Guitars That Rules The World czyli lista naj...gitarzystów:)

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Guitars That Rules The World czyli lista naj...gitarzystów:)

Post autor: Twisted Sister »

Włócząc się, jak to Twisted ma w zwyczaju, po stronach hair-metalowych i rockowych, znalazłam listę 5 najlepszych i najgorszych gitarzystów muzyki rockowej:


Five of the Best:

#5 Steve Vai. Earning his stripes with Frank Zappa, surely it was only a matter of time before Vai teamed up with larger-than-life frontman David Lee Roth for two platinum albums. From there it was on to Whitesnake for (it was rumoured) a million bucks. Steve Vai's individuality, mad-scientist creativity, and all-out weirdness meant that eventually he would have to go it alone. In the end, Passion and Warfare went Gold (which for a guitar instrumental album is like going triple platinum) and even cracked the Top 10 in the UK. Steve Vai is infamous for his religious guitar practice regime of 12 hours a day. His virtuosity was barely human. Sure, there were plenty of good players out there, but Steve Vai seemed in a class of his own. His detractors called it soulless, but the humour, wackiness, and moods invoked by his solo work meant that at his best Vai was as adept at conveying emotions as he was at dropping jaws. OK, sometimes it was nothing more than astonishing virtuosity, but don't pretend you wouldn't play like that if you could. Which you can't. No one can. Defining moment: "For the Love of God", from Passion and Warfare, 1990.

#4 Steve Clark. Before his untimely passing in 1991, Steve was the man who made sure Def Leppard never strayed too far from their hard rock roots; it's doubtful that X would have surfaced if he'd been around to have a say in the matter. With his low-slung Les Paul and exaggerated shape-throwing, Steve was always twice as cool as anyone else in Def Leppard could ever be. His off-the-cuff approach and hard riffing had more to do with Jimmy Page than Mutt Lange. The drawn-out Hysteria sessions and resulting super-slick album were not really the Clark style. Never a technical player, he had a combination of melody, feel, and classic rock cool, sloppy blues-rock licks that blew mindless widdling out of the water. Steve shines on pre-Hysteria Def Leppard albums and the B-side collection Retroactive. Defining moment: "Bringin' on the Heartbreak/ Switch 625" from High 'n' Dry, 1981.

#3 Nuno Bettencourt. Keen as they were to show off their prowess, the typical widdling hair metal guitarist was little more advanced than the average grunge dude. Nuno, however, was in complete control of his instrument. Most guitarists will focus in on one aspect of playing -- Eddie's tapping, Yngwie's picking, Satriani's legato -- but Nuno found himself equally proficient at tapping, legato, picking, and string-skipping arpeggios. His rhythm playing was always massive. All the funk he'd listened to had paid off, and his offbeat rhythms collided with infinitely complex parts. Nuno's idea of a backing part was often more complicated than your average solo, and yet such impossible virtuosity never detracted from the songs. When it came time to solo, Nuno dug into the guitar with fat pinched harmonics and enough power and attitude to make sure he always sounded totally rock. Defining moment: "Get the Funk Out", from Pornograffiti, 1991.

#2 Edward Van Halen. Many will tell you that Eddie invented tapping. Well, that's a bit like saying Les Paul invented the solid-body electric guitar; it's not true but there's good reason for believing it. With his insane whammy bar trickery, never-before-heard high-gain guitar sound, and impossibly fluid tapping, Eddie did what guitarists for the next ten years would try to do: shred. Unlike the others, however, he never sound scrappy or tasteless when doing it, his awesome, behind-the-beat sense of groove and mega feel as well as his ear for melody setting him apart. What really makes Eddie cool, though, is the slow stuff. Sure, he was incredible creative to be the first to do all that tapping stuff, but when twenty years of hindsight, the technique behind it isn't all that phenomenal. When he plays a solo like "Love Walks In", however, his use of the whammy bar, hammer-ons, and slides give it a subtle feel and style that is all his own. Anyone can play that melody; no one else will ever sound half as cool. Defining moment: "Eruption", from Van Halen, 1978.

