[Giveaway] Win a 50 USD/EUR voucher for ELECTRIC MINT

189101214

Comments

  • mitekillem
    mitekillem Member Posts: 2 Member

    There are so many awesome songs and great guitarists to choose from. One guitar solo sticks out in my brain, not because it was impossible, or because there were any super technical transitions between scales and modes. It's the solo from Pantera's Floods.

    The song starts off slow and a little eerie, and morphs into segments of brutal grooves...then in the middle, there's rain, and a certain calm...just as the calm seems to reach its peak, the whole band kicks in and Darrell Abbott's guitar sings a melody like a sad violin with nuanced harmonics and emotion that reach out and pull your heartstrings. I have NEVER, in my entire life, heard another guitar solo that actually made me feel something emotionally. Something about this solo just makes you feel like you're listening to the moment when someone's heart is literally breaking.

    Great music transcends the speakers and touches your heart. And in this epic example, it's not words or a voice that grips you, but the sheer, raw emotion being poured into a guitar to make it sing. If you've not heard the song before, please listen to it from beginning to end, as the solo is the pinnacle of the song.


  • Liam Waddle
    Liam Waddle Member Posts: 5 Member
    edited July 2022

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7tIRRRSMk0 I don't think it could get much more iconic than Brian May playing God Save The Queen on the roof of her own house.

  • dreddiknight
    dreddiknight Member Posts: 1 Member
    edited July 2022

    Starts at 3:29

    While My Guitar Gently Weeps is a standard for a reason. The chord progression, the melody the heritage: directly sourcing the blues, but with George's unique take and the backing of The Beatles to cement it's greatness. Add Eric Clapton and you've got a bona fide classic that still stands the test of time. Add a solo by arguably the greatest guitar player ever, but certainly the best of his generation. Prince's performance here is steeped in funk, blues and swagger while he's clearly showing respect and never overpowering the others. He literally makes his guitar weep and wail in the most fitting tribute to another great guitarist who died too soon. A truly virtuoso performance, and one which shows a genius who has mastered his art and can communicate the most important things without saying a word.

  • Jade81
    Jade81 Member Posts: 5 Member
    edited July 2022

    Gotta have the plugin to show you. ;p


    Sweet solo, and the boy killed it - cool as a cucumber.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HC-R0lp9xkI&t=234s

  • T-O
    T-O Member Posts: 8 Member

    This is the most iconic guitar solo of all time to me because of the beautiful blend of Hip Hop and Rock! 🤩💓


  • galaxy_racc00n
    galaxy_racc00n Member Posts: 3 Member


    Absolutely the most "memorable" guitar solo ever.

    I have no idea how, but as someone who works with both 90's gm modules and real instruments/sample libraries, this man managed to make a real guitar sound like my first fiddling with a guitar patch on a general midi soundset. Like as if I punched my midi keyboard on the overdrive guitar patch.

    This is so befuddlingly funny and memorable and has a special place in my heart. Never fails to make me laugh.

    ..Though joking aside, I don't listen to a lot of rock or metal music but this guitar shredding in this casiopea song around 2:36 is one of my favorite ones to listen to.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inwk2RlXUzw

  • John Mills
    John Mills Member Posts: 1 Member

    How about the solo on Santeria.

    Bradley Newell treat us to an epic example of how many solos fit into & around chords shapes. In this case the 1 2m 3m 5 .

    If you're an intermediate player, and have looked at shapes further up the neck, or caged theory, and want to try a solo away from your tried and tested pentatonic scales & positions, then look no further.

    Newell uses the standard guitar expressions we know and love - bends, vibrato, slide etc. - and shows clearly how selectivity and staying true to the rhythmic thrust of the composition make for a great solo.

    Put these 4 chords on loop, learn the solo, jam it out, and your playing level will be bumped up a notch or two with this one.

    Short, sweet, classic.

  • jemboism
    jemboism Member Posts: 1 Member
    edited July 2022

    Without question (and I'm not even a monster Page fan either):


  • Adriaran
    Adriaran Member Posts: 1 Member

    "Don't Stop Believing" is my pick. Although it's not among very technically difficult, it's one is the most persistently well-known songs in history (if not THE most). Most youth of today who are two entire generations removed from the 80s know every word to this song, making it one of the most recognizable and listened to guitar solos in history.

  • hyperman
    hyperman Member Posts: 2 Member

    Ok here is my entry

    i probably will not win a discount coupon with it but If it makes you all laugh it will make my day:


    an electric guitar solo I want to emulate for years in midi and that I think Mint can handle is the

    guitar riff from the A-team tune

    it’s simple powerful and everyone loves when that part kicks in:

    starts at 0:46


    enjoy!

    joachim

    studio123

    brussels

  • tiagolee
    tiagolee Member Posts: 5 Member

    A whole 10 minutes of an epic solo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOKn33-q4Ao

    Doesn't get much better than this

  • Bruce Bowers
    Bruce Bowers Member Posts: 1 Member

    For me, there's more than one but, Ritchie Blackmore is one of the most important guitar players of all time.


  • buffalo joe
    buffalo joe Member Posts: 4 Member

    Lets have this one, all done & dusted in 3mins.


    https://youtu.be/ilDD5SeHxXE

  • Jashandeep Reehal
    Jashandeep Reehal Member Posts: 1 Member

    I'd say John Mayer's solo in Slow Dancing In A Burning Room. I just love how it evolves every time, over the years

  • Donkey Oaty
    Donkey Oaty Member Posts: 37 Member

    There are technically better and more challenging solos. There are solos I prefer to this. There are live performances by people like Garry Moore (RIP), Knopfler, Gilmour and others that trump Page’s. But credence to Page for performing the song with a twin necked SG monster – and moving so seamlessly between necks.


    The count of people teaching this solo on YouTube is huge. AND – it takes something for the playing of the song and its solo to still be banned in the majority of guitar shops. All that almost 50 years since the song was released. Those are the sort of things that define an icon. So it has to be the ”Stairway to Heaven.” solo.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ly6ZhQVnVow

This discussion has been closed.
Back To Top