Guitar World’s 100 Greatest Guitar Solos of All Time

Seeing as I can never make up my mind about which solo to figure out each week, I decided to apply some sort of structure to my weekly lesson series. I was thinking about doing another Bon Jovi tune, and when I saw that “Wanted Dead or Alive” was number 100 on Guitar World’s list of the 100 greatest solos, the choice was simple.

This list was chosen by their readers, so it shows their biases; there isn’t a single jazz player on the list, no country, very few straight blues, and few songs that predate 1968 (with the only entry from the 50’s being Johnny B Goode. So, while I find the idea of the “greatest solos ever” not including Rock Around the Clock, Au Privav, and other landmark recordings to be quite silly, all the solos on the list ARE great.

However, there seem to be several versions of this list! I purchased the book which purported to contain the 100 solos from that poll, intending to use it as a master list, only to discover that the solos were not ranked in the book. I assume this was due to publishing rights as there were a few guitarists who had multiple solos on the list, but not in the book. Those that were omitted were just replaced with other solos (some of which are odd choices, but still excellent solos).

There are two versions of this list I will be working from, which you can find below. I will be working my way backwards from #100 to #1. Whenever these ranked lists differ, I will pick whichever song is actually in the book (or whichever I prefer should neither be in there). I won’t be learning these solos from the book though, as the point of me doing these regular videos is to buff up my own transcription skills.

So, publishing rights sorta mucked up my initial plan, but I think this will still be very fun.

Here are the lists:
RateYourMusic

About.com

And here is a video where I basically say everything you just read:


“18 & Life” solo & tutorial

Better late than never, right?

It’s starting to become apparent that I can’t count on a free block of time at the studio anymore, but that’s a good thing!

I’m still going to try my best to bring you all another solo tutorial each week. Today’s was recorded in my room. The sound is a bit better, but the lighting is atrocious.

Anyway, 18 & Life: I think it’s safe to call this tune a classic, and this solo is great. Scotti Hill says he wanted to write a solo you could whistle, and I think he delivered. The phrases flow across the bars and changes wonderfully, and it’s super catchy.

Careful with that last lick. It’s not too hard, but don’t get lazy and phone it in.


“Highway To Hell” solo & tutorial

A couple of my students started working on this tune last week and I had to take a couple days off lessons to do the Copycats and Pro-fé-cia shows this weekend, which means I won’t be there to show them how to play the solo. So I decided to make it my solo video this week to help them get a head start!

I’ve never actually learned an entire Angus Young solo note-for-note before. There are some odd position shifts and bends in this one that really took me by surprise. The track is also flat! It’s about a quarter-tone off, so if you try playing along with the track and find that it doesn’t sound right, that’s why. I’ve got a pitch-fixed version of the song available here that you can play along with. It’s pretty fun and not terribly difficult, so have at it!

How to play “Bloodstains”

I love punk music. I love surf music. So, naturally, Agent Orange is one of my favorites.

There isn’t much to this song. There’s the opening riff, a variation of it, and then a big E5 chord. Really easy to learn, but tons of fun to play.

Mike Palm crafted a great solo for this tune. It utilizes an F# major phrygian scale (1 b2 3 4 5 b6 7), a common melodic base for many surf tunes to great effect.


“Hot Stuff” solo & tutorial

This solo has been blowing my mind since as long as I can remember. It is cookin’. I only discovered it was Jeff Baxter a few years ago, but it in no way surprised me (have you heard Reelin’ In The Years?)

Anyways, it’s a killer solo with great phrasing that very modestly stays inside the minor blues scale (except for one lick).

This is how it’s done, kids.


“Aces High” solo & tutorial

Another request this week: we’ve got Aces High by Iron Maiden. This is actually two separate solos (one played by Dave Murray, the other by Adrian Smith) but they are really easy to play back-to-back, which isn’t always the case with dueling solos.

Dave’s solo is in A minor, mostly sticking to quick pentatonic stuff (as Dave is wont to do) while Adrian’s is in  B minor with a couple blue notes.

Nothing to complicated, but a lot of fun.