#1 Richie Sambora. Alice Cooper commented to Guitarist magazine that if he could choose just two guitarists to be in his band for the rest of his career, Richie Sambora would be one of them. "Richie is one of those guys who can play just anything you say", he enthused, "he can play Jimi Hendrix, he can play George Harrison, and he can play his own style." Richie's total versatility made him perfect for Bon Jovi. Most hair metal players were just rockers, but Richie has the blues flowing in his New Jersey veins, giving tremendous soul to his guitar solo outbursts in lovesick power ballads. So great is his grasp of the blues, in fact, that Eric Clapton guested on his first solo album. Sambora chooses interesting runs within the standard blues framework, meaning his note choice is rarely clichéd. His appreciation for the Beatles shines through in most of his solos: very short, melodic outbreaks which compliment the song perfectly and are usually almost as catchy as the chorus itself. To top it all off, his fat, screaming harmonics, exciting tapping, and whammy bar madness mean that he also includes the best bits of Eddie Van Halen's style. To cap it all off, Richie's one of the best songwriters you'll find. Being in a commercial band like Bon Jovi means that he'll never get the acclaim he deserves from critics or musos, but the owners of the 100 million Sambora-related albums sold worldwide know how great he is. Defining moment: "Dry County", from Keep the Faith, 1992.




And Five of the Worst:

#5 C.C. DeVille. If this possibly makes any sense, CC was also a contender for the "Five of the Best" list. How is this possible? Well, in the Rock Hole review of Poison's Greatest Hits, an endearing crappiness is alluded to. CC's aimless widdling is as amusing as it is bad, and his stock of rock & roll clichés is cool and criminal all at once. He's also capable of injecting melodic guitar hooks and penning a classic riff, just as he is of putting some shockingly tasteless whammy bar dive in a sensitive power ballad. Whatever he's up to, it's always entertaining. Defining moment: "Unskinny Bop", from Flesh & Blood, 1990.

#4 Joey Allen. In spite of Joey Allen's best efforts to make it otherwise, Warrant were a good band. Unfortunately, endless whippings from Metal Sludge have used up all the good Joey Allen jibes and rather taken the fun out of bashing him. Defining moment: "Downboys" from Dirty Rotten Filthy Stinking Rich, 1989. Joey didn't play on it.

#3 Slash. OK, so Slash really isn't that bad, but then he really isn't that good either and when half the world is shouting the name of some undeserving nobody from the rooftops, someone has to set things aright. For a start, who names themselves after a bodily function?! Jizzy Pearl, yeah, cool. Slash? Anyway, he really ought to at least learn the major pentatonic scale because sometimes when he plays minor licks over major chords the clash is just painful. Cool he may be, but a great guitarist he ain't. He desperately wants to be Jimmy Page and Joe Perry, but Steve Clark is the true spiritual successor of those guys, not Slash. Defining moment: Getting dropped from Geffen!

#2 Kirk Hammett. Kirk really should have stuck around for a few more lessons with his teacher Joe Satriani. Sure, his technique is alright, but couldn't Joe have imparted some taste or melodic sense into him? Kirk, if you're reading this, try listening to what you're playing over before soloing. Kirk's incessant use of the (Spanish-sounding) phrygian scale and complete ignorance of what chords he's playing over lead to agonising clashes of harmony. The man is clearly deaf. Defining moment: "One", from ...And Justice for All, 1988.

#1 Kerry King. Slayer's bald guitarist makes Kirk Hammett look like a wonder of taste possessing a Mozart-like sense of harmony. If Kirk merely doesn't listen to what he is playing, Kerry consciously tries to sound as horrible as possible. There's no other explanation for it, except for possible demonic possession or crippling stomach cramps. No matter what he is playing over, King plays random notes as fast as possible, punctuated by mindless whammy bar dives. Please. Defining moment: It's all exactly the same! In the recent past, his guest appearance with Sum 41 on "What We're All About" is his best-known piece of sonic desecration.

Well, to chyba pierwsza lista tego rodzaju, w którym nasz Ryszard jest uznany za najlepszego z najlepszych.... (myślałam, żem w tym zdaniu odosobniona :mrgreen: ), ale...tak przy okazji... pomyślałam sobie... jacy są Wasi ulubieni gitarzyści? I co o tej liście myślicie, ofc :) ? Bo jeśli o moich ulubionych chodzi, to: one two, three, here we go:
1.Samboś zdecydowanie :D :D
2.Eddie Van Halen
3. Joe Perry (Aero)
4.Ritchie Blackmore (Deep Purple)
5. Slash (G'n'R i VR)
6.Jerzy Styczyński (Dżem)
7.Andrzej Nowak (TSA)
8. goście z Iron Maiden (jakkolwiek się nazywają :D :D )
9.Steve Clark/Phil Collen/Vivien Campbell (Def Leppard)
10. Jeff Beck
A Wy? :mrgreen:
"I know life sometimes can get tough and I know life sometimes can be a drag, but people, we have been given a gift/a road and that's road's name is ROCK'N'ROLL" Kiss
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sobol_77
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Post autor: sobol_77 »

