This is what makes a great rock & roll guitar sound: an irresistible riff; a solo or jam that takes you higher every time you hear it; the final power chord that pins you to the wall and makes you hit "play" again and again. Every song here has those thrills. But these are rock's greatest guitar moments because of what's inside the notes: hunger, fury, despair and joy, often all at once. You hear the blues, gospel and rockabilly that came before, transormed by the need to say something new and loud, right away. Rock & roll has been the sound of independence for half a century. The guitar is still its essential, liberating voice. These are the 100 reasons why.
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1"Johnny B. Goode"Chuck Berry (1958)
"If you want to play rock & roll," Joe Perry told Rolling Stone in 2004, "you have to start here." Recorded 50 years ago, on January 6th, 1958, at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" was the first great record about the joys and rewards of playing rock & roll guitar. It also has the single greatest rock & roll intro: a thrilling blast of high twang driven by Berry's spearing notes, followed by a rhythm part that translates a boogie-woogie piano riff for the guitar. "He could play the guitar just like a-ringing a bell," Berry sings in the first verse — a perfect description of his sound and the reverberations still running through every style of rock guitar, from the Beatles and the Stones on down. "It was beautiful, effortless, and his timing was perfection," Keith Richards has said of Berry's playing. "He is rhythm man supreme." Berry wrote often about rock & roll and why it's good for you — "Roll Over Beethoven" in 1956, "Rock and Roll Music" in '57 — but never better than in "Johnny B. Goode," a true story about how playing music on a guitar can change your life forever.
"Johnny B. Goode" from The Definitive Collection (Chess)Chuck Berry performing "Johnny B. Goode" on American Bandstand in 1965
2"Purple Haze"The Jimi Hendrix Experience (1967)
The riff is pure blues — the same kind of guitar figure Hendrix played nightly back on the R&B-club grind, as a sideman for Little Richard and the Isley Brothers. But in "Purple Haze," Hendrix's second British single and the first track on the U.S. version of his debut album, he declared himself a free man — "'Scuse me while I kiss the sky" — and unveiled a new guitar language charged with spiritual hunger and the poetry possible in electricity and studio technology. "Guitar — you can play it or transcend it," said Neil Young when he inducted Hendrix into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. "Jimi showed me that. I heard it, felt it and wanted to do it." Hendrix wrote "Purple Haze" backstage at a London nightclub in December 1966 and recorded basic tracks with his band, the Experience, two weeks later. But the galactic travel came in overdubs recorded on February 3rd, 1967: Hendrix's solos, swimming in echo and sparkling with harmonics, were put through an octave-boosting effect and played back at twice the speed. In less than three minutes, Hendrix opened a new age of expression on his instrument.
"Purple Haze" from Are You Experienced (Experience Hendrix)Jimi Hendrix performing "Purple Haze" live at Woodstock in 1969
3"Crossroads"Cream (1968)
Eric Clapton once described Cream's music as "blues ancient and modern." This track is what he meant. He was not yet 23 when he played this high-velocity version of the Robert Johnson song at San Francisco's Winterland on March 10th, 1968. Everything in Clapton's solos is grounded in the blues vocabulary but pointed to the future. "When Clapton soloed, he wrote wonderful symphonies from classic blues licks in that fantastic tone," Little Steven Van Zandt told Rolling Stone in 2004. "You could sing his solos like songs in themselves."
"Crossroads" from Wheels of Fire (Polydor)Cream performing "Crossroads" live4"You Really Got Me"The Kinks (1964)
It was, at first, "a jazz-type tune," said Kinks singer Ray Davies, and the two-chord figure driving it was a sax line. "That's what I liked at the time." Then his brother Dave played it on guitar through an amp speaker he had poked with needles and shredded with a razor blade. ("It was a Gillette single-sided blade," said Dave.) Dave's solo — a tangle of zigzags and viciously bent notes — heralded the birth of Sixties garage and punk-rock guitar in one fell swoop. "I said I'd never write another song like it," said Ray. "And I haven't."
"You Really Got Me" from The Kinks (Castle)The Kinks performing "You Really Got Me" live
5"Brown Sugar" The Rolling Stones (1971)
"Satisfaction" may be the Rolling Stones' most recognizable riff, but this Sticky Fingers hit — based on a gutbucket guitar part devised by Mick Jagger — is the band's raunchy guitar pinnacle. Keith Richards' secret weapon: He's playing a guitar that's missing its lowest string.
