200 greatest guitarists in rock

Status ... bleh. Doesn't mean too much. Allman was one of the modern pinoneers of slide guitar just as much as Hendrix revolutionized hard rock - style. Page and Clapton are also quite well - esteemed.

Both took old songs and used their prodigious skill to make it their own. It was hard rock - style of guitar that took off and not slide guitar technique, which granted a bit more of fame to Hendrix.

SounRAB like I am bashing him, but I actually like him a lot. I love his covers of other songs at 'Live at Monterry'.
 
Hmm I wonder who it is :p:

As for 'standing up for Boo boo', you took a while to catch on to that comment; I think this answers the above question. ^

Also you were so un-original with your comment on the most annoying rab meraber thread...
 
You said Jimmy Page couldn't hold a candle to Petrucci for one, get back to me when he has half the image and star power and writes 50 of the greatesst rock songs ever written. You're an idiot and a troll. Just know that every second of your life that you live thinking Johh Petrucci is the best guitarist of all time is a wasted ****ing second that you will never get back.
 
This.

Sure they have all of the theory in the world, but music isn't about theory, scales, or modes. Music is all about your ears and your soul. Not about your brain.
 
This whole arguement has been about John Petrucci? I was reading the posts and thinking at least this guy had a formidable candidate to argue upon. Give me a ****ing break dude.
 
Something I found while surfing YouTube, couldn't help but compare. Notice the X-factor? Petrucci's version sounRAB like a midi file.
[YOUTUBE][/YOUTUBE]
[YOUTUBE][/YOUTUBE]
 
Now listen, Luci...You don't know WTF your talking about. Fu Manchu were awesome up until "King of the Road". It's just ridiculous to call anything Glass did as formulaic because half the time he played by feel and flat out jammed. Lastly, if you actually did know anything, you'd realize they were bedrock of the stoner scene Kyuss created, with Brandt Bjork (in case you don't know, he was Kyuss's drummer) producing them in 94' and latter joining them on another one of their classics, "The Action is Go." Your comments "Taken from Kyuss"..."Indistinguishable music"? Have you actually played a Fu Manchu record. If you actually had listened to Fu you'd realize two things: A) They don't sound at all like Kyuss. For starter, they had a dual guitar attack. B) Fricken NOBODY sounded like Fu Manchu. Why? Because they were originators. Deal with it.
 
Malmsteen, I'm no fan of the guy, but he was the first shred guitarist to use a very neoclassical dominated style and he's influenced countless guitarists, so he gets his props for influence and originality.
 
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