Nr 1 oczywisty, ale niech bedzie, wymienie :P ; - a oprocz niego, to jakos ciezko mi wybrac, stylistyka, sceniczny ruch - szczegolnie ten przy granych solowkach - jakos mnie nie kreca u innych gitarzystow... wrecz nie moge czasem na to patrzec...
Wiec:

1. Richie Sambora
2. Eddie Van Halen
3. Steve Clark
4. John Petrucci
5. Zakk Wylde
6. Adrian Smith

To jakos tak bedzie. Podoba mi sie tez bardzo gra gitarzystow Saxon, oprocz nich moglbym jeszcze wymienic kilku, ktorzy odpowiadaja za brzmienie zespolu, ale gra jako taka mnie nie powala - tyle ze cenie ich za kreowanie brzmienia wlasnie. Np. gitarzysci Kinga Diamonda: Andy La Rocque i Hank Shermann. Super duet.
To tyle chyba :D
Ostatnio zmieniony 18 listopada 2005, o 17:02 przez sobol_77, łącznie zmieniany 1 raz.
It's a bitch, but life's a roller coaster ride,
The ups and downs will make you scream sometimes...
99-in-the-shade

Post autor: 99-in-the-shade »

Well, chyba zaraz zaczną się ciosy butelkami, bo nie do końca się z tym zgadzam. Przynajmniej nie jako z wiążącym i obiektywnym rankingiem. Miło, że Ryśka ktoś docenił, ale gdzie takie nazwiska jak choćby Page, May, wspomniani już Blackmore i Perry, tudzież Santana?

A jeśli chodzi o moją listę, to wyglądałaby ona mniej więcej tak:
1) Steve Vai. To, co ten gość wyczynia z gitarą jest wręcz niesamowite.
2) Richie Sambora, co chyba komentarza nie wymaga :P
3) Brian May, za rozpoznawalne wszędzie brzmienie.
4) Joe Perry
5) Slash
6) Ritchie Blackmore
7) Jimmy Page
8) Eric Sardinas - wyczynia z wiosłem prawie to samo, co Vai :D

I na razie tyle :)
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sobol_77
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Post autor: sobol_77 »

Zachecam do komentowania tematu, jestem ciekaw opinii fanów Bon Jovi (i nie tylko) w tej kwestii :D
It's a bitch, but life's a roller coaster ride,
The ups and downs will make you scream sometimes...
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CRUSHynka
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Post autor: CRUSHynka »

Rankingi mają to do siebie, że są stronnicze. A jak już dodane są takie obfite opisy, to nie jest ranking, tylko prywatna opinia jakiejś jednej osoby, z którą można się zgodzić lub nie ;).

U mnie gitarzyści nie są ustawieni w żadnej hierarchii. Po prostu każdy ma "coś", za co go lubię - Sambora ma odpowiadający mi styl gry, Slash daje kopa i rewelacyjnie gra temat z "Ojca chrzestnego", następnie Satriani bardzo mi podpasował muzycznie - uwielbiam te melodie, a Vai - gra emocjami ;). Tyle głównych XD.
Proszę państwa, oto pyza :D :
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Rattie
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Post autor: Rattie »

Michael Angelo

D
?
U
G
O

N
I
C

John Petrucci
Yngwee Malmsteen
Dimebag Darrel

To jest moją 'święta czwórca' :lol:

Przepraszam że herezję szerze ale Rychu (mimo że świetnie gra) jakoś tak przy nich troszke bladawo wypada...
To nie jest warszawa coby butelkę wódki zakręcać!
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michalb
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Post autor: michalb »

Mój ranking gitarzystów:
1)Jimi Page :o
2)Joe Perry
3)Slash
4)Jimi Hendrix
5)Angus Young
6)Brian May
7)Riche Sambora :P
8)Steve Vai
9)Ritchie Blackmore
10)Eddie Van Halen

Wszyscy są genialni :o
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Beerdrinker
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Post autor: Beerdrinker »

Edward Van Halen (za wszystko!)
Richie Sambora (Za to kim jest, jaki jest)
Michael Angelo (Za szybkość - boże swięty!!)
Yngwie J. Malmsteen (Za klasę)
Jeff LaBar i C.C. Devil (Za zachowanie sceniczne)
Bruce Kulick (Za KISS!!)
Chris Risola (Za pomysły, jakość i dźwięk)
Eddie Ojeda (Za melodyjność)
Paul Gilbert (Za wiertarkę)
Jimmi Delisi (Za to w jaki sposób bawi się gitarą)
Dann Huff (Za piękną lekką i zwiewną gitarę)
Michael Kelly Smith (Za moc!)
Axel Rudi Pell (za wirutozerję)
Ostatnio zmieniony 26 grudnia 2005, o 18:40 przez Beerdrinker, łącznie zmieniany 1 raz.
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Twisted Sister
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Post autor: Twisted Sister »

