Tag Archive | "Rainbow"

The axeman cometh: Goldmine picks the greatest metal guitar solos ever


By  By Martin Popoff

BONUS ROUND: Wonder which artists take the prize for the best non-metal solos of all time? Click here to find out!

Looking at small bits of art necessarily enters the realm of the abstract, and, of course, a guitar solo is usually shorter than a band’s catalog, much less an album or even a song. So, this gets tricky.

Nonetheless, I polled a bunch of industry experts, as well as fans, and then sifted for trends to answer this question. And since I’m the one writin’ it, I weighed in very heavily myself to come up with this ears-a’-ringin’ collection of the greatest metal solos of all time.

Criteria? I used hummability, musicality, memorability, structure, technicality, impact on the music world and influence on other guitar players. But, I quickly discovered a nice rule of thumb I came back to more and more: If a song title is mentioned, could I almost instantly sift my mental circuitry and happily, accurately, reverently, to hear most of the thing in my head?

I found that to be a sort of objective, involuntary way of ascribing importance outside of intellectual thought or even a temptation to fudge the results. And yes, to reiterate, I took in a wide range of opinions on the subject, so another criterion would be… democracy. So, if you find the list too predictable, remember, I’m going for accuracy and truth here, not cleverness.

Finally, I’ve always felt that to be “the greatest of all time” it helps to be old enough for folks to consider whether it’s “stood the test of time.” Couple that with the ability to fix ’n’ fake things all too simply in the studio these days, and… yeah, I found myself (and all the people who voted, incidentally, as well) gravitating toward material from two distinct places: the classic-rock era and ’80s heavy metal.

Seriously, practically nobody voted for any of today’s generation of shredders, of which there’s got to be at least a couple dozen bona fide guitar heroes. Do this again in 10 years, and those guys (Mike Amott, Alexi Laiho, Zakk Wylde) will get their due.

In any event, here they be… discuss amongst yourselves!
Let’s start with our (highly subjective) honorable mention list for 21-40, then move on to the expanded listings for Nos. 20-1.

40. Metallica — “Master Of Puppets”

39. Sweet — “Set Me Free”
sweet0511.jpg


The Sweet.


38. Thin Lizzy — “Emerald”

37. Pantera — “Floods”

36. Steve Vai — “The Attitude Song”

35. Slayer — “Hell Awaits”
Slayer_2006_PR-01-01.jpg

Slayer.

34. Dokken — “Mr. Scary”

33. Ted Nugent — “Wango Tango”

TedNugent-01-01.jpg


Ted Nugent.

32. Blue Oyster Cult — “Godzilla”

31. Soundgarden — “Jesus Christ Pose”

30. Megadeth — “Symphony Of Destruction”

29. Y&T — “Forever”

28. Kim Mitchell — “Rumour Has It”

27. Rush — “La Villa Strangiato”

26. Guns N’ Roses —“Sweet Child O’ Mine”

25. Montrose — “I’ve Got The Fire”

24. Rainbow — “Kill The King”


Rainbow.jpg

Rainbow.

23. Judas Priest — “Beyond The Realms Of Death”

22. Ram Jam — “Black Betty”

21. Ozzy Osbourne — “S.A.T.O.”

Now, for the Top 20 listings, complete with narrative:

20. Dokken, “Mr. Scary”
George Lynch was essentially “the other one” back in the late ’70s L.A. metal scene, competing with Eddie Van Halen for top dog honors. With Dokken, he proved to be a quintessential and characteristic shredder, actually one of the first to push guitar acrobatics to the fore within the fledgling hair-metal scene. “Mr. Scary” is George’s instrumental workout, an opportunity to utilize the whole fret board, to compose at length, and to relax and blow off some of the tension he always felt with Don garnering most of the spotlight as thespian, Joe Lynn Turner-like lead vocalist. Indeed, Don and George fought like cats and dogs, but they did manage to put out four solid albums of classy stadium-rock in the ’80s that found Lynch alongside Ratt’s Warren DeMartini as the genre’s professors of fret fire.

19. KISS, “Strange Ways”
KISSBW3p0.jpg Seriously, go listen to this one again. You gotta love Ace, if only for the legions of fun-time rockers he inspired with his space boots and smoking guitar and, yes, his crazy, emotional approach to soloing. He’s like the Keith Moon of the guitar, attacking and raw, and usually quite memorable and musical despite the love of noise. Ace also reminds me of Sweet’s underrated Andy Scott, both guys sort of shoving their way into the song at hand, offering a bit of a slap to the face.

