Short solo in Live for ever - Oasis - at 1:45 , less than a minute :
listen to this short solo at 2:08 from Ty Segal
- long solo of Jack White in Ball & Biscuit at 1:48 & 3:49 & etc... this is a short solos song 🙂:
listen to this short solo at 2:08 from Ty Segal
- long solo of Jack White in Ball & Biscuit at 1:48 & 3:49 & etc... this is a short solos song 🙂:
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"The solo at the end of the Hey Baby piece from Troubadour (1976) by J. J. Cale."
What makes that nice is the great interplay between the pedal steel guitar and the six-string guitar licks.
What makes that nice is the great interplay between the pedal steel guitar and the six-string guitar licks.
Every time I hear about Meddle (1971) I always think about Pink Floyd's Obscured by Clouds (1972) as album (and vice versa)...I don't know if you'd call it a "solo" but the bass guitar on Pink Floyd's "One Of These Days" {first track on the Meddle album} is pretty awe inspiring.
Obscured by Clouds [and the following When You're In (they have two different titles, but I've always considered them just as a single piece)] as track(s) and its guitar opening solo also are truly inspiring to me.
David Gilmour is such a great player and Obscured by Clouds is a nice album often, overlooked.Every time I hear about Meddle (1971) I always think about Pink Floyd's Obscured by Clouds (1972) as album (and vice versa)...
Obscured by Clouds [and the following When You're In (they have two different titles, but I've always considered them just as a single piece)] as track(s) and its guitar opening solo also are truly inspiring to me.
He's done some great work with artists as diverse as Jools Holland, Paul McCartney (Run Devil Run), Pete Townshend (Deep End), Kate Bush and Sam Brown. Always tasteful, bluesy and spacey, His solo on Deep End's "After the Fire" is a highlight of the album.
Geoff
Think this one is memorable as well : Blow-up movie - Yardbird
the guy who is destroying the guitar is Jeff Beck while Jimmy Page is on the left side...
the guy who is destroying the guitar is Jeff Beck while Jimmy Page is on the left side...
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I remember an interview with him where he was asked about is playing style and he very self deprecatingly said he wasn't good enough for the fancy stuff so he just did the best he could with what he could do....Always tasteful, bluesy and spacey
Most of the great musicians I can think of are/were modest: Hendrix, Jeff Beck, George Harrison, Rick Danko (I don't play bass, I just fill in the gaps), etc. There are exceptions of course: the late Ginger Baker, who put down almost everybody, springs to mind.
Geoff
Geoff
AC/DC, Angus Young's solo playing On Broadway by George Benson. 😳
Unofficial, 2009 - Live At River Plate
I can't be absolutely sure if that's really the case, but I like it anyway...
Unofficial, 2009 - Live At River Plate
I can't be absolutely sure if that's really the case, but I like it anyway...
Less than 30 seconds solo by Jimmy Page in What Is And What Should Never Be - Led Zeppelin II (1969).
Robert Smith's solo in The Loudest Sound (Bloodflowers): as expected a solo with no technical virtuosity, but awesome emotional musicality.
The absolute technical simplicity of a beautiful harmony. 😍
The absolute technical simplicity of a beautiful harmony. 😍
I guess this was Elliott Randall!"Reeling In The Years" (Steely Dan), guitar lick(s) played by Walter Becker
Best regards!
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