Bijcie niebiosa, zapomniałam o Edziu Ojedzie z Twisted :o . Dzięki za przypomnienie mojemu przedmówcy i dopisuję go do swojej listy gdzies u góry tego tematu XD.
"I know life sometimes can get tough and I know life sometimes can be a drag, but people, we have been given a gift/a road and that's road's name is ROCK'N'ROLL" Kiss
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Smolek
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Post autor: Smolek »

Richie Sambora,
Phil Collen,
Gary Moore
Joe Perry

.. I jeszcze Eddie Van Halen i Slash (za dużo nie słucham Gunsów i Van Halen, ale bardzo ich cenię jako gitarzystów)
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ROCKSTAR
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Post autor: ROCKSTAR »

Nie bede sie rozpisywal- dlaczego i jak... ;) Po prostu- tych kilku Panow ponizej to moja inspiracja i cos, co mozna gornolotnie nazwac natchnieniem ( tudziez tym, co w sercu gra od wielu lat- az po dzien dziesiejszy)

Kolejnosc (prawie) przypadkowa ;)

1. Richie Sambora
2. Phil Collen, Vivien Campbell, Steve Clark
3. Eddie Van Halen
4. Joe Satriani
5. Vito Bratta
6. D.J. Ashba
7. Warren DeMartini
8. Adrian Vandenberg
9. Reb Beach
10. Janek Borysewicz
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Smolek
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Post autor: Smolek »

Moja wielka trójca:

1. Richie Sambora
2. Pete Lesperance
3. Phil Collen
Sam Bora

Post autor: Sam Bora »

Jakiegoś zdecydowanego rankingu nie posiadam. Nie zgodzę się jednak, że Kerry King jest NAJGORSZYM gitarzystą... Wystarczy posłuchać takich kawałków jak "Postmortem", ":Raining Blood", "Skeletons of Society", "Mandatory Suicide" czy "Seasons in the Abyss". Do spółki z Jeffem wymiatają:D

1. Jerry Cantrell - techniki wybornej nie posiada jednak ma "to coś". Swietny feeling i fantastyczne pomysły
2. Richie Sambora - do tego Pana mam ogromny sentyment. Co do jego umiejętności... Album "These Days" gdzie każdy dźwięk jest na swoim miejscu nie wymaga rekomendacji...
3. Dimegag Darrell - Jakoś nie potrafię wyobrazić sobie dnia bez jakiejś płyty Pantery... "Mouth for War", "I'm Broken", "5 min-s alone", "Hell's Wretch"... Perełki
4. Kirk Hammett - Szybkośc i melodyka
5. Angus Young - niepodrabialny styl z opus magnum na "Back in Black"
6. Kerry King - patrz wstęp
7. "Snake" Sabo - jakoś cholernie podchodzi mi to co ze Scotti'm wyrabiali na 2 pierwszych płytkach
8. Slash - nieco przereklamowany ale bywają momenty, że słucha się świetnie
9. Dave Murray - kolejny heros
Geminiman019

Post autor: Geminiman019 »

Oto moje Top 5 najlepszych gitarzystów rockowych

1. Billy Gibbons - ZZ Top to jeden z moich ulubionych zespołów rockowych grających soczyste bluesrockowe utwory, a pan z brodą to mój naj gitarzysta świata
2. Brian May - za to że gra na gitarze, którą zrobił specjalnie dla siebie
3. Joe Perry - bez niego nigdy nie byłoby Slasha
4. Brad Whitford - co prawda jest tylko gitarzystą rytmicznym, ale z Perrym tworzy zgrany duet
5. Larry LaLonde - gitarzysta Primusa co prawda jest zawsze w cieniu wielkiego Lesa, ale jego zeschizowane brzmienia bardzo przypadły mi do gustu
Joanna Gates
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Post autor: Joanna Gates »

Moi ulubieni:
1- Synyster Gates (Brian Haner jr)- Avenged Sevenfold
2-Zacky Vengeance (Zacky Baker)- Avenged Sevenfold
3-Richie Sambora<3
4-Eddie Van Halen
5-Dimebag Darrell
6-Slash
Uwielbiam ich za wszystko, co robią lub robili :D
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And while I'm gone, everything will be alright.
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