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No doubt about it. He introduced classical music to mainstream metal. I think Dee was his masterpiece.
No doubt about it. He introduced classical music to mainstream metal. I think Dee was his masterpiece.
No, not the best, but an innovator. Every "better" player has his roots to thank. It's what happens, people strive to copy, then add their own content. Few people are the end all and be all of musicianship. There are a few, but that's open for debate as well. Randy helped create the metal that made guitar players better. A lot to be said about that.
For some reason Ozzy always lands feet down. The guy helped a lot of good guitarists get started too.
Yeah, I always liked Jake's style. As a kid, I got to see him in Montreal on the Ultimate Sin tour .
Black Sabbath > BotBitch's retarded black metal bands.
The ground work for bots butt metal.
Zakk
Randy
Jake
My favorites.
https://youtu.be/FVovq9TGBw0
One of the best guitarists ever. Crazy Train was his masterpiece and I want someone to look at me the way Ozzy looks at Randy.
https://youtu.be/lvFcygqg3h0
https://youtu.be/Eq4x9Ek66es
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I was going to start a thread about this the other day, but then decided not to, so I will just post this here.
I ordered this bad boy the other day. Can't wait...
https://www.long-mcquade.com/157212...ocaster--Maple-Fingerboard---Aged-Natural.htm
I'm a Gibson guy, always have been, but for some reason about 5 months ago I got the urge for a new guitar and decided on going with the strat.
The natural aged look is sweet, hope to have it in my hands late feb.
I'm a Gibson guy, always have been, but for some reason about 5 months ago I got the urge for a new guitar and decided on going with the strat.
The natural aged look is sweet, hope to have it in my hands late feb.
I don't think I'm who you think I am.
When I retire I plan on making a guitar from scratch, for now I'm planning on starting a collection. New guitar every 2 or 3 years is the plan.
#36
I am ok w this...but I do think it should have been higher
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/100-greatest-guitarists-153675/
Look at who voted...hey batboy...is your name on the list?
Randy Rhodes was the guitarist who single handedly got me into metal at age 12. I didn't even know what heavy metal WAS until I heard Ozzy's "Over the Mountain." Then I knew, I had to have more of THAT sound. It wasn't just his technical ability. It was the way he would subtly embellish the riffs, with a scale run here, or an extra note or harmonic there, making what seemed like a simple riff sound so elegant. None of the other guitarists that Ozzy has played with were as good at this, and none of them were the songwriter or riff writer that Randy was. Not Jake E. Lee, and certainly not Zakk. Now, both of those guys are undeniably talented and I wont take anything away from them, but Randy just seemed to have something that those other guys don't.
And there aren't many guitarists nowadays, metal or otherwise, that had Randy's flair for composition and playing. Too many of them just overdo it, showing off with overly fast licks and mindless shredding, or aimless noodling. Techniclaly precise but with no soul or sense of how to subtly embellish a lick without ruining it by being too flashy. Randy just had a sense of melody and phrasing in his playing that few others could really approach.
Yes I was a huge Rhodes fan. He was a big part of my musical education during my formative years and a big part of why Ozzy became my idol as a kid, and also, sadly, why I lost interest in him by the end of the 1980s.
I got into metal because of Randy. Blizzard of Ozz was the gateway and I will always come back to St. Rhoads. Crazy Train and Mr. Crowley were both a blast to learn on guitar as a teenager, to play in clubs with my band, and are still fun to play now. From Ozzy and Randy, I got into New Wave of British Heavy Metal - Maiden and Priest and Diamond Head and the like. Then American Thrash, of which I would claim Master of Puppets to still represents a high water mark, though Megadeth's Rust in Peace is phenomenal.
And then I got into the Scandinavian stuff. I was lucky enough to get into In Flames when they were in their prime, seeing them on early US tours, and they've remained one of my favorites. I got into other european bands... Dark Tranquility and Amon Amarth. Children of Bodom and Tyr. And on and on. Bands that played power metal, black metal, progressive death metal, technical metal. Math metal. All kinds of different subgenres. I loved them all.
There's room for everything, and the hipster metal fans pushing for purity, extremism, and exclusion in the genre don't do us any favors. The whole Trve Cvlt crowd and the technique and only technique crowd all really freaking bore me.