The best solos, riffs, shredders n ’ more

25 min read

A HORDE OF GUITAR STARS — INCLUDING REB BEACH, STEVE STEVENS, VERNON REID, LITA FORD, ERIC JOHNSON, STEVE LUKATHER AND WARREN DEMARTINI (NOT TO MENTION ADAM JONES, ERIC GALES, JOHN PETRUCCI, SCOTT IAN, MARTY FRIEDMAN, STEVE MORSE AND MORE, MORE, MORE!) — MUSE ON THE ’80s’ BEST STUFF

COMPILED BY JOE BOSSO, DAMIAN FANELLI, BRAD ANGLE, JON WIEDERHORN, JIM BEAUGEZ & ANDY ALEDORT

LOUD, FAST AND OUT OF CONTROL, PART 3

Lita Ford poses with a vintage Corvette at a Chicago gas station, September 30, 1984 (BTW, Chicago’s Matthews Roofing still has the same phone number!)
PAUL NATKIN/ GETTY IMAGES, MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES/GETTY IMAGES

WHAT WAS THE GREATEST GUITAR SOLO OF THE EIGHTIES?

How about the best guitar riff? The ultimate guitar album? The decade’s most underappreciated player? Was Back to School better than Back to the Future? (At least one GW editor screams yes!) Did A Flock of Seagulls’ Mike Score really have a more bitchin’ hairstyle than Steve Stevens?

Well, whether you remember or not, we at GW have already opined on at least some of these burning issues — probably even more than once (and it all started with the February 1990 issue). Hey, we’ve been around for 42 years! This time, however, we decided to open things up to a host of guitar stars (plus a few GW editors), some of whom were already doing their thing 35 years ago, and some who weren’t even born yet.

Living Colour’s Vernon Reid in action in 1989. His choice for guitarist of the decade? Allan Holdsworth!
MICHEL LINSSEN/ GETTY IMAGES

WE ASKED THEM TO ANSWER THESE 10 QUESTIONS ABOUT THE EIGHTIES — AND TO ELABORATE WHENEVER THEY DEEMED IT NECESSARY:

1. Greatest guitar solo 2. Best riff 3. Ultimate guitar album 4. Piece of gear that screams
“Eighties” 5. Guitarist of the decade 6. Greatest shredder 7. Underappreciated hero 8. Best movie 9. Greatest hairstyle 10. Ultimate Eighties accessory.

Below, you can check out their answers — plus one or two kinda interesting sidebars along the way. Enjoy! And, by the way, for more about the February 1990 issue of GW, check out page 47!

VERNON REID

(LIVING COLOUR)

SOLO: “Devil Take the Hindmost” by Allan Holdsworth. Insane fluidity like [Eric] Dolphy, ’Trane and a space alien all at one go.

RIFF: “Sweet Child O’ Mine” by Guns N’ Roses. That riff is basic, but it feels elemental. It’s like the guitar played itself and Slash just channeled it.

GUITAR ALBUM: Discipline by King Crimson. It’s incredible that two guitarists with radically opposite approaches made such a beautifully subtle and colorful album. A total reinvention of Crimson. Adrian Belew and Robert Fripp basically made the rock e

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles