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22
Frank Zappa
David Redfern/Redferns"When I was learning how to play guitar, I was obsessed with that album," Phish's Trey Anastasio said in
2005 of Frank Zappa's 1981 collection of intricate and blistering solos, Shut Up 'n' Play Yer Guitar .
"Every boundary that was possible on the guitar," Anastasio said, "was examined by him in ways that
other people didn't." As the absolute boss of his bands, including the legendary lineups of the Mothers of
Invention, Zappa fused doo-wop, urban blues, big-band jazz and orchestral modernism with an iron hand.
As a guitarist, he drew from all of those sources, then improvised with a furious and genuine delight. His
soloing on "Willie the Pimp," on 1969's Hot Rats, is an extended studio party of greasy distortion,
chomping wah-wah and agitatedblues slaloms. In concert, Zappa would "walk around, doing his thing,
conducting," Anastasio recalled. But when he picked up his guitar for a solo, "he was completely in
communion with his instrument... It just became soul music."
Key Tracks: "Willie the Pimp," "In-a-Gadda-Stravinsky"
23
Buddy Guy
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David Redfern/RedfernsBuddy Guy got used to people calling his guitar style a bunch of noise – from his
family back in rural Louisiana, who chased him out of the house for making a
racket, to Chess Records heads Phil and Leonard Chess, who, he says, "wouldn't
let me get loose like I wanted" on sessions with Muddy Waters, Howlin'Wolf and Little Walter. But as a new generation of rockers discovered the blues,
Guy's fretwork became a major influence on titans from Jimi Hendrix to Jimmy
Page. Guy's flamboyant playing – huge bends, prominent distortion, frenetic
licks – on such classics as "Stone Crazy" and "First Time I Met the Blues," and
his collaborations with the late harp master Junior Wells, raised the standard for
six-string fury. His showmanship, complete with midsolo strolls through the
audience, remains electrifying at age 75. "He was for me what Elvis was
probably like for other people," saidEric Clapton at Guy's Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame induction in 2005. "My course was set, and he was my pilot."
Key Tracks: "Stone Crazy," "First Time I Met the Blues"
Related
• Damn Right, He's Buddy Guy
• Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2005: Buddy Guy
•
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•
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22
Frank Zappa
David Redfern/Redferns"When I was learning how to play guitar, I was obsessed with that
album," Phish's Trey Anastasio said in 2005 of Frank Zappa's 1981 collection of
intricate and blistering solos, Shut Up 'n' Play Yer Guitar . "Every boundary that
was possible on the guitar," Anastasio said, "was examined by him in ways that
other people didn't." As the absolute boss of his bands, including the legendary
lineups of the Mothers of Invention, Zappa fused doo-wop, urban blues, big-band
jazz and orchestral modernism with an iron hand. As a guitarist, he drew from all
of those sources, then improvised with a furious and genuine delight. His soloing
on "Willie the Pimp," on 1969's Hot Rats, is an extended studio party of greasy
distortion, chomping wah-wah and agitatedblues slaloms. In concert, Zappa
would "walk around, doing his thing, conducting," Anastasio recalled. But when
7/18/2019 Los Mejores Guitarristas 8
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he picked up his guitar for a solo, "he was completely in communion with his
instrument... It just became soul music."
23Buddy Guy
David Redfern/Redferns
Buddy Guy got used to people calling his guitar style a bunch of noise – from his family back in rural
Louisiana, who chased him out of the house for making a racket, to Chess Records heads Phil and
Leonard Chess, who, he says, "wouldn't let me get loose like I wanted" on sessions with MuddyWaters, Howlin' Wolf and Little Walter. But as a new generation of rockers discovered the blues, Guy's
fretwork became a major influence on titans from Jimi Hendrix to Jimmy Page. Guy's flamboyant playing
– huge bends, prominent distortion, frenetic licks – on such classics as "Stone Crazy" and "First Time I
Met the Blues," and his collaborations with the late harp master Junior Wells, raised the standard for six-
string fury. His showmanship, complete with midsolo strolls through the audience, remains electrifying at
age 75. "He was for me what Elvis was probably like for other people," saidEric Clapton at Guy's Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2005. "My course was set, and he was my pilot."
Key Tracks: "Stone Crazy," "First Time I Met the Blues"
24Angus Young
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Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Iages
"I don't regard myself as a soloist," AC/DC's lead guitarist has said of his manic style. "It's a color; I put it
in for excitement." Alice in Chains' Jerry Cantrell called him "the absolute god of blues-rock guitar." The
approach that Angus Young and his rhythm-guitar-playing brother, Malcolm, developed in AC/DC's early
years – high-speed pentatonic runs over thunderous power-chord licks – became a hard-rock tradition,and millions of guitarists the world over have his "Back in Black" and "Highway to Hell" licks imprinted
on their brains. "Malcolm and Angus have done more with three chords than any other human being,"
said Slash. Angus Young's onstage persona –l schoolboy outfits, duckwalking like a pint-size Chuck
Berry – is as colorful as his playing. "He's like Clark fucking Kent!" AC/DC frontman Brian Johnson
told Rolling Stone in 2008. "He goes into a phone booth and comes out as the 14-year-old imp, ready to
rock!"
Key Tracks: "Highway to Hell," "Bad Boy Boogie"
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