"Brown Sugar" from Sticky Fingers (Virgin)The Rolling Stones performing "Brown Sugar" live6"Eruption"Van Halen (1978)
Eddie Van Halen's 102-second mission statement was a piece he invented onstage: a solo showcase for his mastery of tone and technique, notably the rush of notes he produced with his fretboard tapping. An army of teens would try to duplicate it, emerging years later in every metal band of the Eighties.
"Eruption" from Van Halen (Warner Bros.)Van Halen performing "Eruption" live
7"While My Guitar Gently
Weeps"The Beatles (1968)
This is a tale of two guitar giants at an empathic peak: George Harrison, who wrote this song on acoustic guitar in India, and Eric Clapton, who amplifies Harrison's vocal dismay with a waterfall of blues fills. It's the finest examaple of his jagged, late-Sixties tone.
"While My Guitar Gently Weeps" from The White Album (Capitol)
George Harrison performing "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" live8"Stairway to Heaven"Led Zeppelin (1971)
"Stairway," Jimmy Page told RS in 1975, "crystallized the essence of the band." It's a masterpiece of dramatic ascension: Page's acoustic picking rising into chiming chords, which introduce the solo, a brilliant succession of phrases that steadily move toward rock & roll ecstasy.
"Stairway to Heaven" from Led Zeppelin IV (Atlantic)
Led Zeppelin performing "Stairway to Heaven" live
9"Statesboro Blues" The Allman Brothers Band (1971)
In 1968, Gregg Allman went to visit his older brother, Duane, on his 22nd birthday. Duane was sick in bed, so Gregg brought along a bottle of Coricidin pills for his fever and the debut album by guitarist Taj Mahal as a gift. "About two hours after I left, my phone rang," Gregg remembers. " 'Baby brother, baby brother, get over here now!' " When Gregg got there, Duane had poured the pills out of the bottle, washed off the label and was using it as a slide to play "Statesboro Blues," the old Blind Willie McTell song that Taj Mahal covered. Duane had never played slide before, says Gregg, but "he just picked it up and started burnin'. He was a natural."
The song quickly became a part of the Allman Brothers Band's repertoire, and Duane's slide guitar became crucial to their sound. "Statesboro Blues" was the opening track on their legendary 1971 live double album, At Fillmore East, and ever since, the moaning and squealing opening licks have given fans chills at live shows. "It wasn't something that Duane would play the same way every night," says current Allmans guitarist Warren Haynes, one of many guitarists who have filled Duane's shoes since he died in late 1971. "But in all of our heads, that's the way it goes."
There's one thing the current band doesn't try to replicate from the Fillmore East performance: At the end of Duane's sublime "Statesboro" solo, the guitarist hits an off-key note that Gregg calls the "note from hell." "He left it in because he knew I hated it," says Gregg, claiming that the mistake only adds to the song's legend. "It was live. It was something that happened." EVAN SERPICK "Statesboro Blues" from At Fillmore East (Island/Mercury)The Allman Brothers Band performing "Statesboro Blues" live
18"Blitzkrieg Bop"Ramones (1976)
There's no guitar solo, because guitarist Johnny Ramone hated solos. But his down-stroke barré chords were fat with Dick Dale's twang and Bo Diddley's strumming. Joey Ramone once said that in Johnny's guitar, he heard organ, piano and other instruments that weren't really there.
"Blitzkrieg Bop" from Ramones (Rhino)Ramones performing "Blitzkrieg Bop" live19"Purple Rain"Prince and the Revolution (1984)
Prince hadn't shown much inclination toward gospel before this movie theme, but if this solo isn't a prayer, nothing is. Partly recorded live, the song ascends for eight minutes, and Prince's guitar is an extension of his voice; at 2007's Super Bowl, it made the actual rain seem miraculous.
"Purple Rain" from Purple Rain (Warner Bros.)20"People Get Ready"The Impressions (1965)
Curtis Mayfield's deepest civil rights anthem is powered by his eloquent open-tuned guitar-playing: The backbeat echoed the new sounds coming out of Jamaica, and the subtle, fluid solo spirals are as expressive as his singing. Bob Marley later synthesized it with "One Love."