18. Alcatrazz, “Island In The Sun”
It’s easy to go to Yngwie’s second solo album Marching Out and find something, but his work on Alcatrazz’s classic first album is so much more fun, upbeat and massaged into the fecund creativity of these smart songs. “Island In The Sun” is the poppiest track on the album, and so, Yngwie answers in kind, not yet a slave to his much-maligned rigidity of style, turning in a thrilling, vaulted, ornate-but-soul-replenishing jewel-within-track.

17. Accept, “Princess Of The Dawn”
OK, I am championing this one, but a lot of people voted for it, too. This is a classic example of building drama, the concept of writing a song within a song, versatility, violence contrasting finesse, and medieval Germanic seriousness set against bluesiness. And the way the song is written, its resolute plod… it’s almost as if the whole regular verse/chorus structure is merely a warm-up act for the Teutonic axe magic to come.

16. Iron Maiden, “The Trooper”
Maiden is mostly known for Dave Murray and Adrian Smith’s twin leads, a characteristic with a pedigree usually attributed to the Allman Brothers, Wishbone Ash and Thin Lizzy. That is certainly on display here, through the memorable, recurring pattern that is virtually the main riff, but there’s also a few shots across the bow of the band’s Iommi-esque burbling, giving this one much contrast as well as drama, given the stop/start nature of the song.

15. Metallica, “One”
Surprised to see the overwhelming number of Metallica votes going to “One,” the band’s protracted, prog-metal epic. Kirk is his usual effects-happy, nutbar self on this one, really exploding in tandem with the track doing the same. He’s a really bubbly, almost atonal kind of soloist and certainly not the heavy-metal norm. But, on the tough slog of “One,” he’s a shot in the arm.

14. Judas Priest, “Electric Eye”
JudasPriest4p5.jpg It helps that “Electric Eye” is one of Priest’s most thrilling rock rides, but the solo placed on top of the custom chords of the break has everything you want from K.K. and Glenn, marrying technicality to a cogent harnessing of lurching noise to the establishment of themes. Also, the guys have a knack for wrapping it up in a big red bow before getting back to the business of banging heads with Rob. One of the great metal teams and, like Schenker, distinctive in more up-market, less “tricks”-related ways.

13. AC/DC, “Back In Black”
AC/DC’s penultimate anthem got the most votes, with Angus getting to solo over a track with amusing spaces and pregnant pauses. Angus is an old-time rock ’n’ roller like Ted Nugent or Billy Gibbons, looking around and finding himself immersed in a hard-rock world and forced to make hay while the sun shines. As a result, there’s a timelessness to his rootsy, rock grind. And when you’re hearing him, you can’t help but picturing him perilously headbanging.

12. Thin Lizzy, “The Cowboy Song”

thinlizzyc.jpg I’ve put Lizzy on this list twice, because they had essentially two (but actually about five) different guitar configurations. The two celebrated eras include one lone album with John Sykes, but the lyrical, sublime twin leads woven by Brian Robertson and Scott Gorham through all the big albums in the middle are even more praised. “The Cowboy Song” includes one of the best of these (“The Boys Are Back In Town” got votes as well), but it also includes a series of boogie-rocking solo leads that, like the twin ones, are instantly hummable and enhancing of the song itself, effortlessly vaulting ‘The Cowboy Song” to anthem status.

11. UFO, “Lights Out”
UFO4p5.jpg “Rock Bottom” got more votes, but I prefer Michael Schenker on this rousing, golden-era classic. There’s an ironic confidence to him in his craziest years — of course, this is when the “Michael Schenker Is God” thing reprised the Eric Clapton story from a decade earlier. In any event, Michael has proven over the years to be an irresistible synthesis of full-on medieval/Euro tones with a pop sensibility. His style is, in fact, very distinctive, but not as obviously so to novices as, say, Eddie Van Halen or Robert Fripp or Yngwie Malmsteen. It’s more of a discerning thing.

10. Black Sabbath, “Neon Knights”
Tony Iommi is the riff master, no question, but his soloing is often skronky, wah-wah-laden, noisy and illogical, oddly akin to that of Kirk Hammett. Mob Rules and Heaven And Hell contain the man’s best solos, however, and when he’s on, he’s highly memorable — the “Neon Knights” passage evoking the man’s weirdly melancholy and wistful, bluesy vibe with structure and melody and resolution that is rare for Iommi, who, like I say, is usually a bit of a… blower.

