrod stroke makes him one of the all-time great rhythm
    players, and he brought a thrilling sense of anarchy to his leads.
    With the Velvet Underground, he established a sound that owed as
    much to free-jazz maverick Ornette Coleman as to "Louie Louie."

  • Paul Kossoff

    Image Credit: Putland/Retna

    Kossoff's solos for British hard-rock pioneers Free —
    particularly in the radio classic "All Right Now" — are
    better-known than his name, but he is admired by guitarists for the
    economy of his lines and the purity of his tone. He made his
    presence felt by what he did not play, and the exquisite way he
    sculpted what he did.