"People Get Ready" from Ultimate Collection (Hip-O)Curtis Mayfield performing "People Get Ready" live
21"Seven Nation Army"The White Stripes (2003)
How much noise can one guitar make? Plenty. Jack White's six-string is responsible for everything from the "bass line" to the burn-rubber slide, not to mention the most indelible riff of the last decade. Not many songs can claim to have been covered by both Audioslave and the Flaming Lips.
"Seven Nation Army" from Elephant (Third Man)The White Stripes performing "Seven Nation Army" at the 2004 Grammy Awards22"A Hard Day's Night"The Beatles (1964)
It's been 44 years, and still nobody's sure what that opening chord is, but when it crashed out of the Beatles' first movie, it marked the Sixties as their pop decade. George Harrison's harpsichordlike 12-string Rickenbacker lead part alone spawned the entire genre of folk rock.
"A Hard Day's Night" from A Hard Day's Night (Capitol)
The Beatles performing "A Hard Day's Night" live23"Over Under Sideways Down"The Yardbirds (1966)
There's a Chicago-style blues shuffle in here, but Jeff Beck's sitar-imitating lead part is louder than anything else, with good reason. In a band that never lacked guitar heroes — including Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page at various times — Beck invented rock guitar heroism as we know it.
"Over Under Sideways Down" from Roger the Engineer (Repertoire)The Yardbirds performing "Over Under Sideways Down" live
24"Killing in the Name" Rage Against the Machine (1992)
In 1991, a year before rage against the Machine released their debut album, Tom Morello was giving a guitar lesson in his tiny apartment in West Hollywood, teaching his student the hard-rocking riffs that are characteristic of drop-D tuning (in which the lowest string is tuned down to create heavier chords). Because Morello's Telecaster had a locking nut, preventing it from drastic tuning changes, he taught the technique using an Ibanez bass. "I just came up with the 'Killing in the Name' riff," Morello says. "I stopped the lesson, got my little Radio Shack cassette recorder, laid down that little snippet and then continued with the lesson." The next day, Morello brought his riff with him to a studio in North Hollywood. "We were off to the races," he says. Though Morello points out that the bone-crushing song was a collaborative effort — "Timmy C.'s magmalike bass, Brad Wilk's funky, brutal drumming and Zack [de la Rocha]'s conviction meld with the guitar" — "Killing in the Name" introduced the world to Morello's off-kilter attack, which would include substituting an Allen wrench for a pick and slamming the toggle switch like a DJ scratching records. "We were melding hard rock, punk and hip-hop, and I was the DJ," he says. "It allowed me to emulate a lot of noises that I heard on Dr. Dre and Public Enemy records." AUSTIN SCAGGS "Killing in the Name" from Rage Against the Machine (Epic)Rage Against the Machine perfroming "Killing in the Name" live at Woodstock 1999
31"Keep Yourself Alive"Queen (1973)
Queen's first single was Brian May's statement of purpose: a phalanx of overdubbed guitars crying out in unison, with rhythm and texture from over-the-top effects. (Check out that science-fiction noise!) It's an entire album's worth of riffs crammed into a single song.
"Keep Yourself Alive" from Queen (Hollywood)Queen performing "Keep Yourself Alive" live in 197732"Sultans of Swing"Dire Straits (1978)
Part Nashville twang, part pub-rock grit, this ode to a journeyman jazz band offered an earthy alternative to the disco and punk of the late Seventies. Singer-guitarist Mark Knopfler wrote the song on acoustic guitar, then switched to a Strat; his trumpetlike solos and tart licks answer him as he sings.
"Sultans of Swing" from Dire Straits (Mercury)Dire Straits performing "Sultans of Swing" live in 198533"Master of Puppets"Metallica (1986)
This long, mutating track showed that California metal wasn't all hair spray and power chords. A hell's parade of quick-chop figures and bludgeoning fills, the song is anchored by a main, surging lick with jolting stops, and the guitars sound like grinding brakes.
