Gibson.com picks the top 50 guitar solos of all time

    1 of 1 2 of 1

      Gibson.com has posted what it feels are the 50 greatest guitar solos of all time, and boy, did they forget a few folks.

      Most conspicuous by his absence is Texas blues-rock legend Johnny Winter. I for one am getting sick and tired of so-called experts ignoring the huge cache of stunning solos the albino picker has layed down over the years. Have they not heard him rip it up on "Still Alive and Well", "Rock Me Baby", or "Can't You Feel It"? They got all sidetracked giving four picks each to Jimmy Page and Jimi Hendrix, and three each to Eric Clapton and Eddie Van Halen, and didn't bother doling even one out to Winter. Heck, he's even famous for playing a bloody Gibson!

      Other highly regarded guitar heroes who got undeservedly shut out include: Carlos Santana, Mick Ronson, Peter Green, Steve Marriott, Gary Moore, Robin Trower, Joe Satriani, John Fogerty, Tony Iommi, Brian Setzer, Michael Schenker, Steve Howe, Alvin Lee, Buck Dharma, Buddy Guy, and Billy Gibbons.

      Here's Gibson.com's complete list, followed by further analysis and a few picks of my own.

      1. “Stairway to Heaven", Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page)

      2. “Eruption", Van Halen (Eddie Van Halen)

      3. “All Along the Watchtower", The Jimi Hendrix Experience

      4. “Hotel California", Eagles (Don Felder, Joe Walsh)

      5. “Comfortably Numb", Pink Floyd (David Gilmour)

      6. “Free Bird", Lynyrd Skynyrd (Gary Rossington, Allen Collins)

      7. “Layla", Derek and the Dominos (Eric Clapton, Duane Allman)

      8. “While My Guitar Gently Weeps", The Beatles (Eric Clapton)

      9. “Johnny B. Goode", Chuck Berry

      10. “Bohemian Rhapsody", Queen (Brian May)

      11. “Crazy Train", Ozzy Osbourne (Randy Rhoads)

      12. “Cause We’ve Ended as Lovers", Jeff Beck

      13. “Sweet Child o’ Mine", Guns N’ Roses (Slash)

      14. “Hot for Teacher", Van Halen (Eddie Van Halen)

      15. “Since I’ve Been Loving You", Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page)

      16. “November Rain", Guns N’ Roses (Slash)

      17. “Mr Crowley", Ozzy Osbourne (Randy Rhoads)

      18. “Whole Lotta Rosie", AC/DC (Angus Young)

      19. “Like a Hurricane", Neil Young and Crazy Horse

      20. “Sultans of Swing", Dire Straits (Mark Knopfler)

      21. “Texas Flood", Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble

      22. “One", Metallica (Kirk Hammett)

      23. “Cortez the Killer", Neil Young and Crazy Horse

      24. “Rock Around the Clock", Bill Haley and His Comets (Danny Cedrone)

      25. “Sweet Jane” (live), Lou Reed (Steve Hunter, Dick Wagner)

      26. “Purple Rain", Prince and the Revolution (Prince)

      27. “Heartbreaker", Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page)

      28. “Jessica", Allman Brothers Band (Dickey Betts)

      29. “Machine Gun", Jimi Hendrix

      30. “Crossroads", Cream (Eric Clapton)

      31. “Time", Pink Floyd (David Gilmour)

      32. “Are You Experienced", The Jimi Hendrix Experience

      33. “Race with the Devil", Gene Vincent (Cliff Gallup)

      34. “Don’t Believe a Word", Thin Lizzy (Brian Robertson)

      35. “Purple Haze", The Jimi Hendrix Experience

      36. “Besame Mucho", Wes Montgomery

      37. “Sympathy for the Devil", The Rolling Stones (Keith Richards)

      38. “Blue Sky", Allman Brothers Band (Duane Allman, Dickey Betts)

      39. “My Sharona", The Knack (Berton Averre)

      40. “Marquee Moon", Television (Tom Verlaine)

      41. “Hitch a Ride", Boston (Tom Scholz)

      42. “The End", The Beatles (Paul McCartney, George Harrison, John Lennon)

      43. “Whole Lotta Love", Led Zeppelin (Jimmy Page)

      44. “Train Kept A Rollin’” (live), Aerosmith (Joe Perry)

      45. “Highway Star", Deep Purple (Ritchie Blackmore)

      46. “Dirt", The Stooges (Ron Asheton)

      47. “Off the Handle", Rory Gallagher

      48. “The Great Curve", Talking Heads (Adrian Belew)

      49. “The Messiah Will Come Again", Roy Buchanan

      50. “Beat It", Michael Jackson (Eddie Van Halen)

      It was great to see Jeff Beck's version of Stevie Wonder's "Cause We've Ended as Lovers" up there, as well as the tune that inspired it, Roy Buchanan's "The Messiah Will Come Again". I'm also glad that Rory Gallagher snuck in there at number 47 with "Off the Handle", although his "Tattooed Lady" might have been a better choice.