9. Thin Lizzy, “Baby Please Don’t Go”
The Thin Lizzy votes were plentiful and varied, so much so that I had to support the many John Sykes nods (“Cold Sweat” getting the most votes) with a gracious bow to the “Baby Please Don’t Go” solo, which is my personal top pick when I get hit with that question in a radio interview. This one always gets me pulling out the air guitar. It swoops, dives, explodes and divebombs, and yet, it is so melodic and logical… it’s pure genius, as is Sykes on Whitesnake’s seminal “Still Of The Night,” I might add.

jimihendrix.jpg8. Jimi Hendrix, “All Along The Watchtower”
Curiously, most of the Jimi Hendrix votes went to this otherwise uneventful Bob Dylan cover. But, inside it, Jimi does many of the things that made all those previous greats like Clapton, Townshend and Page look like also-rans, indeed, most believing that Jimi had rewritten the rulebook, essentially reworking what could be done with the instrument through what was virtually a new guitar vocabulary. Not exactly Jimi’s heaviest metal track or solo, but you can most definitely hear the fire in the belly he applies to his louder rockers.

7. Queen, “Bohemian Rhapsody”
Zakk Wylde comes to mind as the only other guy besides Brian May who has this way of sounding like he’s wrenching each note from the guitar, making it howl, and kick and scream, in pain. The “Bohemian Rhapsody” solo is an amusing demonstration of this. It’s pretty much simple, laid-back and relaxed, but each note sounds like it’s going through torture, as May methodically writes a tune within a tune that would be good enough to be a vocal line within one of the medium-loud passages of this groundbreaking epic track. No doubt part of this comes down to May’s use of a coin as a pick, but whatever the reason, it’s a brutishly executed solo that sounds like a hard-won victory.

6. Scorpions, “The Sails Of Charon”

ScorpionsBand-01-01.jpg Most hardcore fans will agree that Scorpions was at its best when Ulrich Roth was in there adding his strange hippie/Hendrix twist to the modern, heavy-metal writing coming out of Klaus and Rudy. “The Sails Of Charon” solo (off Taken By Force) is really cool, because of its mix of riffing and soloing, its heavy Spanish influence and the fact that it innovatively and grandly opens the song. It is testimony that disparate elements within a band can result in great art. Roth would amicably leave the band after this last “obscure” Scorpions album to follow his left-field muse.

5. Dio, “Stand Up And Shout”
Talk to Viv Campbell, and he famously forsakes metal for pop, but amusingly, his entire reputation is forever assured and completely based on his work all over the first two Dio albums, “Stand Up And Shout” being an example of his violent, muscular, motion-filled, yet incredibly hooky soloing style. Oddly — or for sure synergistically — he is to the guitar what Vinny Appice is to the drums, both putting on a highly rhythmic and squarely musical display, turning the Dio band into one of metal’s more fiery and sensual outfits of the intense ’80s.

4. Led Zeppelin, “Stairway To Heaven”
zepplin1.jpg You know, the votes on this actually put it at about #2, but I’m penalizing it down a few spots, because I think the song and the solo are both overrated, as is Jimmy as a soloist. I do, however, think Physical Graffiti is the greatest album ever made, and Jimmy is one of the greatest axemen of all time, but that’s more for his acoustic writing and his riff writing, not his (admittedly amusing) “wisecracking” approach to soloing. Anyway, this is a very memorable solo as it builds and resolves, almost as a microcosm of the song as a whole. It’s also very tuneful, hummable, etc., and it is structured nicely in tandem with a backing track that moves toward its own conclusion.

3. Ozzy Osbourne, “Crazy Train”

OZZ4p5.jpg Randy Rhoads was an unknown with a couple of Japan-only albums to his name as part of Quiet Riot, but his time with Ozzy, as well as his shocking airplane crash death, made him a legend. “Crazy Train” was his introduction to the world, and his classically trained chops, coupled with an immense electric sound put way up in the mix, could not be denied. The “Crazy Train” solo made use of both the obsessive training and the unyielding sonics, with Randy turning in a composed and criss-crossingly melodic solo that bridged Blackmore to Malmsteen via Michael Schenker.