"Master of Puppets" from Master of Puppets (Reprise)
Metallica performing "Master of Puppets" live in 1989
34"Walk This Way"Aerosmith (1975)
The syncopated lick at the center of "Walk This Way" jump-started Aerosmith's career twice — as a hit single in 1976 and then again, a decade later, with Run-DMC's version. Joe Perry knows exactly where he came up with it: a soundcheck in Hawaii. "I was in a funky kind of mood," Perry says. He began to play a riff inspired by New Orleans legends the Meters. Drummer Joey Kramer, who had made his rent money in Boston funk bands before Aerosmith, joined in, "and it all came together." The song was recorded at New York's The Record Plant in early 1975. "There was a steakhouse that we used to stop at on our way into the studio," Perry says. "It was a good time to get an Irish coffee." Fueled by caffeine and whiskey, Perry and guitarist Brad Whitford "chopped a rhythm together. We never talked about who was going to play what part — it just fell together." Perry played the solos on his Strat and used a '68 Les Paul on the rhythm track — as he did throughout the Toys in the Attic sessions. "I didn't have too many guitars back then," he says. To really sound like a Meters hook, says Perry, "we knew we needed hornlike parts." He and Whitford didn't want to bring in session musicians, so they rendered those brass blasts on their guitars. "We weren't going to bring up the horn subject," says Perry. "We're guitar players." GAVIN EDWARDS "Walk This Way" from Toys in the Attic (Columbia)Aerosmith performing "Walk This Way" live in 1994
44"Dig Me Out"Sleater-Kinney (1997)
One of the awesome punk blasts of the Nineties, "Dig Me Out" marked the point where the bass-free trio's indie primitivism bloomed into full-on guitar heroics. Carrie Brownstein's onslaught of fiercely overdriven riffs meshed with Corin Tucker's corrosive vocals and downtuned six-string, announcing the arrival of a great new American rock band.
"Dig Me Out" from Dig Me Out (Kill Rock Stars)Sleater-Kinney performing "Dig Me Out" live45"I Saw Her Standing There"The Beatles (1963)
The twang heard 'round the world: "I Saw Her Standing There" is the first great Beatles song, fueled by John Lennon and George Harrison's double-guitar chemistry — a toughened-up synthesis of chugging rhythm & blues with rockabilly. Suddenly the Liverpool scene had a sound, and every garage band had a starting point.
"I Saw Her Standing There" from Please Please Me (Capitol)
The Beatles performing "I Saw Her Standing There" live46"Miserlou"Dick Dale and the Del-Tones (1962)
Dale debuted his adaptation of this old Greek pop song when a fan at a show reportedly dared him to play a whole tune on one string. In the studio, Dale fortified his oud-like staccato with stinging treble and oceanic reverb. The result: surf rock's high-water mark.
"Miserlou" from King of the Surf Guitar: The Best of Dick Dale & His Del-Tones (Rhino)Dick Dale and the Del-Tones performing "Miserlou" in A Swingin' Affair
47"Panama"Van Halen (1984)
One of the great combinations of hard-rock thunder, technical skill and meticulous detailing from the guitarist who had mastered all three: The riff to "Panama" couldn't be blunter, and Eddie Van Halen couldn't spin it with much more finesse. Eddie and David Lee Roth spend the whole song trying to out-flash each other, and both of them win.
"Panama" from 1984 (Warner Bros.)Van Halen performing "Panama" live during their 2007 reunion tour48"London Calling"The Clash (1980)
A perfect mix of punk ferocity and classic ambition, "London Calling" also has one of the Clash's most memorable guitar lines. Mick Jones and Joe Strummer stab at sharp little chords and trade push-pull riffs, until Jones unleashes a solo that starts as a piercing squeal and coalesces into a swarm of bees; his final feedback burst is a Morse-code SOS.
"London Calling" from London Calling (Epic)The Clash performing "London Calling" live49"Machine Gun"Jimi Hendrix (1970)
Perhaps the greatest live document of Hendrix in full flight, this anti-war blues is little more than a skeletal march, but Hendrix fills the spaces with simulated gunfire, moaning notes and kamikaze dives. Dedicated to "soldiers that are fighting in Chicago and Milwaukee and New York," as well as Vietnam, it's the sound of a nation at war with itself.
"Machine Gun" from Band of Gypsys <(Capitol)Jimi Hendrix performing "Machine Gun" live
50"Debaser"Pixies (1989)
Joey Santiago was a guitar hero to the punks who followed the Pixies' jet stream, and his trebly surf leads on this tribute to surrealism are part of the reason: His overdubbed tangle of guitars perfectly matches frontman Black Francis' fuzzed-out rhythm guitar and hoarse shout. "I should have been in that band," Kurt Cobain said in 1994, "or at least in a Pixies cover band."