      Skynyrd's "Free Bird" was an obvious pick, but it's companion piece by the Outlaws, "Green Grass & High Tides", should have also made the cut. And Eddie Van Halen definitely kicks it on "Hot For Teacher", but I'll take his impassioned solos on "I'll Wait" and "Little Dreamer" any day.

      Brian Robertson's solo on Thin Lizzy's "Don't Believe a Word" is killer, but there's twice as many wicked guitar wipeouts on Lizzy's "Cowboy Song". And what's up with Boston's "Hitch a Ride"? Isn't Tom Scholz's solo on "More than a Feeling" that band's ultimate six-string statement?

      Anyway, it's easy to criticize a survey like this, so let's keep doing it. Here's 10 guitar solos from some fairly well-known songs that should have been on the Top 50.

      1. "Get Outta Denver," Bob Seger (Drew Abbott)

      2. "Beer Drinkers and Hell Raisers", ZZ Top (Billy Gibbons)

      3. "Burnin' For You", Blue Oyster Cult (Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser)

      4. "Stray Cat Strut", the Stray Cats (Brian Setzer)

      5. "Handle Me With Care", the Traveling Wilburys (George Harrison)

      6. "Hocus Pocus", Focus (Jan Akkerman)

      7. "Sheila", the Georgia Satellites (Rick Roberts)

      8. "Billion Dollar Babies", Alice Cooper (Glen Buxton)

      9. "Samba Pa' Ti", Santana (Carlos Santana)

      10. "I Won't Back Down", Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (Mike Campbell)

      Ear of Newt would love to hear which other guitar solos readers think deserve to be among the Top 50 of all time. Please do bring 'em on.

      You can follow Steve Newton on Twitter at twitter.com/earofnewt.

      Comments

      28 Comments

      miguel

      Oct 24, 2010 at 5:17pm

      So many guitarists out there, and a Rock oriented list, but no Frank Zappa or John McLaughlin?
      Miguel

      Jack*

      Oct 25, 2010 at 9:52am

      Steve-o - Way to go plugging Johnny! Robbie Roberston on Joni Mitchell's "Raised on Robbery" immediately jumps to mind as well.

      miguel

      Oct 25, 2010 at 9:59am

      Thanks for the tip Steve, I'll pass that on to a friend, for whom McLaughlin is God. I agree about Johnny Winter, though I don't know his later work, I had all his early vinyl.
      Miguel

      glen p robbins

      Oct 25, 2010 at 10:03am

      I know most of the songs on both lists - I mean - they are all so good - Carlos Santana for sure--

      To lovers of rock n roll music - it's kind of like saying which denomination of one religion or another is best. If you believe you believe.

      John Lucas

      Oct 25, 2010 at 10:10am

      Not being as obsessed with guitar solos as some folks are, I'll just say that as long as "Comfortably Numb" and "All Along the Watchtower" are in the top 5, I'm cool with it.

      Glad to see "Marquee Moon" in there, too. Tom Verlaine is great; Richard Lloyd is also pretty damn good, and underrated.

      Jim Chisholm

      Oct 25, 2010 at 12:06pm

      Hey Steve
      Never take these lists too seriously. But yes Johnny Winter deserves mention. My personal choice is his mind numbing and impassioned solo in Be Careful With A Fool. It's nice to see you still championing the great r&r music.

      miguel

      Oct 25, 2010 at 12:09pm

      I could rattle off quite a few guitarists from the 70's, but some that should get an honourable mention are: Ritchie Blackmore of Deep Purple, Robin Trower originally in Procol Harum, Paul Kossof of Free, Terry Kath of Chicago on their debut album, Robert Fripp of King Crimson.
      Miguel

      Steve Newton

      Oct 25, 2010 at 12:31pm

      I hear ya, Miguel. Blackmore, Trower, and Kossoff were all godlike back in the day. Trower still is. If Blackmore gave it up with the medieval music and got back with Deep Purple, that'd be nice. (Nothing against Steve Morse.). Terry Kath's solo on Chicago's "25 or 6 to 4" was the coolest thing you could hear on AM radio back in the early '70s. Never got into Fripp much. Saw him play the Plaza of Nations with Satriani and somebody else on a G3 Tour and wasn't too thrilled. Didn't mind "21st Century Schizoid Man" tho.

      Pat Cro

      Oct 25, 2010 at 3:48pm

      Missing in no particular order are Steve Hackett, Dave Davies, Steve Howe and Nigel Tufnel.