2. Deep Purple, “Highway Star”
Many votes, and I’m in total agreement — this is one of the most singable, gorgeous, passion-filled, classy guitar solos in rock, with Ritchie Blackmore running aristocratic medieval runs all over a tossed-off lyric about driving cars fast. Jon Lord helps out and duels with the Blackmore in time-honored Purple fashion and a baroque, frilly-sleeved good time is had by all. Note: “Burn” and “Child In Time” also gathered a fair number of admiring nods.

And the No. 1 solo is…


1. Van Halen, “Eruption”

VanHalen5.jpgI’ve had more guitarists tell me lately that Eddie is really only second to Jimi Hendrix in sheer importance to the art of the guitar. Here, the man single-handedly invents shred, touching off a decade’s worth of explosive guitar acrobatics through the ’80s — namely the golden age of metal. And even though folks credit Steve Hackett and Rick Derringer’s Danny Johnson with coming up with the tapping technique, this is the world’s first involved, musical, triumphant exercise in that little, tricksy innovation. Finally — and sort of related to the first point — “Eruption” made more kids want to take the guitar seriously than any musical event in history, save for perhaps The Beatles (and yes, KISS) inspiring kids to pick one up in the first place. Sure, this is cheating a bit, as it’s a stand-alone solo and not a brief bit enveloped in a song, but Eddie was a rule-breaker, too.




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Backstage Pass: Over the Rainbow with Joe Lynn Turner


That dynamic voice, so expressive and soulful, that graced classic material by Rainbow, Deep Purple and Yngwie Malmsteen could only belong to one man: Joe Lynn Turner.

Mostly known for his work in the hard-rock arena, Turner started out with the eclectic late-’70s outfit Fandango, singing and playing guitar on the group’s four albums. After Fandango broke up, a call from a representative of legendary guitarist Ritchie Blackmore led to a stint with Rainbow that lasted from 1981-1984. 

His smoldering vocal treatments on such Rainbow smash hits as “Stone Cold,” “Street Of Dreams” and “I Surrender” left an enduring mark on the more melodic realms of heavy metal, and Turner, today, shows no signs of slowing down.

Belting out classic tracks like “Power” and “Jealous Lover,” Turner and his band deliver a hard-charging, electrifying performance that rocks as hard as any Rainbow show ever did on Turner’s first solo concert album, Live In Germany, recently released on Blistering Records via the Frontiers label. Coming off a life-altering trip to Iraq in the fall with Big Noize — a collection of veteran metal and hard-rock performers — to visit with and play for soldiers stationed there (see the World’s Forgotten Boy blog for more reaction from Turner on the trip), Turner turned his attention to a new Sunstorm album, expected to be released in 2009.

Then, not long after this interview was conducted, word came of a Rainbow reunion of sorts — with Blackmore’s son Jurgen filling in for his father on guitar, along with Turner, Greg Smith, Tony Carey and Bobby Rondinelli  — that goes by the name of Over The Rainbow. The group is now touring overseas.

About a year ago, you headlined the United Forces of Rock festival in Ludwigsburg, Germany, performing all of your hits with Deep Purple and Rainbow, plus some outtakes from your solo album, Second Hand Life. And tapes from the show ended up becoming the Live In Germany CD. When did it become apparent to you and your label, Frontiers, that they were good enough to make a live album?

Joe Lynn Turner: Well, I’ll be honest with you. We didn’t know we were being recorded. We had come from a tour in Spain and were pretty washed out to be honest with you. We were like, OK, we got one more gig in Germany, and it’s a great gig and all that stuff, but we’re going on so late, and the crowd is going to be so tired, because they’ve been there ever since like noon.

And we didn’t go on ’til like midnight, so that’s like 12 hours of nonstop bands and rock ’n’ roll and drinking beer and God knows what else. And we just went like, OK, so let’s just go on and give ’em a great show and do what we do, but we had no idea we were recorded until we got backstage, and we were toweling off. And I think it was Ted Poley from Danger Danger … he came down and just said, “Did you guys know they have this on hard drive?” And I went, “What?”

And then I started talking to guys from Frontiers and everybody, and they said, “Yeah, we want to make this a live album.” And we kind of all looked at each other and went, “Were we OK, you know? How did we play?” We felt good about it. 

Tell us about the band that performed with you.

JLT: This band has played together for a while. I think we had one rehearsal before we went overseas, you know, just to brush up on the endings and tighten up things, but we pretty much really got tight right throughout Spain by the t

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Web Exclusive: Shooting Star: An Interview with Don Airey


Don Airey took over for the legendary Jon Lord in Deep Purple when the elder Lord decided to retire from the band. Airey, the logical choice, has had an amazing career, playing with some of the greatest men to ever brandish a guitar, including Ritchie Blackmore, Gary Moore, Randy Rhoads, Brian May, Brad Gillis, Tony Iommi, Glenn Tipoton, KK Downing, Steve Via—well, you get the picture.

He is Heavy Metal’s best known keyboard player, a dubious accolade, but an honor that Airey wears with pride. In a genre based on the electric guitar, the keyboard is usually given the background treatment, if given the light of day at all. Airey, along with Deep Purple’s Jon Lord, have changed all of that. Purple’s love affair with the keyboard is well documented but it was Airey that brought the instrument to new heights when he wrote and performed the opening to "Mr. Crowley" on Ozzy Osbourne’s Blizzard of Oz.

Now, after two decades, Airey has released his second solo album, an ode to the universe, titled A Light in the Sky. The musical concept album see Aireys showing off all of his influences and even brining out two songs that could have been on the next Deep Purple album. The album is a complex weaving of styles that will thrill any fan of any of the bands Airey has been a part of. Read on to learn how the album came to be as well as how Airey went from seeing Deep Purple perform in 1971 to becoming their current keyboard player.

Jeb: A Light in the Sky is your second solo album but there was a bit of gap between this one and the first.

Don: I took a quick break of twenty years. To be honest, this one comes down to the fact that somebody offered me a record deal. I had been working on stuff since the last solo album, so I had a lot of the material. I got the tracks together and put a theme to it. The label is an instrumental label, so much of it is instrumental but there are a few songs as well. I tried to really show my past influences throughout my career.

Jeb: The song "Shooting Star" is the one that Purple fans and Rainbow fans will be excited to hear.

Don: "Endless Night" as well, as it is pretty much a Rainbow track.

Jeb: There is classical and rock and there is some very unique music. With the theme of the album, I would call it ‘spacey’.

Don: When you have a warehouse full of keyboards, which I have, you are going to get some pretty spacey stuff. I have a big interest in astronomy. I have a big telescope, and I live in a place where the skies are very clear at night; there is not much ambient light. I read a lot of Steven Hawking stuff and books about where we come from and how the universe was formed. Nobody actually knows how life was formed but they know how everything that constitutes the earth came about.

Jeb: Is this a lifelong passion of yours?

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Album Review ? Blackmore's Night: Secret Voyage


Another haunting journey through the ancient past, Secret Voyage takes this group of wandering minstrels to musical ports of call both familiar and foreign. Along the way, the collective, led by legendary rock guitarist Ritchie Blackmore and the ethereal chanteuse Candice Night, resurrects the folk music of Eastern Europe, France, Germany and, of course, England with a beguiling mix of modern and Renaissance-era instrumentation.

On the rollicking, toe-tapping drinking song “Toast To Tomorrow,” stringed instruments, including Gypsy Rose’s violin, wheel about the dance floor in an authentic mastery of Russian folk traditions, while “Gilded Cage,” featuring Blackmore’s intricate acoustic guitar patterns and borrowing from French folk styles, plays on romantic, old-world sensibilities.

But, Renaissance music is Blackmore’s Night’s forte, and the lushness of “The Circle” and the misty atmosphere of “Sister Gypsy” — both featuring Night’s alluring vocals and gripping lyrical tales — drive home the point.

Examples of Blackmore’s incredible dexterity as a guitarist abound in the acoustic instrumental “Prince Waldeck’s Galliiard,” an adaptation of German traditions, and the more English leaning “Peasant’s Promise.” Interestingly, the full, rich reworking of “Rainbow’s Eyes,” an old Rainbow tune, and Blackmore’s soaring guitar leads on the synth-powered remake of Elvis’ “Can’t Help Falling In Love” make you wonder if he’s, indeed, ready to give up the rock ghost.

If nothing else, Blackmore’s Night should be applauded for reintroducing the world to musical styles that would, otherwise, be in danger of being forgotten entirely. That they continue to find new avenues of expression through dead musical languages is nothing short of remarkable.

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