"Debaser" from Doolittle (4AD)The Pixies performing "Debaser" live51"Crazy Train"Ozzy Osbourne (1981)
The son of two music teachers, the late Randy Rhoads offered a more precise, classically trained version of hyperspeed guitar than the other virtuoso of his era, Eddie Van Halen. Rhoads' impossibly clean-picked solo here — painstakingly composed while listening to tape loops of the backing tracks — helped kick off a shredding arms race.
"Crazy Train" from Blizzard of Ozz (Epic)Ozzy Osbourne singing "Crazy Train" live52"My Iron Lung"Radiohead (1995)
Hardened by touring and sick of their first hit, "Creep," Radiohead recorded the instrumental track to this sarcasm grenade at a London show in 1994. The moment that announced them as a great guitar band: when Jonny Greenwood and Ed O'Brien crank it up and bury Thom Yorke in an avalanche of bent phrases — perfect for a song about a guy gasping for air.
"My Iron Lung" from The Bends (Capitol)
Radiohead performing "My Iron Lung" live
53"Born on the Bayou"Creedence Clearwater Revival (1969)
In 1968, Creedence Clearwater Revival were booked at San Francisco's Avalon Ballroom. "We were the number-seven act on the bill, bottom of the totem pole," says John Fogerty. "And as the first guys to go on, we were the last to soundcheck before they opened the doors." While the band members rushed through setting their levels — "It was like, 'Here's the drums, boom, boom; here's the guitar, clank, clank' " — Fogerty started playing an E7 chord with his Rickenbacker guitar in his hands and the tremolo cranked on his amp. "I looked over at the guys and said, 'Hey, follow this!' " he recalls. "Basically, it was the riff and the attitude of 'Born on the Bayou,' without the words." In that sudden blast of creativity, inspired by Fogerty's deep love for Southern bluesmen such as Lead Belly and Son House (the E7 chord was a Delta-blues staple), the guitarist laid the foundation for CCR's singular brand of swamp rock — and the song was a B side for the band's first major hit, "Proud Mary." At the Avalon, Creedence jammed on the song until a stagehand told them to knock it off. "He said, 'Get out of here, you're not going anywhere anyway,' " Fogerty says. "I remember looking at him and saying, 'Give me a year, Buster, and I'll show you who's going somewhere.' " AUSTIN SCAGGS "Born on the Bayou" from Bayou Country (Fantasy)Creedence Clearwater Revival performing "Born on the Bayou" live at Woodstock in 1969
57"Dark Star"Grateful Dead (1969)
Considered the Dead's greatest live track, this definitive near-half-hour version from an acid-soaked Fillmore West show is Jerry Garcia at his spaciest and most exploratory. Framed by Bob Weir and Phil Lesh, Garcia's free-form improvisation is the song's "nightfall of diamonds" come to life.
"Dark Star" from Live/Dead (Rhino)Grateful Dead performing "Dark Star" live58"Rumble"Link Wray (1958)
In 1958, guitar distortion and power chords were virtually unheard of, but Wray stabbed a pencil through his amplifier to make it sound nastier, dragged his pick like a switchblade, and got this blues riff banned by radio stations as an incitement to violence. Not bad for an instrumental.
"Rumble" from Rumble! The Best of Link Wray (Rhino)Link Wray performing "Rumble" live59"Freeway Jam"Jeff Beck (1975)
After years of leading bands with vocalists, Beck proved he is his own best singer. There's a howling quality to his string-bending in this brisk funk. "There were thousands of guitarists playing with their Les Pauls cranked up bloody blaring loud," he later told RS. "I needed to try something new."
"Freeway Jam" from Blow by Blow (Epic)Jeff Beck performing "Freeway Jam" live
60"Maggot Brain"Funkadelic (1971)
Most bands wouldn't start an album with a 10-minute guitar solo. But George Clinton's funk-rock legion wasn't most bands, and the late Eddie Hazel wasn't most guitarists. This mournful psychedelic extravaganza could stretch out twice as long in concert.
"Maggot Bain" from Maggot Brain (Westbound)Funkadelic performing "Maggot Brain" live61"Soul Man"Sam and Dave (1967)
"Play it, Steve!" shouts Sam Moore — he's calling out to Steve Cropper, the genius who powered Stax Records' house band. Cropper's fluttering, high-end riffs provide the song's rhythmic mojo, and his squealing fills (for which he used a cigarette lighter in lieu of an actual slide) are its third singing voice.
"Soul Man" from Soul Men (Rhino)Sam and Dave perform "Soul Man" live62"Born Under a Bad Sign"Albert King (1967)
King's roughneck blues weren't delicate — he was a master string-bender who said more with a five-note fill than most players did with a five-minute solo. Here, the Stax band gave him a Memphis context for his biggest hit, which has been covered by players from Clapton to Dimebag Darrell.
"Born Under a Bad Sign" from Born Under a Bad Sign (Stax)Albert King performing "Born Under a Bad Sign" live
63"Sweet Child O' Mine"Guns n' Roses (1987)
Slash was sitting on the floor in Guns n' Roses' squalid East Hollywood house sometime in 1986 when he started fooling around with a chiming, circular melody. "It was an interesting sort of pattern," Slash says. "But Jesus Christ, I never thought it was going to become a song." As he kept playing, fellow G n' R guitarist Izzy Stradlin joined in, playing a simple chord progression. They didn't realize that Axl Rose was listening in from upstairs — and writing lyrics. At rehearsal the next day, the band hashed out what would become "Sweet Child" — over the objections of Slash, who was convinced that the music was too lightweight for what he saw as a "thrash band." But he relented, and soon came up with the lyrical, multisectioned solo that ended up on the finished song. "It's a combination of influences," Slash says. "From Jeff Beck, Cream and Zeppelin to stuff you'd be surprised at: the solos in Manfred Mann's version of 'Blinded by the Light' and Gerry Rafferty's 'Baker Street.'" Despite the solo's complexity, it was the song's precise intro that proved challenging onstage. "It's easy now, but it was very daunting in the early days," Slash says. "Especially because I drank exorbitant amounts of alcohol and had other chemical things going on. I hated playing that song for years." BRIAN HIATT "Sweet Child O' Mine" from Appetite for Destruction (Geffen)Guns n' Roses performing "Sweet Child O' Mine" live in 1988
73"Summertime Blues"Blue Cheer (1968)
This power trio's cover of Eddie Cochran's classic was their only hit, sometimes called the first heavy-metal record. It's a showcase for the massive roar of Leigh Stephens' guitar, so fuzzed-up it scrapes like steel wool, dragging the rockabilly riff through the dust.
"Summertime Blues" from Vincebus Erputum (Island/Mercury)Blue Cheer performing "Summertime Blues" live74"La Grange"ZZ Top (1973)
"La Grange" has become rock's version of the jazz classic "Cherokee," a standard for guitarists to show off their chops. The genius of this breakthrough was Billy Gibbons' upgrade of a John Lee Hooker boogie riff into blistered metal, and his solo zooms from Texas blacktop to lunar landscapes.
"La Grange" from Tres Hombres (Rhino)ZZ Top performing "La Grange" live75"Willie the Pimp"Frank Zappa (1969)
Zappa's guitar improv never sounded more bluesy — or more jubilant — than it does on this song. His greasy skids and howling-dog tone — and the way he breaks into note-cluster fisticuffs with the rhythm section — are playfully impulsive. And that deep vocal? Zappa's teenage chum Captain Beefheart.
"Willie the Pimp" from Hot Rats (Zappa)
79"Silver Rocket"Sonic Youth (1988)
Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo formed Sonic Youth as a temple to the electric guitar, spurning lead and rhythm roles in favor of noise and more noise. Here they're a two-headed beast, crashing through open-tuned riffs and throwing in a bristling, free-form feedback blizzard in lieu of a solo.
"Silver Rocket" from Daydream Nation (Geffen)Sonic Youth performing "Silver Rocket" live80"Kid Charlemagne"Steely Dan (1976)
In the late seventies, Steely Dan made records by pushing a revolving crew of monster session dudes through take after take, which yielded endless jaw-dropping guitar solos. Larry Carlton's multi-sectioned, cosmic-jazz lead in this cut may be the best of all: It's so complex it's a song in its own right.
