Good Guiotar Music
Discussion
Ideal for a relaxed drive along a sun-dappled B-Road would be Martin Taylor. Jazzy and tuneful.
Stevie-Ray Vaughan's "Texas Flood" is a classic, high octane blues album but try and find one of his live sets; his intensity is palpable.
Derek & The Dominoes "Live at The Fillmore" is a bona fide Clapton classic, as is "The Beano" album when he played lead axe with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers.
"Truth" by The Jeff Beck Group (their first studio album) is full of smoky, slinky blues numbers.
Some Albert King wouldn't go amiss either.
For some good-time-feeling geetar rock, Van Halen's first album hits the spot (and amazing to think it was released in 1978! Light years ahead of their time, they were).
Stevie-Ray Vaughan's "Texas Flood" is a classic, high octane blues album but try and find one of his live sets; his intensity is palpable.
Derek & The Dominoes "Live at The Fillmore" is a bona fide Clapton classic, as is "The Beano" album when he played lead axe with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers.
"Truth" by The Jeff Beck Group (their first studio album) is full of smoky, slinky blues numbers.
Some Albert King wouldn't go amiss either.
For some good-time-feeling geetar rock, Van Halen's first album hits the spot (and amazing to think it was released in 1978! Light years ahead of their time, they were).
kiteless said:
Ideal for a relaxed drive along a sun-dappled B-Road would be Martin Taylor. Jazzy and tuneful.
Stevie-Ray Vaughan's "Texas Flood" is a classic, high octane blues album but try and find one of his live sets; his intensity is palpable.
Derek & The Dominoes "Live at The Fillmore" is a bona fide Clapton classic, as is "The Beano" album when he played lead axe with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers.
"Truth" by The Jeff Beck Group (their first studio album) is full of smoky, slinky blues numbers.
Some Albert King wouldn't go amiss either.
For some good-time-feeling geetar rock, Van Halen's first album hits the spot (and amazing to think it was released in 1978! Light years ahead of their time, they were).
You hvae good taste Stevie-Ray Vaughan's "Texas Flood" is a classic, high octane blues album but try and find one of his live sets; his intensity is palpable.
Derek & The Dominoes "Live at The Fillmore" is a bona fide Clapton classic, as is "The Beano" album when he played lead axe with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers.
"Truth" by The Jeff Beck Group (their first studio album) is full of smoky, slinky blues numbers.
Some Albert King wouldn't go amiss either.
For some good-time-feeling geetar rock, Van Halen's first album hits the spot (and amazing to think it was released in 1978! Light years ahead of their time, they were).
peter green, man of the world, green manalishi, need your love so bad, oh well
baby animals, any
CCR, keep on chooglin, run through the jungle
coheed and cambria, welcome home
dave edmunds, i hear you knocking
edgar winter group, free ride
george thorougood, move it on over, who do you love
robin trower, little bit of sympathy, lady love
heavier stuff...
yes, starship trooper
van halen, aint talkin bout love
the godfathers, birth, school, work, death
spiderbait, black betty, ghost riders in the sky
saliva, broken sunday
rammstein, any
priestess, run home, blood
porcupine tree, idiot prayer, even less (not heavy or guitary but good)
melisa auf der maur, real a lie, followed the waves
megadeth, almost honest
jackyl, when will it rain
james gang, funk # 49
baby animals, any
CCR, keep on chooglin, run through the jungle
coheed and cambria, welcome home
dave edmunds, i hear you knocking
edgar winter group, free ride
george thorougood, move it on over, who do you love
robin trower, little bit of sympathy, lady love
heavier stuff...
yes, starship trooper
van halen, aint talkin bout love
the godfathers, birth, school, work, death
spiderbait, black betty, ghost riders in the sky
saliva, broken sunday
rammstein, any
priestess, run home, blood
porcupine tree, idiot prayer, even less (not heavy or guitary but good)
melisa auf der maur, real a lie, followed the waves
megadeth, almost honest
jackyl, when will it rain
james gang, funk # 49
Edited by Invisible man on Thursday 25th June 11:15
John 5 - the devil knows my name.
An instrumental guitar album in the same vein as Joe Satriani. There is a cracking cover of Welcome to the Jungle with Axl Roses voice replaced by Guitar!
Guest artists:
An instrumental guitar album in the same vein as Joe Satriani. There is a cracking cover of Welcome to the Jungle with Axl Roses voice replaced by Guitar!
Guest artists:
wikipedia said:
Several artists including Joe Satriani, Eric Johnson, Jim Root (Slipknot, Stone Sour), Tommy Clufetos (ex-Alice Cooper, Rob Zombie), Piggy D (Rob Zombie), and Matt Bissonette (David Lee Roth) made guest appearances on the album. Zakk Wylde (Black Label Society, Ozzy Osbourne) was reported to have an appearance on the album, but it was canceled due to scheduling problems.
Maybe try some Eric Johnson also.
Listening to the lad play, you'd never guess that - for the most part - it's done using a Strat. But his tone is just right, as is his phrasing and touch (oo-er ). His incessant change of sound can get tiresome though IMO (fuzz to metal to clean chorus to long delay all in four bars).
Nevertheless, this is one of his best tunes:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnqpOFcBiMM
Listening to the lad play, you'd never guess that - for the most part - it's done using a Strat. But his tone is just right, as is his phrasing and touch (oo-er ). His incessant change of sound can get tiresome though IMO (fuzz to metal to clean chorus to long delay all in four bars).
Nevertheless, this is one of his best tunes:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnqpOFcBiMM
Gassing Station | Music | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff