Trying to find the 100 best
guitarists
Trying to figure out the 100 best guitartists of all time
could be close to impossible! With so many different genres of
music everybody has their own opinion but we are going to give
it a shot in this article.
First, narrowing down the list of folks who've played the
guitar to the 100 best guitarists is, well,
challenging. So many people have played the axe that it's nigh
impossible to come up with a list of the "best." It's pretty
darn hard to come up with a set of criteria, to boot!
So where do we start? How about with the dawn of the
instrument's impact on the American music and cultural scene.
We have to go back all the way to Robert Johnson, probably
considered the first guitar hero. Does that earn him a spot on
the list of the 100 best guitarists? In my mind it does -
originality counts for a lot, and no one was more original than
Robert Johnson. Find out more information at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Johnson_(musician)
He was one of the original Delta Bluesmen. The "Delta," of
course, is the Mississippi River Delta, which empties out into
the Gulf of Mexico after traveling through New Orleans. You
could say the Big Easy is the spiritual home of blues and jazz
music, and therefore the spiritual home of the guitar - at
least as it's known in America.
The list of Delta Bluesmen that Johnson influenced could in
itself be the list of the 100 best guitarists. Muddy Waters. BB
King. Howlin' Wolf. Bo Diddley. And on and on and on.
What's great about that is you can see the influence that
Johnson had still in evidence today. Muddy Waters was the
favorite bluesman of Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck, both members of
the British Invasion (through the Yardbirds, the Jeff Beck
group and, of course, Led Zeppelin) of the 1960s and both
surefire members of the list of 100 best guitarists. Moving
further down the road we have someone like Dave Grohl, an
accomplished singer, songwriter, drummer and guitarist with
Nirvana and Foo Fighters, who lists Jimmy Page as his biggest
influence.
Does Grohl belong on the list of the 100 best guitarists?
Probably not, but it's a matter of personal taste. What is
important, though, is that you can draw a straight line from
Johnson, to Waters, to Page, to Grohl - who's still making
chart-topping music today.
Back several decades ago, Johnson was referred to as "the
Grandaddy of Rock and Roll," and it was fitting since,
generationally, Page, Beck, Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix et al
would be his grandsons. Now he might better be referred to as
"The Great Grandaddy of Rock and Roll." Either way, he's your
starting point for figuring the 100 best guitarists of
all time.
Also read: 100
Greatest Guitar Solos
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