"Kid Charlemagne" from The Royal Scam (MCA)Steely Dan performing "Kid Charlemagne" live81"Beat It"Michael Jackson (1982)
There had never been a soul hit with as much heavy guitar as this or a heavy-metal hit with as much soul. Paul Jackson Jr. and Steve Lukather play the menacing riff, but Eddie Van Halen's speed-shred solo is the coup de grâce. Van Halen says producer Quincy Jones' only advice was "go be yourself."
"Beat It" from Thriller (Epic)Michael Jackson performing "Beat It" live
82"Walk — Don't Run"The Ventures (1960)
The Ventures' first hit is the platonic ideal of the surf instrumental. For almost half a century, bands have been elaborating on Bob Bogle's whammy-bar-laden twang, Don Wilson's choppy rhythm-guitar attack and the spring reverb they cranked up all the way.
"Walk — Don't Run" from Walk — Don't Run: The Best of the Ventures (Capitol)The Ventures performing "Walk — Don't Run" live83"What I Got"Sublime (1996)
"I can play the guitar like a motherfucking riot," Sublime's Brad Nowell sang on this hit (released two months after his death from a drug overdose), and he was right: His bluesy acoustic solo lasts mere seconds, but its singalong syncopation makes it one of the Nineties' most unforgettable hooks.
"What I Got" from Sublime (MCA)Music Video: "What I Got"84"Gravity"John Mayer (2006)
The two sides of Mayer — blues virtuoso and pop star — never met in the same song until this impeccable soul ballad. The rhythm guitar is an understated take on Curtis Mayfield, and the Claptonesque leads are as gorgeous as anything Slowhand himself has recently recorded.
"Gravity" from ContinuumJohn Mayer performing "Gravity" live in 2006
85"You Enjoy Myself"Phish (1988)
The hypnotic arpeggios, cathartic hard-rock solos and wah-wah'd funk of the epic "You Enjoy Myself" defined the ambitions — and the whimsical live jams — of Phish in their Nineties prime. But for Trey Anastasio, the song's guitar parts evoke an even earlier time: The idyllic summer of 1985, when the 20-year-old guitarist composed the tune on the half-size Time electric guitar and battery-powered Mouse amp he brought along on a trip to Europe. Anastasio and Phish drummer Jon Fishman spent their days busking and their nights partying and sleeping in a Ford Fiesta. "I was coming up with these little bits, but I never really sat down to write anything," says Anastasio. "We'd be sitting around the bonfire with, like, 20 people, watching the stars and listening to the waves crash, and I'd be strumming along. I'd play something like the opening part of the song, and it would stick in my head. And the next week, we'd be standing on the street, and I'd come up with another part. I would just glue them together — the song is like a travel journal." The intro was inspired by Robert Fripp, and the funk section was "some convoluted attempt to sound something like James Brown," says Anastasio. "What I really liked about that song — and this sounds weird, considering what kind of song it is — is that it had a lot of soul." BRIAN HIATT "You Enjoy Myself" from Junta (Elektra)Phish playing "You Enjoy Myself" live in 1998
86"I Ain't Superstitious"Jeff Beck (1968)
The Willie Dixon cover that closed Beck's first solo disc has got Rod Stewart singing and Ron Wood on bass, but the guitar is the bandleader. At every break, Beck's aqueous wah-wah tone makes his instrument sound like it's talking — Chicago blues upgraded for the age of the bad trip.
"I Ain't Superstitious" from Truth (Epic)87"Red"King Crimson (1974)
"I'm not a blues guitarist," Robert Fripp said in 1995, "but I think I've met the spirit of the blues several times." This is one of them: blunt-instrument funk in which Fripp, leading a power-trio Crimson, jars the mathematical cadence of his riffing with a wrecking-ball swing and rude pig-squeal harmonics.
"Red" from Red (DGM)
King Crimson performing "Red" live88"Mona"Quicksilver Messenger Service (1969)
Taken from live recordings at the Fillmores East and West, this is the acid-ballroom experience in a nutshell by the San Francisco masters: a Bo Diddley cover transformed into tribal ecstasy. When guitarist John Cipollina cuts the air with his wah-wah, your high is real and all natural.
