E
EpiSGpl8r
Guest
i'm gonna have to say hendrix. all i ever hear about is hendrix oh he's so good. He's the man but c'mon lets come up with some new people.
hrn said:I love Jimi Page, he's one of the few great groundbreaking musicians in modern time!
Listen to "Houses of the holy" for example.
Hans,
www.hagen.nu
King Elvis said:THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER!!!! what kinda crap was that, my dog can sit on my guitar and make it sound like that!!!
Amen. Not only is he sloppy, his leadwork is unoriginal. Remember when the self-titled Whitesnake album came out in the 80s and Robert Plant got all indignant about how David Coverdale had ripped off LZ's essence? I thought that was some funny shit, considering how LZ took riffs and parts directly from old blues songs and called them their own. But despite all that, I still like LZ overall, and I think Page is a good guitarist, particularly on the acoustic.eyeslikefire said:Groundbreaking?......![]()
I'm not saying all he's done is crap. He has some good stuff, But have you sat down and listend to the solo on Whole lotta love? (the one right after the break) If that is not the slopiest excuse for a solo I don't know what is.
I disagree about his effectiveness. His sheer musicianship pulled Ozzy's nuts out of the fire. And I don't think his guitar sound was horrible, although I tend to think that Max Norman's engineering/production could have been better. I think he is underrated if anything; he made it cool to use non-power chords and non-pentatonic scales/modes in metal, kind of an American answer to Michael Schenker.Cyrokk said:Randy Rhoads.
He may be a technical innovator on some level, but I can't get past the horrible sound of his guitar to really appreciate him. Kudos to him for being a great guy and certainly one to look up to and respect, but he wasn't as effective as everyone makes him to be.
Cy
Musicianship isn't all about solos. It's about writing songs too having a vision. The hard rock scene changed after Led Zeppelin.