We all have our favorite guitarist and a selection of their solos we like best. My tastes range pretty widely. In college my band Black Water play many AC/DC songs from that era. A buddy of mine had a video of AC/DC on it and that lead me to find this solo by Angus Young, which I really love.
What's great about it is Angus doesn't just overwhelm you with billions of notes and guitar licks. The entire 9:52 segment is all about tension and anticipation. Dozens of times Angus gives you a little bit of stuff, and then brings it back to the chanting drums. There's even a segment where you sure you're going to get mooned by Angus (I won't give away what happens), followed by Angus going into his all out guitar stuff.
Very entertaining and a good lesson on why it's not just what you play, or how much of it, but it's how you deliver it. It's all in the delivery. If Angus had just laid out the last 2 minutes of this as his solo, we'd remember this as 'just another guitar solo'. Enjoy.
I think I've said on this blog quite a few times that David Gilmour is one of the top, if not the top, influences on my guitar playing style. Not because I've purposefully sought out to emulate or try and copy what he does, but I think because I both grew up listening to Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here when I was getting deep into rock music, and because his melodic and emotional playing style really connects with me. I loved the keyboards, Alan Parsons engineering, and the entire vibe of the middle period of Pink Floyd's music.
A few times recently I've gotten a comment after playing or doing a solo that my playing sounded very Gilmour-esk. I wish I could say I thought it sounded as good as David but I'll take a compliment like that in a heartbeat. So tonight while I was waiting around for some software to finish installing on my computer, I decided to play along with Shine On Your Crazy Diamond, one of my top favorite Pink Floyd tunes (along with so many others). As I was noodling along, playing Gilmour's tastefully crafted open solo and in-song solo, I realized there are many things about my playing I had forgotten came from Gilmour. (Again, this about Gilmour influencing my playing, not me playing like him, which is a far cry from David's level.)
First, I sometimes enjoy bending a note up one and then two steps (or even another half step), singing the notes up and down and you change pitch, with some suttle virbato occassionally. That's very Gilmour, I don't know how many other players do it with his emotion and style. Another more frequent lick I play is a trill like run between the 2, 3, 1 notes and land on the flat-7 and 5 notes (when in a minor penatonic pattern) resolving back to 8 (1). It's sort of my way (lifted from Gilmour) of not staying boxed in by the minor penatonic pattern and it communicates a really different vibe with great tension for an anticipated resolve.
I hadn't learned that triplet run that repeats all through the bari sax solo towards the end of the song, so I figured out how that was played. One reason is that one of my signature licks that I build a lot of both comp'ing and soloing around is a triplet pull-off pattern, usually between strings 2 and 3, or 1 and 2. It's actually a riff I learned from some songs by Christian artist guitar player, Lincoln Brewster, who also toured with Journey btw. That riff didn't use the slide up one fret at the start of the riff, like the Floyd one did. Also the line in the Floyd song sounds sort of like this B riff over a Gm to C to F, etc., chord line. Not a way I've ever used that before, so I learned both a variation on a riff I know and a new voicing to play it.
I really enjoyed sitting down and playing along with this song, learning stuff along the way. What a way to spend an hour. In honor of David Gilmour and one of my favorite bands, here's a YouTube video of Shine On You Crazy Diamond from the Echos tour. Sit back and enjoy. Or better yet, play along.
The contents, opinions and views expressed on Guitartropolis are those of the authors', and the authors' alone, and have no relation to current and past employers, customers, or anyone else. The authors and commenters are responsible for their own content. No representations are made as to the accuracy, validity, relevance or importance of anything said here. Some of what is said here could very well be true, a lot of it is obviously made up, and all of it is the opinion of the individual contributor. Read entirely at your own risk, and as they say on TV, please don't try this at home.