"Mona" from Happy Trails (Capitol)Quicksilver Messenger Service performing "Mona" live in 1969
92"Memo from Turner"Mick Jagger (1970)
Guitar virtuoso Ry Cooder, who played on the Stones' Let It Bleed, accused Keith Richards of stealing his open-G tuning technique on singles like "Jumping Jack Flash" and "Gimme Shelter." Cooder's jittery slide guitar defines Jagger's first solo recording, which was written for his film role as a decadent rock star in 1970's Performance.
"Memo from Turner" from The Very Best of Mick Jagger (Rhino)93"Only Shallow" My Bloody Valentine (1991)
MBV's masterpiece, Loveless, influenced acts from Smashing Pumpkins to U2 with its gorgeously abrasive guitar textures, which defined shoegazer music. This opening track zooms between dreamy verses and storms of melodic noise — effects that guitarist Kevin Shields managed to achieve with no more than two or three layered tracks and a heavy use of his whammy bar.
"Only Shallow" from Loveless (Sire)Music Video: "Only Shallow"94"Money for Nothing"Dire Straits (1984)
In its early years, MTV wasn't known for great guitar moments. But that changed when Mark Knopfler traded his pristine, rootsy tone for a dry, overprocessed sound achieved by running a Les Paul through a wah-wah pedal on a track that became one of the network's earliest hits. Even without an actual solo, Knopfler's chunky rhythm guitar had the power of a lead.
"Money for Nothing" from Brothers in Arms (Warner Bros.)Dire Sraits performing "Money for Nothing" live in 1985
95"Omaha"Moby Grape (1967)
This San Francisco band's original lineup was the Summer of Love's biggest hope, and it's clear they fought their way there. On their best single, Jerry Miller, Peter Lewis and Skip Spence compete in a three-way guitar battle for two and a quarter red-hot minutes, each of them charging at Spence's song from different angles, no one yielding to anyone else.
"Omaha" from Moby Grape (Sundazed)Moby Grape performing "Omaha" live96"New Day Rising"Hü sker Dü (1985)
Eighties hardcore punk was never more simple or stubbornly hopeful: three chords, a three-word chorus and magnificent speed-of-light hammering that never seems to quit but is over way too soon. Bob Mould beats his strings like a homicidal Johnny Ramone, but there's no mistaking the battered-church-bell ring in his stacks of chords and his stressed-amp roar.
"New Day Rising" from New Day Rising (SST)Hü sker Dü performing "New Day Rising" live97"No One Knows" Queens of the Stone Age (2002)
With this enduring throwback to the T. Rex beat, QOTSA guitarist and overall mastermind Josh Homme found the sweet spot between hooky hard rock and the pulverizing metal he'd grown up playing. More than a few of the last half-decade's modern-rock bands have taken their cues from this hybrid of downtuned menace and AM-radio sugar frosting.
"No One Knows" from Songs for the Deaf (Interscope)Queens of the Stone Age performing "No One Knows" live in 2005
98"Under the Bridge" Red Hot Chili Peppers (1991)
Guitarist John Frusciante's tone is as naked as singer Anthony Kiedis' addiction memoir. But the moving parts in his chord patterns and the hurt in his flourishes are symphonic. He modeled the chorus on Joe Jackson's "In Every Dream Home (A Nightmare)," but when he locks in with the drums and bass, you can hear funk — the kind you always get in true blues.
"Under the Bridge" from Blood Sugar Sex Magik (Warner Bros.)Red Hot Chili Peppers performing "Under the Bridge" Live99"Run Thru"My Morning Jacket (2003)
Jim James and Johnny Quaid played the swaggering guitars on this Southern-gothic rave-up, with Skynyrd's heft and early Sabbath's slow-motion pace. And Two-Tone Tommy's thumping bass riff proved guitars don't get all the best licks. And when Carl Broemel replaced Quaid in 2004, "Run Thru" got heavier live — like "Free Bird" and "Kashmir" combined.
"Run Thru" from It Still Moves (ATO)My Morning Jacket performing "Run Thru" live100"Vicarious"Tool (2006)
This is as arty as new metal has ever gotten. Guitarist Adam Jones' cadmium-heavy riffs are mostly in 5/4 time (with a few extra rhythmic hiccups), and he batters away at them with inhuman precision. Even though it runs long at seven minutes, the song still became a crossover hit, peaking at Number Two on modern-rock radio.
"Vicarious" from 10,000 Days (Volcano II)
Tool performing "Vicarious" live
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